‘MySpace’

1 Billion Digital Songs Purchased Online

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

Digital music downloads reached a milestone in 2008, exceeding 1 billion songs purchased online, according to a newly released report from Nielsen SoundScan, which tracks music sales. That represents a 27% gain over the previous year.

But the soaring popularity of the 99-cent download is not enough to offset continued declines in CD sales, which still account for the bulk of the music industry’s revenue. Physical disc sales fell nearly 20% to 362.6 million, the seventh decline in eight years, according to SoundScan.

Overall album sales — including CDs and the digital equivalent — dropped 8.5% compared with 2007. Every musical genre, including alternative rock, Christian, gospel, new age and rap, reported across-the-board declines in album sales. Holiday sales — hello recession — were off by a steep 19%.

In an effort to cope with changing technology and the threat of Internet piracy, the recorded music industry has been exploring new sources of revenue. Royalties from satellite and Internet radio and so-called 360 deals with artists, in which the label shares in concert ticket and merchandise sales, contribute to the labels’ bottom line. Video games such as “Rock Band” and “Guitar Hero” also generate licensing fees.

Nielsen doesn’t track those alternative revenue streams, which are not yet large enough to offset the decline in CD sales.

Universal Music Group remained the industry’s big dog, with a nearly 32% share of the album market, followed by Sony BMG Music Entertainment at 25%. Warner Music Group claimed 21% of sales, and the smallest of the major labels, EMI Music, saw its market share drop slightly to 9%.

Lil Wayne’s “Tha Carter III” was the bestselling album of the year, and country crossover artist Taylor Swift was the top solo artist.

The ’70s heavy-metal rock group AC/DC — a group that long labored in the shadow of such contemporaries as Led Zeppelin — was the bestselling group.

250 million people on MySpace

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

There are well over 6 billion people on the planet earth and over 250 million people on MySpace. Just think of all the benefits you could get by having more friends. Alright so some people have 50 million friends on their list because they are indeed just in it for the win. But other people actually run businesses from their MySpace account and market their businesses, websites, products, and services on MySpace, so having more friends means you have more of a chance of reeling someone in. Another great thing about MySpace is the fact that you can make an account for every service or product you have and then get friends that are relevant to what you are “selling.” But how does someone go about this? Is there an easy way out? Sure is! In fact, there are programs you can sign up for which will allow you to download a piece of software for friend adding.

These software programs allow you to do all kinds of things; most of which are automated. For example, say you have a product and you want to advertise it to all 500,000 of your friends. You can’t really sit there and send every single person a comment that is a waste of time and would take you months at a time. However, if you use these programs you can easily and effortlessly send a comment to ALL your friends at once. Something like “Hey I just wanted you to check out my new product I’m offering” and then include the link to your site. Or you can be a little sneakier about this and just send a random “Hey just seeing how you are doing today!” comment and then add your name and your website link to the “signature”. Once you input the info on the program, you press send, and voila, all 500,000 of your friends just got that comment. This is a great option for backlinks as well. Seriously think about 500,000 comments which then equals out to 500,000 backlinks. That’s supreme quality right there.

Getting friends is even easier than leaving a comment. In fact, most of these programs (the good ones anyway) will let you pick and choose who you want to add to your list. You can pick from certain demographics, ages, sexes, interests and much more. For example, say I am offering a service to people for a writing business. I would probably want to find other people that are looking to promote something, right? So I could do a search for females and males ages 25-35, interests; promotion, networking. Then, the program simply does a search for ALL the people on MySpace and sends them a friend invite. You could literally make thousands of friends in one day. Ah the hard work! Not! This is not only easy, but cheap as well. You could just as well hire someone to do this work for you and they could just as well charge you hundreds of dollars per hour. Or you could get one of these programs, pay and do it your damn self! Plus when you do it yourself, you are in control of who stays, who comes, and what goes! Check it out!