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Monday, September 18th, 2006

YouTube and Warner Music

Natalie Painchaud

Warner Music has taken a step away from the pack of other music companies to ink a deal with the video sharing web site YouTube. This comes just one week after the CEO of Universal Music Group called out YouTube claiming that they violate copyright regulations by hosting content on their site that is uploaded without the proper approval of its owners.

Here's an overview of the how the partnership will work...

"YouTube will allow users to legitimately incorporate Warner content into their own video creations, while ensuring that Warner continues to receive a proportion of the advertising revenue generated."

...and here a few things that we like about Warner Music's approach


  • Innovating the business model - Warner will receive non-traditional revenue from ads placed next to Warner's content or user-generated content that features Warner music or videos. This differs substantially from how music companies traditionally make money by producing and selling albums

  • Understanding Jobs - YouTube has proven that there is an important Job to be done of "give me a place to create and/or post cool video content". It has also shown that there is an audience for this user-generated content. YouTube was reported to have more than 100 million videos viewed on a daily basis

  • Experimentation - Warner Music does not appear to view this deal as the "silver bullet" solution but as an experiment where they can invest a little, earn a little and learn a lot

This definitely is a hot topic and we'd love to hear your thoughts!


Discussion

From: Innovation Zen
Posted: Monday, September 18th, 2006 - 3:34 am EDT

I think media companies have more to gain than to lose by partnering and experimenting with innovative media platforms. It is beyond discussion the fact that the music and movies behemoths will need to revise their business model in the near term, and Warner is doing a good step forward in that sense.


From: Ramon Prat
Posted: Wednesday, October 4th, 2006 - 3:31 am EDT

Undoubtedly interesting. It seems that they might remove a barrier of consumption, or may be making an ugly business attractive, which sounds as a potential disruptive innovation. However, it would be interesting to know more about the economics behind the idea such as the revenue generated with the expected increase of advertisement and the percentage that goes to Warner. Profitability is important; also in the initial steps.


From: John
Posted: Saturday, October 28th, 2006 - 1:48 am EDT

suspect that Warner has read The Cluetrain.



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