On Tuesday I
felt the impact.
Going all
the way back to when I worked in a record store, I always looked forward to
Tuesdays.
New music
day.
The day when
new album, cassettes and CDs were released.
When I
worked for BMG Music as a Sales Rep. my favorite day to do store visits was
Tuesday. Not only was it the day I’d first get to see the new product I sold to
the retail outlet on the shelves, but I also got to see what else was new.
Over the
years, the retail environment for music has changed considerably. These changes
didn’t get in the way of my New Music Tuesday ritual.
My ritual
simply shifted online.
Every
Tuesday I found myself sitting at the computer, checking out what was new in
the world of music. New music on Tuesday has always been something I always
looked forward to. What else is there to look forward to one Tuesday? KFC
doesn’t even do Toonie Tuesdays anymore. All I had to look forward to on
Tuesday was new music.
This past
Tuesday there was no new music. I was unable to go to my computer and see and
listen to what was new and I felt empty because of this.
The music
industry recently decided to change the official new release day from Tuesday
to Fridays. This change took effect last week and being the fan of new music I
spent a portion of Friday evening seeing what was new.
Sadly not
much.
I was
genuinely shocked. Switching the new release day for music from Tuesday to
Friday is a fairly significant change. You would think that the record
companies would try and have some fairly significant releases come out on that
first Friday of the new schedule, to help entice people by new music on
Fridays.
That’s what
helped Record Store Day take off. Sure it’s great to support the little
independent record store, but you can technically buy albums any time of the
year. To make Record Store day that much more appealing, having unique releases
that are only available on Record Stare Day drew in crowds.
I’m not
aware of any activities done by any retail outlets, both physical and online to
promote the new Friday release date. Apple sent out a variety of materials to
help the stores…did they get used? What’s going to entice the general public to
go into a music store or peruse iTunes on a day they typically don’t. The
hardcore music enthusiast will make the effort, I already admitted I did, but
what percentage of the target audience are hardcore music enthusiasts? What was
being done to get John Q Public to check out new music on a Friday? Is that
something John Q Public wants to even consider doing on a Friday?
One of the
reasons given for the move was movies, video games, books, etc all tend to come
out on Tuesdays and so new music was continually competing with these other
products for a share of the disposable income wealth. Sure moving the release date
to Fridays takes them out of the already highly competitive Tuesday market, but
has the industry considered what consumers tend to spend their money on
Fridays?
On Fridays
people are thinking about what and where they are going to spend their money.
Are they going out of town, going out for a movie, going out for drinks, for
supper, do you have activities planned? Some people get paid every second
Friday, so they may also be thinking about paying bills, mortgage, car
payments, getting groceries for the coming week. Those are some pretty hefty
important things that are most likely going to be priorities over new music.
When new
release day was on Tuesday, chances are those hefty options where no longer concerns. Once the weekend is done,
the money that is left in consumers’ pockets is considered disposable income
and that’s when they start thinking about purchasing items like DVDs, video
games, books and music. When new music came out on Tuesday it was competing for
disposable income. Consumers aren’t thinking that way on a Friday and new music
runs the risk of getting lost.
As you've probably guessed, I'm not a fan of this change. It's just another example of the music industry making decisions based on assumptions instead of facts, focused on what benefits them not the consumer or their retail partners. Worst of all, making decisions without their target audience in mind. Aside from the labels, the only people I've heard say anything positive about this change.
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