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Guest post by James Shotwell of HaulixThink you have a hit song on your new album? Better make it track one.
When you have access to everything all the time with just a few simple clicks patience is a hard thing to achieve. After all, why wait for something that may or may not be good when you can have almost anything else in a moment’s notice?That way of thinking is how the term ‘skip rate’ became commonplace in the music industry. Skip rate refers to the likelihood of someone skipping a song when it appears on streaming services such as YouTube, Spotify, Apple Music, and TIDAL within the first thirty seconds of the track. Any stream that lasts longer than that amount of time is considered a play and therefore generates income for the artist whether or not the consumer finishes the song.The reasoning behind a skip can be hard to pin down. Some skip songs because the artist is unfamiliar, but other songs get skipped because they don’t engage consumers fast enough. The latter is the most troubling, and it has changed the way music executives discuss new music.“Data comes back [from YouTube] and it’s like, ‘videos that have intros longer than 20 seconds have less playback value,’” says Alexander “AE” Edwards, A&R VP at Def Jam. “So if an artist is going to start a video off with a 30-second scene of them running in the bank and robbing the bank, it’s like, ‘people might not watch this because they don’t want to sit through 30 seconds of no music.’ We have those conversations within the label and with the artists: ‘Maybe the intro has to be 15 seconds; this is why; here are the numbers; numbers don’t lie.’”A report released in 2018 revealed that consumer attention spans are shortest when dealing with new artists or talent that is new to the consumer. Music blogger Paul Lamere analyzed billions of plays from millions of Spotify listeners all over the world to discover their skip rates. Here’s what he found:- 24.14 percent likelihood of skipping to the next song in the first 5 seconds.
- 28.97 percent in the first 10 seconds
- 35.05 percent in the first 30 seconds
- 48.6 percent skip before the song finishes