Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Mobile music adoption ‘passes tipping point’

Added:
Feb 27, 2008

The total value of the global mobile music market is expected to rise to more than $17.5bn by 2012, driven by rental music services and full-track downloads, according to a new report by Juniper Research.

According to report author Dr Windsor Holden, “I think it’s fair to say that 2007 marked the tipping point as far as mobile music adoption was concerned. Far more subscribers began downloading and subscribing to music content in developed markets, and it must be said that that the publicity surrounding the iPhone launch undoubtedly contributed to consumer awareness of mobile music services per se.”

 

However, the Juniper report also argues that current prices for ringtones are unsustainable and that the market for such services may already have peaked in a number of developed markets, arguing that competitive pricing allied to a steady migration to ad-funded and/or self-generated ringtones will lead to a gradual decline in global ringtone revenues.

 

 “With some operators now offering full-track downloads at a comparable price to iTunes, there is little justification for a ringtone retail price point that is in many cases two or even three times this level,” said Holden. “Furthermore, those aggregators whose portfolios are largely dependent upon the polyphonic ringtone will be unable to survive in the medium term unless they both rethink their pricing strategies and substantially diversify their product portfolios.”

Other findings from the Juniper report include:

 

The China/Far East region will remain the largest regional marketplace for mobile music services, accounting for around 43% of sales per annum over the next five years, the report found.

 

Significantly, the report goes to forecast that ringtones, which accounted for 62% of the mobile music market in 2007, will account for just 38% by 2012.

 

The report argues that more operators should emulate the Vodafone model and introduce similar subscription-based music rental services.

 

Juniper Research assesses the current and future status of mobile adult services based on interviews, case studies and analysis from representatives of some of the leading organisations in the growing mobile adult services industry.

White papers and further details of the study 'Mobile Music Services: Ringtones, Ringback Tones and Original Recordings (4th edition)’ can be freely downloaded from
http://www.juniperresearch.com .

 

Document Actions
Subscribe to Netimperative Newsletters

Email address:


Daily
Weekly
Search Marketing
Events
Publishing & Media

Send as:
Text
HTML

Alternatively, click here to unsubscribe

Digital Training Academy
Digital Training Academy
Essential skills for today's marketers: boost your team's results with customised advanced digital marketing coaching from world class trainers at the Academy.
Mail our academy managers Ask our tutors for more
Full details here...
Digital marketing audits
Digital Training Academy

Getting the best ROI from your websites, emails and online ads? Sure?

Our digital marketing audits review your current and planned campaigns to find ways of cutting budgets without cutting impacts.

Mail our academy managers Ask for more
Full details here...
 
Digital events
Latest polls
Mobile ad networks
Apple's iAds Vs Google's AdMob- which do you think will be most succesful in the long term?



Votes : 114
Comment
Right to reply: The New Twitter – a sticky, revenue-rich service that blitzes the third-party apps
Twitter is now a 'destination website' and that means it is gunning for Facebook, but cleverly avoiding a direct dogfight. It’s more an information network than a social network and so is offering much, much more. Tanya Goodin, CEO of search and social conversion agency Tamar comments…
Sep 16, 2010
Right to reply: ‘Instant Search’– Google giveth then taketh away
Google has just announced its “streaming search” service, Google Instant, is coming out of limited Beta testing and going live for all users. According to Adam Bunn, Head of Search at leading independent search and social marketing agency Greenlight, when it comes to search engine optimisation campaigns (SEO), some websites may now suffer a drop in traffic.
Sep 10, 2010
Guest comment: No rival to the SMS text exists in the market today
SMS is the obvious “lowest common denominator” mobile marketing solution... yet critics still talk about apps and website and vouchers. Darren Daws, Managing Director at Txtlocal argues why SMS is still the best mobile marketing medium, even on smartphones.
Aug 04, 2010
All subject items…