Back in the days when I was a music journo, I used to get a stack of anywhere to 10-20 free CDs A DAY. And if you think I listened to all of them, you're crazy. The truth is, label overhead and marketing/promotion are increasingly over-budgeted especially on the bigger sellers.Price War: Does a CD have to cost $15.99?
Major labels insist that the low prices mass retailers such as Wal-Mart and Best Buy demand are impossible for them to achieve. But Best Buy senior vice president Gary Arnold counters, "The record industry needs to refine their business models, because the consumer is the ultimate arbitrator. And the consumer feels music isn't properly priced." Labels point to roster cuts and layoffs as evidence that they can't sell CDs cheaper.
This breakdown of the cost of a typical major-label release by the independent market-research firm Almighty Institute of Music Retail shows where the money goes for a new album with a list price of $15.99.
$0.17 Musicians' unions
$0.80 Packaging/manufacturing
$0.82 Publishing royalties
$0.80 Retail profit
$0.90 Distribution
$1.60 Artists' royalties
$1.70 Label profit
$2.40 Marketing/promotion
$2.91 Label overhead
$3.89 Retail overhead
The evidence for this lays in the whole ramp-up of mp3s and the internet. You find most people are aware of release dates and its little to do with any advertising or music press. Most releases can be purchased bootleg in major cities before their release date. So no, you don't need a major marketing push on things like Destiny's Child or Jay-Z because most people know already. But paradoxically enough, the marketing budgets for those releases are always massive compared to the new artists.
It seems so improbable that the music industry can't recognize that complimentary copies of CDs needn't go out in the standard format. If only there was some way of distributing text materials and music without incurring some sort of overhead on them. Something that required no actual material product. Hmmm...
The other aspect is that they refuse to acknowledge that the consumer demand is less than the price point. If they can't afford to do it at these prices, then perhaps they should reevaluate their business model. Every other industry in the world has to. Why are they an exception?