Key Report Highlights
Digital music sales estimated to double to around US$2 billion in 2006
Single track downloads estimated up 89% at 795 million
Tracks double to four million, via 500 online services in over 40 countries
Portable music players help drive digital music consumption
New revenue streams and business models emerge
Lawsuits impact illegal file-sharing, but ISPs must act to curb digital piracy
Record labels have become digitally
literate companies, selling an estimated US$2 billion worth of music online or
through mobile phones in 2006 (trade revenues), almost doubling the market in
the last
year.
Digital sales now account for around 10% of the
music market as record companies experiment and innovate with an array of
business models and digital music products, involving hundreds of licensing
partners.
Among new developments in 2006, the number of
songs available online doubled to four million, thousands of albums were
released across many digital formats and platforms, classical music saw a
digital dividend and advertising-funded services became a revenue stream for
record companies.
However, despite this success, digital music has
not yet achieved the holy grail of compensating for the decline in CD sales.
Meanwhile, digital piracy and the devaluation of music content are a real
threat to the emerging digital music business.
Research suggests legal actions against
large-scale P2P uploaders some 10,000 of which were announced in 18 countries
in 2006 have helped contain piracy, reducing the proportion of internet users
frequently file-sharing in key European markets. Yet actions against individual
uploaders are only the second best way of dealing with the problem. IFPI is
stepping up its campaign for action from ISPs and will take whatever legal steps
are necessary.
The conclusions are published today in IFPIs
Digital Music Report 2007, a comprehensive round-up of developments in
the sector.
IFPIs report shows how the record industry is
combining digital technology with its traditional skills of discovering and
marketing music. It also sets out where the music sector needs action by
government and its industry partners to tackle piracy and prevent the
undermining of its intellectual property rights.
Digital is empowering the music consumer
Consumers are finding that digital technology is
helping to change their purchasing habits. They are taking advantage of the
unlimited shelf space in online stores, buying recordings that would have long
vanished from the shelves of even the largest offline stores.
Recent months have also seen digital music
distribution channels diversify. A-la-carte download services, led by iTunes,
remain the dominant digital format, but they compete in a mixed economy with
subscription services, mobile mastertones and more recently new
advertising-supported models and video licensing deals on sites like YouTube and
MySpace.
Mobile music accounted for about half of global
digital revenues in 2006, but the split between mobile and online varies sharply
by country. In Japan around 90% of digital music sales are accounted for by
mobile purchases. 2007 could prove to be a landmark year in the mobile music
market, as handset makers such as Nokia and Sony Ericsson develop their music
phone series. Meanwhile, Apple has announced the launch of the much anticipated
iPhone.
Portable players are one of the major drivers of
growth in the digital sector. New figures show that the proportion of portable
player owners who source mainly from paid downloads is roughly the same as the
proportion who source mainly from unauthorised P2P and free websites (14%). Yet
there is still concern at the relatively low levels of digitally purchased music
that is stored on devices.
There is mixed news for the industry when it
comes to digital piracy. Independent research analysts Jupiter suggest that
record number of high-profile lawsuits against large-scale uploaders in 2006 did
have a deterrent effect on illegal file-sharers. As broadband penetration
across Europe doubled to 40% between 2004 and 2006, the proportion of users
regularly file-sharing fell from 18% to 14%. In the US, lawsuits were the most
cited reason by computer users for changing from unauthorised P2P to legal
downloading (NPD Group, June 2006).
Key successes against illegal operators were
recorded in 2006, including Kazaa in Australia, Bearshare in the US, ZoekMP3 in
Netherlands and Kuro in Taiwan.
Yet digital piracy is still a massive problem for
the music industry and one of the major reasons that the surging legitimate
digital market is not expected to make up the shortfall in the decline of the
physical market in 2006.
IFPI Chairman and CEO John Kennedy said:
The record industry today has evolved into a digital thinking,
digitally literate business. Revenues in 2006 doubled to about $2 billion and by
2010 we expect at least one quarter of all music sales worldwide to be digital.
This is a market combining evolution and revolution, where the learning curve
is changing direction on a regular basis.
The chief winners in the rise of digital music
are consumers. They have effectively been given access to 24-hour music stores
with unlimited shelf space. They can consume music in new ways and formats an
iTunes download, a video on YouTube, a ringtone or a subscription library.
Yet the market remains a challenge. Other
industries, such as film and newspapers, are struggling with the same problems
that we have had to live with. As an industry we are enforcing our rights
decisively in the fight against piracy and this will continue. However, we
should not be doing this job alone. With cooperation from ISPs we could make
huge strides in tackling internet piracy globally. It is very unfortunate that
it seems to need pressure from governments or even action in the courts to
achieve this, but as an industry we are determined to see this campaign through
to the end.