Newest Music Strategies
New Music Strategies will be different in 2008. Here’s what we have to look forward to.
There’s been a constant thread running through New Music Strategies in 2007. You probably haven’t noticed it, but it’s been there all along. It has to do with my reluctance to predict the future, and talk about what the industry will be like. You’ll notice that I’ve avoided that, pretty much at all costs.
As a result, much of what I’ve discussed to date has been descriptive and reactive. Here’s what’s going on, here’s a way of thinking about that, here’s a strategy to deal with or maximise the possibilities inherent in the current environment — and so on.
In fact, the whole idea of this blog, the e-book and the seminars and workshops I’ve been presenting has been to understand the contemporary music environment as it is, rather than preparing for some hypothetical future that awaits us just around the corner.
New year, new approach.
No, I’m not going to start writing science fiction, engaging in crystal ball gazing and imagining the way things are going to be. I’m not going to start making wild claims about some new business model that will fix or change everything. That’s not what I do.
But there was a point to getting our heads around the contemporary music environment. It wasn’t just out of interest. It was Phase One.
The future is not something that’s going to happen to us — it’s something we can make happen. Now that we understand the new music environment, it’s time to take control and start shaping it.
This is Phase Two.
You heard me. In 2007, we learned about the new music business environment. In 2008, we claim it, take the reins and start driving it in a direction that suits us. It’s a direction that’s good for consumers, good for artists, good for entrepreneurs and good for music. It uses the new technologies, but it is not subject to them.
Technologies are tools, not rules. We decide how and when to use them. They don’t decide what happens to us. Best of all, we can get new ones made as and when we think of them. To our specifications.
In a couple of days, I’ll be writing the New Music Strategies New Years Resolution. It’s something that with your help, I want to fashion into a new Manifesto.
We’re taking 2008. It’s our year. There are going to be some pretty radical changes — to this blog, to my role, to the online music environment.
But this time, we’re driving the bus.






4 Comments, Comment or Ping
Tom Parnell
Crikey. I think that’s the first blog post I’ve read that’s had a ‘Riders of Rohan come over the crest of the hill at the turning-point of the battle’ kind of spirit to it. I felt there should be some kind of rousing soundtrack playing in the background, to accompany the reading process.
So - yeh - bring it on …
(And thanks for all the thoughts in 2007.)
Dec 25th, 2007
netvalar
I see we are thinking and acting in similar directions. I started music evolution network to test a couple of ideas, Since then with my blog moving towards the question of what is record label 2.0 and deciding along the way that music fans and artists working together was a step towards the answer. This then caused my ideas to alter before even reaching music evolution. As I have stated elsewhere 2008 is the year Netvalar explodes and helps put music fans to work with music.
For me though I am planning this congruent to adding more of todays ever changing industry. I just wanted to stop by due to the similar goals to 2008.
Dec 26th, 2007
M.Z.
http://smokingsection.rawkus.com/TSS/?p=2688#more-2688
Like your book & site, so I wrote a little piece about them. Hopefully it’ll bring some more people your way.
Jan 7th, 2008
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