Should Apple add subscription service to iTunes?

“Apple Computer Inc’s dominance in digital music faces new challenges as online subscription services from Napster and others take off and pressure the iTunes owner to begin ‘renting’ music in addition to selling downloaded tracks, analysts said on Thursday. Apple declined to comment on Thursday, but Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs has often said subscriptions will not succeed because people want to own music, not rent it. To be sure, several analysts said Napster’s revised revenue forecast was still a drop in the bucket to Apple, which sells an estimated 90 million to 100 million downloads a quarter,” Reuters reports.

“Jupiter Research analyst David Card expects by 2009 that subscriptions will outpace downloads, generating $890 million in revenues versus $800 million for download sales. ‘Subscriptions are a great thing for real fans because you get access to a lot of music. The appeal is it’s on-demand. As long as you keep paying, its all there,’ he said,” Reuters reports. “‘We think many millions of people will be buying 5 to 15 downloads per year versus fewer, a few million, who will spend 10 to 15 dollars a month for subscriptions,’ he said. ‘We’re looking at 100 percent growth rates for the next three or four years in digital music sales and in digital music players,’ said Phil Leigh, analyst with Inside Digital Media. Leigh expects Apple’s dominance will be challenged. ‘Apple sold 8 million iPods in 2004, or 70 percent of the market. They will probably lose some market share over the next few years, but if they offer subscriptions, I think that loss of market share will be less,’ he said.”

‘Many industry watchers believe Jobs would change his stance if Apple’s iTunes download store — which has fueled sales of its iPods — was challenged by subscriptions,” Reuters reports. “‘The only reason they have iTunes is to sell iPods. If it turns out subscription services are important to sell iPods, they’ll probably get into that business,’ said Card.”

Full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: If subscription services prove to be attractive to people, then Steve Jobs will probably flip the iTunes subscription switch to “on,” but not until Napster and the rest pay for educating the public about the subscription model first. And if subscription services flop or make little impact, no problem for Apple. Apple is in a “win, win” situation here, presuming that they’ve already got an iTunes subscription model ready to go if need be. It would be very hard to imagine that Apple doesn’t already have a subscription plan option waiting, just in case.

Related MacDailyNews articles:
Napster’s math does not add up – February 28, 2005
Napster’s dirty little secret: changing subscription services into downloads is easy – February 18, 2005
AOL removes Napster pirate plug-in ‘Output Stacker’ from website – February 17, 2005
Napster feels the heat over flawed copy-protection scheme – February 17, 2005
Apple CEO Steve Jobs warns record industry of Napster To Go’s security gap – February 16, 2005
Users thwart Napster To Go’s copy protection; do the music labels realize the piracy potential? – February 15, 2005
Napster-To-Go’s ‘rental music’ DRM circumvented – February 14, 2005
Napster’s ‘iPodlessness’ doesn’t bode well for its future – February 10, 2005
Analyst: Napster To Go service no threat to Apple’s iTunes Music Store – February 04, 2005
Why ‘Napster To Go’ will flop – February 03, 2005
Apple to add subscription-based option to iTunes Music Store? – December 06, 2004

38 Comments

  1. All of you bitched and moaned about this issue when Napster and MS toyed with the idea of subscription based music. Now you all clamour to the idea that Apple doing it as a Great Idea!.Make up your minds paople.You guys are a bunch of brown nosing, skin flutists, brainwashed by the maggots in Cupertino.

    G.A.C.

    MW “Hall” as in You are all a part of the Hall of Shame. L’s

  2. All of you bitched and moaned about this issue when Napster and MS toyed with the idea of subscription based music. Now you all clamour to the idea that Apple doing it as a Great Idea!.Make up your minds paople.You guys are a bunch of brown nosing, skin flutists, brainwashed by the maggots in Cupertino.

    G.A.C.

    MW “Hall” as in You are all a part of the Hall of Shame. L’s

  3. personally i would find a subscription based option very handy it would just let me listen to all the music i want for as long as i want before i go and buy it on cd ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”smile” style=”border:0;” /> hate it when i buy a cd and i like only one or 2 songs on it

    brought to you by the magic word “John” or John Peel RIP 🙁

  4. Anybody thought about the musicians, I’m thinking about the smaller bands not the u2’s. On iTMS the get paid what they get paid. But with nap and others how do they decide. Do the most famous people get more cash because they are more popular or would it be fair.

  5. My point from last post was the 99 cent model is good for the artist the nap model is for the record companies, not the artist. Say no to subscriptions. (yes i am a musician)

  6. Real music fans have been buying their music since they were preteens and stealing their music since the real Napster was created.

    Real music fans have sizeable music collections already.

    They don’t need no stinkin’ rental service.

  7. The real issue here is the fact that the iPod is dominating the hard drive portable music player sales right now, and this could be something that threatens it.

    If Napster gains any traction from their model, it won’t just hurt the iTunes Music Store – it will hurt iPod sales. People won’t buy an iPod because of their inability to subscribe to any service but Apple’s.

    Personally, I prefer Apple’s buy-to-own model. I think it works better for me, and if I need lots-and-lots of music, there’s always Shoutcast and a stream recorder than exports to iTunes.

    The thing is, everyone is convinced that the iPod is selling so well because it is better hardware. This is true, but hardware selling software hasn’t been the only business model for quite a while now, and the competition clearly can’t beat Apple on the hardware front. They are now moving to the software side.

    I don’t have much faith in a subscription model, but if there is anything that is a danger to Apple’s dominance in this market, it is on this front. Apple’s hardware is great, but the software inside of it has the potential to cause people to make a different choice in music player.

  8. I still beleive the subscription model to be a stupid one. But people like to make stupid choices: hence MS dominance. They want to get fleeced? Let ’em.

    If Apple went with the opposite approach as Napster and made it clear to people this means you don’t get to keep your music any longer than you pay for it and basically make it out to seem like a dumb idea to go that route, even though it’s your choice, I think it’d be a good idea. Choice is choice. Just be honest about how much one choice sucks compared to another you offer.

  9. I wouldn’t be interested in a subscription model, but I would be interested in an audition model. Sell iTune prepaid cards that would give you a month or longer of total access to all songs offered. That way I could listen to more than the 30 second sample and see which songs I really want to pay for and own.

  10. The subscription model isn’t a technical issue for Apple but it is a licensing issue. To get all of the record labels lined up without them forcing Apple to change its $0.99 track fee might be impossible. If you like the current iTMS model you definitely want to root for subscriptions to fail.

  11. scrawler, good idea, so if your a regular buyer you can preview the whole song and lots of other songs too

    surly apple must have the capabilty to allow us to preview the whole song yet prevent someone recording it, maybe do a hmv style preview where it adds interference on the song

    brought to you by the word “toward” as in to ward of the compatition (sic)

  12. I’ve already commented about my interest in an iTMS subscription service and ideally it would be something like scrawler’s idea, without any extended contract. It would be convenient to start and stop a “subscription” any time, without penalties. Conceptually cool, but maybe there’s still too too little cooperation and too much theft, greed, and control for such a service to successfully exist with the current immaturity of our digital community/economy.

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