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Guest post by Cherie Hu For record labels, technological change has created more questions than answers. Are they even relevant anymore? Which tech trends and tools matter for their bottom line, and which ones are just “hype”? Should labels’ historical roles stay the same in the wake of disruption, or should these roles also disrupt themselves?Running a record label has always been high-risk with an unknown reward. Labels spend as much as 15.6% of their revenue on artist development—a higher percentage than what technology, software, aerospace, healthcare and pharmaceutical industries spend on R&D. The risks are not unlike what one would take at a venture capital firm, except the startups are human beings who carry unique, abstract artistic capital.With each month, the A&R landscape seems to get ever more competitive. Streaming services like Apple Music are stepping in to oversee traditional label responsibilities themselves, giving artists more direct access to their distribution and data (à la Frank Ocean). In addition, an entirely new collection of marketing tools and investment schemes (crowdfunding, investor-agency partnerships, accelerators like Zoo Labs and Techstars Music) has entered the business, making the future of artist development even more cryptic.

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