Microsoft Considering Subsidizing Zune Sales 141
grouchomarxist writes "Microsoft is considering selling the Zune subsidized like a cellphone, according to an excerpt on MarketWatch from a PC World magazine interview with Microsoft's Zune marketing director, Jason Reindorp. According to the article: 'The spokesman said that Microsoft first considered the cellphone-like distribution plan after seeing interest in its Zune Pass subscription service, which offers monthly paid access to songs on the Zune Marketplace, a competitor to Apple's iTunes store. Though he declined to say how many subscribers currently use Zune Pass, the spokesman said subscriptions rose 65% during January.'"
So... (Score:5, Funny)
So... that's 165 people?
Re:So... (Score:5, Informative)
The fact is the subscription music plan just sucks. It's like paying for radio. XM and sirus have a good idea, but very few people are willing to shell out money for music that stops playing when they stop paying.
It is a nice market, and always will be.
The best part of itunes is that it has more than just songs. I don't own an ipod. I just don't like any of the models and I am not impressed with any other music player either. But I still shop at iTunes. I grab the Battlestar galactica or Hero's episodes I missed and forgot to tivo.
I then unplug my monitor's dvi connector, and plug in my tv's dvi cable.
Even the simple 640x480 resolution they sell looks good on a 23" HDTV. not spectacular but better than the regular tv reception I get.
Re:So... (Score:5, Insightful)
Your comment like saying "Nobody would PAY for Cable Television. It makes no sense. Few people are willing to shell out money for television that stops playing when they stop paying"
2. Your comment about iTMS having TV & movies is funny. Are you actually suggesting that a subscription model wouldn't work well for TV shows? I mean, what makes you think that MSFT couldn't offer TV as part of their subscription price in the future? When iTMS launched they didn't have TV in the beginning, either. You do realize that people have been buying into the subscription-model for TV for, oh, 30 years now?
3. I love my iPod and I love iTMS. But as soon as I realized that I couldn't burn my TV purchases and that there was no "PlayFair" for video DRM I refused to give them another cent. Their video DRM is hideous and unacceptable. Imagine if FairPlay refused to let you burn them to CD. Well, THATS the kind of service you're paying for. $2 for 22 minutes of video that is crippled beyond all usefulness.
Re:So... (Score:5, Interesting)
Subscription services are trying to compete with stores. Stores basically say, "Come here and buy your favorite music." That's great. I want to buy my favorite music. But how do I know if I like a song?
So how do you sell a subscription service? To me, the answer is the second part of the name: Service
Suppose I pay $15 per month to have access to any songs I want. But what songs do I want? I'm not going to go through a catalog of 2 or 3 million songs and figure out what's good and what sucks! I have better things to do with my day! And I already own my favorite songs on CD, so I'm certainly not going to rent them again. So what do I get from the subscription model? Absolutely nothing. I still have to do all the work.
So make it a real service. Do some research. Use other people's research. Come up with genre playlists and let people subscribe to them. Find worthwhile podcasts and hire/pay people to make them daily/weekly and let people subscribe to them. Promote hot DJs at hot clubs by letting them come up with weekly playlists and let people subscribe to them. Build playlists from Billboard, Radio & Records, etc. and let people subscribe to them. And, of course, let "regular people" build lists of music and let people subscribe to them. Heck, build playlists based upon my ripped CDs and let me subscribe to them.
Then let me build my own playlists of music and playlists. I might want to build a playlist of Billboard's Top 40 along with this song from your collection, this song from my CD, and Club DJ Wugmeister's mix. I might build another playlist of Radio & Record's Adult Contemporary listings, along with my Barry Manilow collection (from CD), the latest ABC News podcast, and WJAZ's Smooth Jazz playlist.
The "Here's our whole catalog--you figure it out" model isn't bringing them in droves because it's too much work. I'm not going to pay $15 per month for access to a mind-numbingly large collection of music. But I might pay that much if the subscription service actually provides a service where I automatically get new music that I might actually want to listen to!
Re:So... (Score:5, Insightful)
This is so right that I just want to scream at the morons in the music business for not getting a system like this set up. The really revolutionary part is that each user can manage sets of subscriptions on their own personal device and they are not limited by a fixed number of "channels" or any other holdovers from the radio days and since each user is paying the same subscriber fee there is more of an incentive to cater to all of the various niches out there since the real cost is in setting up and running the service, but once it is all set up and going there is almost no cost to add additional niche programs, eclectic playlists, and off-beat selections ala the Amazon.com com and Craigslist list based systems. The system would not even need to have only human DJs, it could use AI and have intelligent agent programs making playlists and selections based upon live user feedback, random, shuffle, etc...it is really wide open possibilities. The only explanation that I can think of is that the music execs are either too greedy, too stupid, or both to get this type of system up and running.
In the meantime you might want to check out Digitally Imported [www.di.fm] and A State of Trance w/Armin Van Buuren [www.di.fm]for some of the features that I have described above.
The "Here's our whole catalog--you figure it out" model isn't bringing them in droves because it's too much work. I'm not going to pay $15 per month for access to a mind-numbingly large collection of music. But I might pay that much if the subscription service actually provides a service where I automatically get new music that I might actually want to listen to!
Yes, Yes, Yes! If there are any music industry people reading this then PAY ATTENTION...THIS IS WHAT WE WANT. Sigh, they just don't get it.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Actually it's one of the best ideas I have heard on slashdot in a while.
Somebody mod these two up and somebody in the music industry please listen.
Re: (Score:2)
That's all well and good, but that wugging is pretty hard on the chicken's stomach. Please think of the chickens.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Last.fm looks at artists I listen to and how often. Then it finds others users with a similar profile, and recommends artists from those people. The problem is it doesn't look at songs. It doesn't care about which songs I hate, or dislike. People who are big fans of Radiohead have different favorite songs of the band than I do, because I only like a few tracks from
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
if in 20 years you decide to stop buying CD's, you have 240 CD's.
if in 20 years you decide to stop subscribing to your service, you have nothing.
I suppose... (Score:2)
You can chose to look at music as something your consume versus something you collect.
I get some joy out of the physical heft of a CD. The liner notes. The artwork. The ritual. But not much. Not nearly as much as, say, a book. But more than a DVD which is just a plastic disc in an plastic box.
Really, the joy I get from music is all about the consumption. Not the collection. And, to continue your "20 years" example.
Over the course of 20 years, on any average y
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
When you stop paying, the music goes bye bye. You never actually "own" the music. I'm sorry, but I want to buy that song and own it, to do whatever I wish to do with it for as long as I'm alive, and so do most people. When people buy something, we usually like something tangable that we can cuddle around. I can buy a song from iTMS and it's mine, for 99 cents, and I can do whatever I want with it. It just feels be
Re: (Score:2)
Bullshit. I can connect my antannea and get all the free TV the airwaves have to offer. It's worth the advertising revenue to do so. Cable is merely a paid upgrade, a luxury. The difference, is that there are millions of songs and millions of bands out there making music. How I get to choose which ones I listen to, out of al
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Right... the viewership (and time spent watching) compared to network television isn't even close... not even on the same planet. Come back to me when a show like Scrubs or Boston Legal is on YouTube, commercial free, every week. Not going to happen my friend. YouTube is a vast collection of amateur video nuggets, nothing more. It's fun, it makes a lot of money via hits, but that's it.
Re: (Score:2)
I don't know where you live, but in Toronto, you can get maybe 20 stations on broadcast; by cable, I can get over 300 channels of TV, about a hundred music stations, and a whole bunch of pay-per-view channels. And, except for a few shows like "Lost" or "Law a
Re: (Score:2)
I get your point, but the difference between music & TV shows is that you don't really have to catch up on music like you would a TV show. This means I can buy an album, listen to it for a few weeks, lend it to a friend for a while, borrow some of theirs, make a copy, etc. I don't have to buy every single album I want to
Re: (Score:2)
Video content is a lot different from audio content. I can listen to the same songs over and over again. I rarely
Re: (Score:2)
I agree with you that people are not willing to pay, but what I am wondering is, why? "It's like paying for radio." Yeah, but it's also like paying for television. It comes for free over the airwaves. Millions pay for cable, even though when you stop paying, the cable stops working. You pay $100 a
Re: (Score:2)
I don't know if I would go that far, imagine an XM radio attachment for your iPod that would allow you access to any of the XM streams from your iPod just about anywhere in the United States (or even the world if their satellite coverage is good enough) combined with the expertise of competent DJs selecting tracks with intelligent commentary, there are still a few st
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact is the subscription music plan just sucks. It's like paying for radio. XM and sirus have a good idea, but very few people are willing to shell out money for music that stops playing when they stop paying.
I agree with you that people are not willing to pay, but what I am wondering is, why?
i don't think you guys are fair in comparing this to radio. with radio you can't control when/if the song you like plays, how often it plays, or how long it stays in the rotation. all of those are part of the reason that people buy albums to begin with, so obviously people were willing to pay to control when music plays before there was an internet. the only question is whether having music for a limited amount of time is worth the price relative to buying the CD or track where you get it forever, and t
Re:So... (Score:4, Insightful)
Because I can RECORD the rented TV shows so I *can* view them if I stop paying. Next question?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
I agree with you that people are not willing to pay, but what I am wondering is, why? "It's like paying for radio." Yeah, but it's also like paying for television. It comes for free over the airwaves. Millions pay for cable, even though when you stop paying, the cable stops working.
I think the difference is that TV programs, most of the time, are something you probably only watch once. Sure, if you see an old movie on HBO you might tune in if there's nothing else to watch; and some TV programs might be
Re: (Score:2)
A) you have to expect that many people will walk in in the middle of your show.
B) many people won't have time to finish the show
C) people will watch it once and never really need to watch it agian.
So currently, our TV watching habits match that of subscriber distrobution, and the entertainment style matches that of our viewing habits.
Popular music, which has been driven by radi
Re: (Score:2)
Speak for yourself. I don't pay anything for cable; I get my HDTV video over-the-air in much better quality than the cable company would deliver it. I also have a $15/month subscription to Netflix for watching movies and TV shows on DVD.
Not all of us are dumb enough to pay $100/
is it just me (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Zune Meme Prediction (From October) (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.realmeme.com/roller/page/realmeme/?ent
I believe the Microsoft attempted a viral marketing / meme manipulation scheme over the Internet, but I can't prove it. It's getting harder and harder to "advertise", partly because of the flood of information from the IT age, partly due to increasing resistence to memetic propagation.
http://www.realmeme.com/roller/page/realmeme/?ent
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Zune Meme Prediction (From October) (Score:4, Funny)
(no, I haven't tested it. It's a joke, damnit)
Subsidizing probably won't help (Score:3, Insightful)
In this case, Microsoft's just admitting that it has an unsuccessful, come-lately design that isn't taking the market by storm. In the mobile/cell business, you sell hardware differently, based on features, pizzaz, functionality, and rate plans that suit an audience. Only the rate plan might change, but the RIAA is going to charge Microsoft what it charges Real and Apple; they're unlikely to discount the 'minutes'.
Bad move: it cheapens the product rather than advancing it.
On the contrary! (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
I think the idea of sharing songs/media wirelessly via your digital music device is a good one. But Microsoft's model relies on Zune being a monopoly product where everyone has it. If they had approached it as an open standard where any player could share a song with another wireless-enabled player, to me at least, it seems like a nice little feature. I guess my
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
So far they are proving quite inept with the Zune, yes, but they do have monopoly leverage, through Windows. And if it wasn't for the Wii, they would also be pretty close to closing a monopoly on the console market, in a few years (but that market is unpredictable, so who knows really).
In a while, if other Microsoft projects go well, then a combination of Windows + Windows
I suspect that you are wrong. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
And while many companies try to 'buy' market share, they do so with eventual business models in mind. Microsoft doesn't own the software, like they do with the Xbox, and don't control how the software is used--
Re: (Score:2)
Who? (Score:2)
(And Quicken never lost to MS Money...it outsells MS Money by a very large margin.)
New paradigm for portable music (Score:4, Interesting)
A zune, even with it's questionable attributes, is going to be quite attractive at a $49 or $99 pricepoint - even if you get stuck with a year or two of $16.95/mo service. Americans will delay any capital investment - especially for entertainment - even if they pay through the nose on a regular basis. Cell phones, cableTV, satTV have far and away proven this to be true.
I hate to admit it, but MS might - I say might - be on to something here. Something bad, imho, but I'm pretty far outside of the mainstream when it comes to this stuff.
Now, they could end up being the first mouse instead of the early bird - I'm thinking prodigy and pop-up ads at the moment - but this could herald the beginning of a new paradigm in portable music. (Man, that's a lot of marketingspeak - I feel slimy just typing it).
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm not so sure about this.
You're right, Americans have definitely hooked onto the subsidized equipment idea with cellphones, cable TV, and
Worked great for the XBox (Score:5, Insightful)
I know, this is a different business model, but it looks like J Allard just trying to do what's "worked" in the past.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
What are you talking about. Microsoft lost billions on the original XBox. In fact, the reason that Microsoft came out with the 360 early was that it wanted to get the original XBox off of shelves as soon as possible. Microsoft is doing much better in this particular iteration, but that's mostly because it moved away from subsidizing the hardware to such a ridiculous extent. The XBox is still a long way from being profitable. Right now the best you can say about the XBox is that it is losing money at a
Re: (Score:1, Interesting)
You had better check out the losses at similar points in time between the first Xbox and the 360 before making any claims about progress. So far Microsoft is roughly generating the same amount of red ink and Microsoft has gotten better at hiding the losses this time around. Even the claims of breaking even are almost exactly the same with the break even point supposedly being 'about a year to two away'. Ballmer had publicly stated that 2008 was their target for 360 breaking even but that was
Re: (Score:2)
The real story is that Sony didn't have to be tricked into anything, they shot their own foot. You think the 360 is floundering in europe? The PS3 sales numbers dropped over 80% in the second week there. If the 360 is dead and rotting, t
XBox: Yes, Zune, actually YES, too (Score:1)
Subsidising the cost of hardware in the hopes of making up the money on content has worked wonders for the profits of the XBox division...
And Microsoft learnt this from Nintendo, Sony, Sega, Atari, et al.
I know, this is a different business model, but it looks like J Allard just trying to do what's "worked" in the past.
Actually this isn't a different business model at all. If Apple is making a profit on the iPod, then good on them. Microsoft has long used their profitable divisions to underwrite
No it has not! (Score:4, Informative)
Home and Entertainment division lost $1.2billion dollars in 2006. If that is "worked", then I have a bridge to sell you.
Re: (Score:2)
They have more money then they have interesting and compelling products so it may work for them although it's an oddball tactic. Paying people to use your products I think I missed that on econ 101.
I wonder how many 65% actually is. (Score:3, Funny)
interviewer: and how many people is that, exactly?
MS: well, 13, actually...
(dunno if my math is right...)
I actually saw a guy with a Zune yesterday (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Check out Google Trends for "zune" (Score:4, Interesting)
The news items that have been picked out are priceless (in chronological order):
-Microsoft Confirms Zune
-Microsoft Unveils Zune
-Microsoft launches Zune
-Zune misses top-10 sales list
-Zune Executive to Leave Microsoft
Re:Check out Google Trends for "zune" (Score:4, Funny)
-Zune Executive found dead due to acute "deceleration of chair to head"
I strongly doubt (Score:2)
Absolutely (Score:2)
The only problem is that I don't see how they could make more than $100, even on a two year contract. which is half the retail cost. I suppose if they are willing to lose money on the Xbox, then they can do the same thing on the Zune.
BTW, when I checked on google, it appeared no one has paid for the sponsored on the keyword zune, just the side ads. It is i
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Now, all they've got to do is make it price-competitive with a portable FM radio.
Re: (Score:2)
Trying to come onto the market with a big 30GB drive when everyone's buying the smaller flash-based players was pretty dumb. Personally, I like having a big HD to hold my entire music collection at once, but it seems like most people (especially teenagers with their fickle and quickly-changing tastes) want something s
Re: (Score:2)
Cause the cell phone industry is the one to follow (Score:1)
MS, you will have had 9 months or so to come out with a competitor to the soon-to-come iPod video. Instead you waste your time on marketing gimmicks instead of product. Why not bring out a nano-sized movie player with touchscreen controls? Give me an e-mail and I will design it fo
How many subscribers are there? (Score:1)
Wild Ideas being considered by the company (Score:2, Interesting)
Release it first! (Score:2, Interesting)
Nice slashvertisement (Score:2)
Kinder to the environment (Score:2)
Is price the problem? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Gotta love marketing
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The reason for having a true iPod dock jack is not for sound quality; it's for control. Some cars apparently (so I'm told) have controls on the steering wheel and/or stereo that allow you to control the iPod through this jack. Definitely a safety feature.
What annoys me is that other MP3 manufacturers haven't
So you would walk around with something ugly if it (Score:2)
I am KIDDING!
But geez, isn't the fact that the thing is fucking ugly reason enough? It don't even matter that the device is apparently available in other colors then brown, in peoples mind the device is brown and brown is NOT the color of an Mp3 player. It hasn't been the color of any consumer electronics in decades. It is the color of old stuff. When wood was still the only thing people found acceptable
Just like PocketPC/WinCE, got $10B to spare do ya (Score:3, Insightful)
I predict it'll take another 10 years but this time, it's gonna cost Microsoft atleast $20 billion in losses to do it. And, in 10 years, Microsoft will not be the same company it is now or was in the past. So, in about 5 years, you'll want to watch out for people driving their cars while attempting to reboot the Zune music player system.
Microsoft; the maker of innovative products businesses must be paid to sell and customers must be paid to use.
LoB
welcome to the social! (Score:2)
sign up for a zune pass!
welcome to the social!
sign up for a passport account
welcome to the social!
provide name, address, telephone number, age and credit card number to complete registration!
skip
welcome to the social!
sign up for a zune pass!
welcome to the social!
sign up for a passport account
welcome to the social!
provide name, address, telephone number, age and credit card number to complete registration!
skip
welcome to the social!
sign up for a zune pass!
welcome
Isn't this illegal? (Score:5, Insightful)
If Apple happened to ONLY make iPods, and Microsoft subsidised the Zune's sales, wouldn't they be trying to force Apple out of the market, by using their huge capital gained from software? That sounds illegal to me.
Re: (Score:2)
IANAL, but I'm pretty sure it's legal. There are two tactics that they could use that would be illegal. One, they lower the price and drive the competition out of the market, followed by them raising the price (i.e. predatory pricing). The other is if they use an existing monopoly in some way to gain a monopoly in music players. Neither Zune nor the Zune subscription service is a monopoly (they're not even significant players in the market). The only way I could think for them to do that is to lock out
Re: (Score:2)
You haven't been paying attention for a few years, have you?
This may be news to you, but here in the USA, we elected a guy named George W. Bush (the
Buy Vista ... get a FREE Zune... Oh wait.... (Score:2)
Well (Score:2)
EXCEPT : Microsoft has a history of loading products down with extra "features" no-one uses, but having the basic functionality be SLOW and buggy.
If *I* were a developer for a
So, shouldn't Jobs call Reindorp irresponsible? (Score:2)
Turnaround is FairPlay... so Jobs ought to suggest that it was irresponsible for Reindorp to speculate that Microsoft might engage in predatory pricing.
Jobs should call Reindorp "irresponsible" (Score:2)
When Jobs said that recording companies ought to eliminate DRM, the press reported that "Executives at the major labels dismiss Jobs' challenge, saying that eliminating DRM isn't going to happen," while Reindorp, "dismisses Jobs' remarks as 'Irresponsible.' [podcastingnews.com]"
Turnaround is FairPlay... so Jobs ought to suggest that it was irresponsible for Reindorp to speculate that Microsoft might engage in predatory prici
No Dumping... (Score:2)
Subscriptions only make a $3.00/month profit (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.zunester.com/2007/01/subscription-servi ce-finance-101.html [zunester.com]
I fully expect them to subsidize it! (Score:3, Interesting)
take Apple in the format war then they own the media and the only means by which to play it.
Zune 360 (Score:2)
Zune poem (Score:2)
if the premature squirt
had lasted a reasonable time?
Well, the R.I.A.A.
which still to this day
sees squirting as some sort of crime
If you own a Zune
and seek to commune
with others to squirt and to share
You ought to buy two
for they're scarce and they're few
to see one in public is rare.