Viewing posts with the tag internet

Was on ChurchCrunch and I saw this post on the Catalyst Music Project.  I got all excited about it.

[ Catalyst Music Project | Aaron Keyes from Catalyst on Vimeo ].

So here’s the deal.  The music industry is changing.  No, it already has changed.  Not everyone knows it yet.

The Web is empowering the artists and the listeners.  People who would have never made it into the mainstream 20 years ago can make a living.  And people can find just that right band even if their taste is a little off the beaten path.

Pandora gave me a band I would have never found otherwise.  (It’s Tokyo Rose, if you’re wondering)  I bought a few songs from iTunes once I found them.  It was awesome!

We need to take heed, my friends!  The change is upon us!  Okay, all poetic verbage aside, there are awesome ideas just waiting to be used.

What will the future be?  How has the web changed music for you?

I Went to Church Online

April 10, 2009 | Church

On Sunday, I went to church online.

I had seen and been told about LifeChurch.tv and this week my wife and I decided to check it out.  Here’s what I thought.

The message was great.  I think God reminded me of a few things.  I liked that the worship music was included in the service.  The podcasts or vodcasts I know of don’t do that (admittedly, I only know of a few).

Overall, I think this is a brilliant idea.  Church online had more attendees than some small local churches I know.  There is even interactivity, via chat rooms and virtual hand raising.  People connecting and praying.

This is a great outreach opportunity.  The relative cost of going to church online is zip.  You can just jump in, no questions asked.  It allows for people wondering about God and church to check something out, and maybe get connected with a church and God.  It allows people who, for whatever reason, can’t make it to services to “go” to church.  This is leveraging the technology of the internet!

I think we should still seek face-to-face interactions in our communities, though.  Being at church online made me miss being with everyone.  I think that people connecting offline will never be replaced.  Not that this is what I think LifeChurch.tv is trying to do (they have physical campuses all over).

But church online is good.  Check out this post if you want proof!  God moves in it.  Welcome to a new era.

Posted via web from On Life, Stories, and Music

I sat down and watched Michael Hyatt’s presentation at O’Reilly Tools of Change Publishing Conference on “Blogging as a Tool of Change.”  If you haven’t watched it, you should.  And it got me thinking on how we use all this new tech.

One thing that he said in the presentation really struck me.  “You’re not going to find the future unless you engage it.”  That seems so simple, but so elusive.  We can’t sit on the sidelines and expect to leverage these new technologies for our own good.

Change will come.  It always has and always will.  If you want to be a part of the change, you need to be involved.  Get dirty with it, try it out.  I have been finding out lately that the more tools I try, the more incredible the landscape becomes.  I see more opportunities and think of more ideas.

And make no mistake, the future is on the internet.

Just a few thoughts today.

Posted via web from On Life, Stories, and Music

This topic has been around for a while now.  We talked about this very problem in a music business class I took in college (only a few years ago, but for digital things, that’s a while).  Is the music “flat rate” the answer for the music industry?

I say no.

Here’s why.

The flat rate would be essentially a universal internet user tax that would pay for all downloaded music.  That’s how I understand it.  There’s probably a thousand different variations, but that’s the basis.

One big problem is the people who don’t get their music online.  They subsidize the rest.  Why should I pay for Jonny’s 183 GB worth of music?  I only have 500 MB!

Another problem I see is that the music industry is essentially capping itself.  If the tax is say $2 per internet user, that only pays for 2 songs per internet connection.  If the average user downloads (or just listens) to more than that per whatever time period we use, then the industry loses money.  As a business model, you want to be paid for what you do.  It’s bad if you’re not compensated as much as you should.  If I continued to do that in say, a bakery, then I would go under.

Now, subscription based services seem fine to me, but they’re especially useful for people who do buy/use a lot of music.  If you’re going to buy 12 issues per year of some magazine, why not buy a subscription for the year and save some money?  But for the person who only buys 1 or 2 copies over the year, the subscription isn’t worth it.  They’ll pay less because they skipped the subcription.

By collecting the music fee, you take away that option for higher usage, and essentially make everyone pay a subscription fee.  It’s like charging someone $20 to walk in a record store saying “Take what you want.”  If you heard that, you’d go a pick out 20 or 30 CDs.  At $15 per CD, the store just lost money!

And the silly thing is, the music industry has been giving away free songs for years.  It’s called radio.  In fact, they’ve paid people to play music on the radio!  Now you’re telling me that they can’t figure out a way to monetize digital music other than by universally charging internet users?

Personally, I think things like Spotify or Pandora or YouTube are on the right track.  Free music is the ultimate end of the digital revolution.  It’s too easy to copy songs digitally and give them away for anyone to truly stop it now.  YouTube is like radio MTV.  Pandora is internet radio.  Spotify is more like a new breed of music, combining social media aspects with radio.  The trick is finding ways to create value in free music.

I don’t have an easy answer.  But I do know that by giving enough away for free, you generate interest that will probably lead to sales.  Charging a flat rate seems to be reaching to far, and I think there has to be a better way.

Any thoughts?

Posted via web from On Life, Stories, and Music

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