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Guest post by Bobby Owsinski of Music 3.0Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) owns the largest digital music platforms in China in QQ Music, Kugou Music and Kuwo Music, which are all doing very well at the moment according to its latest financial statement. While Western streaming services rely on paid subscriptions, Tencent is still trying to upgrade its free customers to paid tiers and one of the ways its using with some success is limiting the amount of current hit music you can get for free.The fact that the company has placed its hopes on the practice differs quite a lot from the experiences of Spotify, Apple Music and Tidal, all who faced a backlash from exclusives of new releases by select major artists. Albums by Beyonce, Kanye West and Chance the Rapper among others have experimented with this, and the general feeling is that exclusives of that type are counter-productive, losing marketing buzz and streaming revenue when limited to just one service even for a short period of time. Limiting new music to a premium tier, or “windowing,” rather than a certain platform is a different animal though.Tencent Music Requires You Pay To Stream Current Music – Will This Catch On?
In an effort to increase its profitability, Chinese streaming giant Tencent has begun experimenting with limiting the amount of current hit music which its customers can access for free. Given. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2019/05/tencent-music-requires-you-pay-to-stream-current