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MP3
sites see ad revenue jump thanks to Napster
Napster may or may not be good for CD sales, but online music
sites can thank the popular file-swapping service for a substantial
surge in revenues last month, according to a new study. Advertising
spending at online music sites jumped dramatically in the
week after a federal judge clamped down on the music company,
according to AdRelevance, a division of online traffic measurement
company Media Metrix.
Before the ruling, advertisers spent about $2 million on music
and streaming sites. In the week after, that figure jumped
to about $5 million, researchers reported. Soon as the
Napster ruling came down, people flocked to the music sites
and created an opportunity for advertisers to jump into the
action, said Marc Ryan, one of the authors of a report.
The report comes amid a heated debate over the commercial
impact of Napster and other free file-swapping networks that
allow users to find and trade music and other digital content
online without paying copyright holders.
The recording industry has sued Napster arguing that the service
which launched barely a year ago has already
cut significantly into revenues. In its complaint, the Recording
Industry Association of America cited a study conducted by
SoundScan that suggested slowing CD sales at music stores
located near college campuses.
That report was countered by research published by Jupiter
Communications noting that Napster users buy more music than
consumers who dont use the service. The AdRelevance
report sheds light on a mostly-overlooked aspect to the economics
of file-swapping by tracking the advertising dollars that
have followed the enormous consumer interest in the product.
The increase in marketing dollars traced to Napster highlights
a less welcome trend for online media, however, by offering
more evidence of the volatility of Internet advertising. In
August, U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel ordered the
company to stop allowing copyrighted works to be traded on
its system, a decision Napsters attorneys said would
effectively shut down the service.
The order touched off a flurry of activity at online music
sites as music lovers apparently rushed to the Net to get
free copies of their favorite tunes before the services were
blocked for good. The rush didnt go unnoticed by advertisers.
In February, for example, Media Metrix recorded 1.1 million
unique visitors to the Napster site. After the July 26 court
ruling, Napster hosted 4.9 million unique visitors.
The high traffic numbers lured new advertisers such as State
Farm Insurance, Bonzi Software, Allstate, Network Solutions,
X10, and Citicorp. Ryan and Martin looked at 23 Web sites
including Napster, SonicNet.com and AudioFind. The surge in
revenues was short-lived, however, as traffic and advertisers
retreated after a federal appeals court agreed to temporarily
suspend Patels decision pending Napsters appeal.
The reality is that advertisers need to look where they
will be able to reach the most people so they follow fads,
Ryan said. The problem with this strategy is, are they
reaching the right audience.
Sports sites are experiencing much of the same bounce in advertising
revenues during the Olympics, but analysts say the games wont
likely kick-start Web ad spending by big-brand advertisers,
which have mostly stayed on the sidelines of the online marketing
game. As for the music sites, Ryan believes there will be
another rush of visitors after another Napster court hearing
in the appellate courts. And advertisers will likely take
advantage of that traffic.
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