Showing posts with label universal music group. Show all posts
Showing posts with label universal music group. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Universal Music Picks MediaCom for Consolidated U.S. Biz

Industry Execs Say Record Company on Track to Double Spending for Year


Universal Music Group selected MediaCom as its agency of record in the U.S. The company held a competitive pitch earlier this summer in a move to consolidate the work across its labels, according to industry executives.

With a budget range of $30 million to $40 million, said the executives, the company is nearly doubling its spend in the U.S. compared to 2010. According to Kantar Media, Universal spent $18.1 million in measured media last year.

"The music business is changing. We have the ability to apply social and search to conventional means of marketing," MediaCom North America CEO Harvey Goldhersz told Ad Age. He added in a statement: "We welcome the opportunity to work with our new business partners to change the rules of how record labels promote artists through media."

The firm will handle digital and traditional media for all labels, including Interscope Records and Def Jam Recordings, among others. During the pitch, UMG gave the agencies assignments to promote releases for several labels and artists of different genres, he added.

The assignments will likely go beyond traditional buys and get creative as the music industry moves toward direct distribution. Also, with new online music services like Spotify and Sonos, music companies are attuned to the looming threat to the labels' sales. They're looking at a fresh, digital-heavy marketing approach.

Despite the challenges and past financial setbacks, music sales are up, and 2011 is on track to become the first full year of positive music sales since 2004. The short-term bump is likely contributing to a heftier media budget, which the labels will need if they have any hope of stabilizing success in the long-run.

The agency already handles media responsibilities for Universal in Europe, Canada and Australia.
"Through our relationship in other parts of the world, Mediacom has already demonstrated to us their ability to think and execute boldly in the very complex modern music business," said Andrew Kronfeld, Universal's president of global marketing, in a statement. "Their creative ideas for how to approach media strategy and buying in the U.S. have shown us that they are the right partner for UMG."

For the agency, which lost the $800 million Warner Bros. account and its $1.4 billion GlaxoSmithKline account within a year, it's one more step in the right direction. Under Mr. Goldhersz, who replaced Doug Checkeris earlier this year, the agency recently won the U.S. Tourism and Spin Master accounts.

Universal Music Group labels include A&M/Octone, Decca, Def Jam Recordings, Deutsche Grammophon, Disa, Emarcy, Fonovisa, Geffen Records, Interscope Records, Island Records, Lost Highway Records, Machete Music, MCA Nashville, Mercury Nashville, Mercury Records, Motown Records, Polydor Records, Show Dog-Universal Music, Universal Music Latino, Universal Republic and Verve Music Group.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Virgin Media Close to Deal for Digital Music Service A trial could launch as early as this summer



In early 2009, Virgin Media announced that it was planning an unlimited music download subscription service in partnership with Universal Music, but none of the other major labels signed on. Yet according to the Guardian, Virgin Media is now close to signing a new deal with Spotify, and four record companies — which means that the digital music service might finally come to fruition.


The negotiations have taken so long to complete because Virgin Media also had to separately agree to terms with Sony Music, Universal Music, EMI, and Warner Music as they have the power to veto any deal Spotify does. But sources are now saying that a deal has been agreed to in principle and is “all but signed.”

If the deal goes through, Virgin Media plans to launch a limited trial of the service over the summer with full consumer availability coming this winter. Sources say that Virgin Media may offer the new music service as a “bundle” with other Virgin products like TV, broadband, and telephone.

Assuming that no one beats it to the punch, Virgin Media will be the first of the “big five” Internet service providers to launch a digital music service, says the Guardian.

Friday, July 30, 2010

Vevo Climbs Web Video Charts

The newcomer is now the No. 3 video venue on the Web...



The red-hot music site, a joint venture between Sony Music Entertainment and Universal Music Group -- with investment from Abu Dhabi Media and backing from Google's YouTube -- reached 48 million unique users in June, per comScore. That makes it the third-largest video site on the Web, trailing YouTube and Yahoo.

The venue -- which went live eight months ago -- has seen its user base grow steadily. According to company officials, Vevo now delivers 1 billion views globally every month.

In the U.S., the site appears to be reaching a broad cross section of viewers, as an impressive one in four Web users has logged on to the site, per figures compiled from comScore and YouTube Content Manager.

The site has also quickly penetrated the Hispanic and younger Web demographics. Vevo executives claim that the venue now reaches 27 percent of the U.S. Hispanic audience, or 7.4 million Hispanic users, and one in three U.S. video viewers age 18-34.

That growth positions Vevo especially well in the exploding online video market. This year, two-thirds of U.S. Internet users, or 147.5 million people, will watch some form of online video content at least once per month, according to eMarketer. By 2014, the number of U.S. online video viewers will represent 77 percent of Internet users, or 193.1 million people, according to eMarketer's forecasts.