If you like good music, you’re almost certainly aware of the iconic indie label Sub Pop. Apparently, Sub Pop’s creative juices aren’t just focused on putting out great music these days, but they’re considering how to adapt their business model to the changing music landscape, and I’m happy to see that they seem to have realized the key point that I’ve been making for years: infinite goods make scarce goods more valuable, so free the infinite and sell the scarce. Sub Pop is apparently considering starting to give away new music, while focusing on selling tangible goods related to the music (found via Hypebot):
“Although Sub Pop is primarily known for its many fine artists and their really very fine recordings (also grunge), we’re not at all opposed to expanding into the fine world of t-shirts, hats, beer cozies, and key chains,” Jaspers says. “We used to give many of these tchotchke items away for free in an effort to entice people to pay for the music, but we’re considering flipping our strategy so that people pay for the toy and receive the music for free. Just a thought.”
Basically, it’s a recognition that people want the music, but they’re also willing to pay for a physical good as something of a “souvenir” or additional scarce and valuable “art” that is made more valuable by the connection to the music. Sub Pop’s art director, Jeff Kleinsmith, is apparently looking to go in creative directions with this:
Regardless of age, there’s always going to be people who prefer to touch and make stuff that’s like, physical. CDs may end up being little books. We’ve talked about this at work, where you might spend the time to do a cool package, it just doesn’t have a disc in it. And instead of a disc, you’ve got a little piece of paper that says “go here for your download.” So you’re getting everything about it except for that plastic disc, you know. I would love to see that.
And that could be a magazine, it could be a shirt, it could be a sticker on a banana, it could be anything, really, that has that download. It could be a poster, a thing associated with this music.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Connecting Authors To Tangible Goods They Can Sell? (techdirt.com)
- Significant Objects Becomes A Book… More Infinite Goods Creating New Scarcities (techdirt.com)
- Intellectual Property: Dying Among Libertarians? (reason.com)
- The scarce and the infinite: Considering the Significant Objects book, and its story (hermenaut.org)