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Guest Post by Glenn Peoples on MediumTakeaways:· Streaming will soon represent over half of all recorded revenue in the United States. The revenue from purchases are already equal to revenue not derived from purchases.· The growing role of streaming services in the industry is bringing changes in how music is promoted, how concert tickets are sold, and the information available to an artist, manager or label.By Glenn Peoples, Music Insights and Analytics at PandoraMusic streaming is hitting a tipping point in the United States. The majority of royalties paid to artists and record labels will soon come from selling access rather than selling things. It’s a major shift that’s already bringing changes to nearly every aspect of the music business.In the first half of 2016, streaming’s share of total recorded music revenue jumped to 47 percent from 32 percent a year earlier, according to midyear data released by the RIAA. This 57-percent gain is comprised of royalties earned from non-interactive services like Pandora, on-demand streaming services such as Apple Music (in the paid category), YouTube (in the ad-supported category) and Spotify (in the paid and ad-supported categories).[i]On the strength of streaming, total recorded music revenue improved 8 percent.As the market tips there is evidence that people are more willing to pay to access music. The RIAA counted 18.3 million on-demand subscribers, a 101-percent year-over-year improvement. With Pandora’s on-demand service waiting in the wings — the company has publicly stated it will debut by the end of 2016 — the on-demand sector should be strong again in 2017. There’s a constellation of factors at play. People are being presented more and better options. Services are becoming more convenient. Improved discovery features help subscribers find music for just about any taste, mood or activity. Streaming fits many use cases, from the automobile to the office. And people have become comfortable with streaming media in general.Related articles








