TranceAddict Forums (www.tranceaddict.com/forums)
- Music Discussion
-- Beatport Sales?
Pages (2): [1] 2 »
Beatport Sales?
How much do you figure beatport makes off the sale of your average trance tune? Perhaps not something off of monster labels such as Anjunabeats or Armada... but a small/respectable label such as Captured, Conspiracy, AVA, etc.
more than the person who actually made the song
Buttloads.
yea, buttloads.
think about this .. beatport requires each label to produce, what, $300 in gross sales a quarter?
multiply that by the currently 8,849 labels listed = 2,654,700 gross sales/qtr
say BP takes on avg 20% (guesstimate) -> $500,000 + per quarter.
that's if each label hits MINIMUM.. doesn't account for labels selling well over the requirement (i.e. the people selling consistently in top100), so i'm confident its way way more.
nice little business 
dammmmmm, plus beatport is doing hip hop too on beatsource
I am very interested in finding reliable sales figures for individual songs on Beatport... particularly psytrance songs. But in the business world it is easier to keep this sort of information under wraps and fuel speculation...
Good reason for them to abolish or at least reduce the outrageous wav handling fee.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Ben Brown nice little business |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by RJT Nice for them I'm sure, but how nice is it from your end? Seneca's? Any label or artist? Better yet, how is it for any label or artist who isn't on Armada, m_nus, or any number of other well established and highly profitable Beatport labels? I ask only because I don't know. Seems they do well at keeping the same names and labels near the top (obvious no doubt - this is a business after all, the point of which is to make money), but I really have no idea how well or poorly it benefits those who perhaps aren't at or near the top of the "I'm connected" pile. I've had little doubt as to how much money Beatport makes for quite some time - whether or not I think that's a good or bad thing for the EDM scene in general is a bit less clear. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Sadface I think that beatport rewards sales more than anything else, so in some sense, the big labels have "earned" their good ad placement on beatport's site, so its not necessarily just "hooking up their friends." Quite frequently I will see relatively lesser known artists and labels who have big hits which get little to no promotion at all. Later, I will see big ads for those artists when they release something new. Ultimately, Beatport is still just a download store, and it really doesn't have control over the tastes of EDM listeners, instead it has to respond to them. And to keep things in perspective, It's still MUCH better for everyone (small labels and consumers) than vinyl was. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by RJT I didn't think I said anything about "hooking up their friends." |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Sadface Thats basically what I thought you meant when you talked about the "I'm Connected pile." |
Most artists and labels don't make a lot of money. Only the big guys as said. Someone like Prydz gets thousands of downloads, but most don't. The top 10's are laughable too. Number one might get a couple of thousand downloads, but number 10 could easily get 300 sales... Not to mention numbers 11 to 20...
And as for the prices: Beatport gets 50%, the artist and label have to split the other 50. At least it was this way the last time I heard from a label owner, maybe things have changed the last couple of months. But I don't think so.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by RJT Really it's no different than the Pop v. Indie debate in mainstream music - but I definitely did not mean "we're bros, sort me out", sorry for the confusion. |

| quote: |
I don't think there's any arguing that there are a lot of "staple" labels on Beatport and that being connected to them (buddies or not) means sales for Beatport and promotion for the artist, which is obviously win-win, but I wonder as to whether or not it narrows the focus of EDM in general as well. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Sadface They're just one store (albeit the biggest one, I think), but do they even have 50% of EDM single sales on the net? |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Djeebie And as for the prices: Beatport gets 50% |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by RJT Nice for them I'm sure, but how nice is it from your end? Seneca's? Any label or artist? Better yet, how is it for any label or artist who isn't on Armada, m_nus, or any number of other well established and highly profitable Beatport labels? |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Sadface I just don't think that beatport's ads really have enough power to actually shift EDM in any meaningful fashion. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Sadface I just don't think that beatport's ads really have enough power to actually shift EDM in any meaningful fashion. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Ben Brown On my end its OK. Not great but that's expected in an early stage of a career/fan base. Numbers are confidential in all cases with labels/distributors. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Ben Brown Anyway, yea big dogs beat out little dogs all day in ANY industry, dance music isn't immune. Most of these labels take years to develop, have an incredibly loyal fanbase, and know the industry and marketing well enough to ensure success. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Ben Brown Also I can't remember seeing an Armada release in top 50.. they prob do 10x as many sales on iTunes since their sound is more consumer-friendly vs. the labels that put out DJ-friendly and 'underground' dance music (beatport's forte). |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by nefardec I do. the big names are so few. there are thousands of nameless deejays with residencies across the world that worship beatport |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by RJT I like the fact that on Beatport I can really dig and find some music that appeals to me, but I guess I worry whether or not they're set up in a fashion that puts smaller artists and labels I enjoy at risk. Again, this is all stuff I know absolutely nothing about but have been very interested in, so thanks for sharing some insight. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Ben Brown For sure. It would be in BP's best interest to facilitate growth of all dance music labels, but from a business perspective it's easier to sell dubfire than joe shmoe. It also costs a lot of money to hire people to market tracks,choose what should be featured, and all that's involved with selling, so ROI is important as well. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Ben Brown I'm confident that BP would be happy to see growth in the digital market from top to bottom, since they're going to be the primary distribution point (at least for now). However, I can understand that its tough to support ideals over profit when the bottom line is $ in business. |
)
It's true that the Internet provides great potential to search out more really obscure, diverse stuff, but it seems like most people make very little use of that, preferring to see the net as just a way of more quickly and easily obtaining stuff they already know and stuff their friends and peers are already listening to.
In some ways dance music has been homogenizing: people across the world can now become aware of which producers, tracks, and DJs are "big" everywhere rather than mostly being buried in whatever is hot in their local scene, and this phenomenon perpetuates itself as DJs around the globe download whatever the big tracks of the month happen to be.
And in other ways it's been diversifying: I would wager that most of us have a much more diverse, eclectic, and above all international roster of tracks in our possession than we would have had if there were no Internet music.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles It's true that the Internet provides great potential to search out more really obscure, diverse stuff, but it seems like most people make very little use of that, preferring to see the net as just a way of more quickly and easily obtaining stuff they already know and stuff their friends and peers are already listening to. In some ways dance music has been homogenizing: people across the world can now become aware of which producers, tracks, and DJs are "big" everywhere rather than mostly being buried in whatever is hot in their local scene, and this phenomenon perpetuates itself as DJs around the globe download whatever the big tracks of the month happen to be. And in other ways it's been diversifying: I would wager that most of us have a much more diverse, eclectic, and above all international roster of tracks in our possession than we would have had if there were no Internet music. |
Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright © 2000-2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.