Itâs been a big year for BitTorrent, said Matt Mason, the companyâs executive director of marketing. Mason and his team have been working with big names like DJ Shadow and Tim Ferriss to figure out how to turn file sharing into a source of revenue.
I met with Mason (who also wrote The Pirateâs Dilemma) last week to discuss how BitTorrent can work with the music industry and the companyâs plans for next year. Mason joined BitTorrent almost exactly a year ago, and since then, the company has run a total of 16 artist campaigns. It hasnât found the One True Solution to monetizing music yet, and Mason said the answer wonât come in the next few months, but the next quarter âwill get us closer.â
Not that he actually believes in a single answer. Instead, he said BitTorrent wants to provide âthe layer of toolsâ that artists need to monetize file sharing in whatever way makes sense for them.
âWe donât want to dictate what the business model is, because we donât know what it is,â Mason said. âThereâs not a business model for content in the digital world. Thereâs a new business model for every piece of content you release.â
The emphasis is very much on artist partnerships, not deals with record labels or movie studios. Since most people associate BitTorrent with illegal file sharing, I assumed the big entertainment companies want nothing to do with it, but Mason said thatâs not entirely true. (He also pointed out that BitTorrent drove 124 million legal music downloads in the first six months of the year, accounting for nearly one-third of the total 405 million music downloads on BitTorrent that were tracked by Musicmetric.) The bigger problem, he said, is that the entertainment industryâs terms are too onerous: âThe deals just donât make sense.â
So BitTorrent works with artists on one-off experiments. For example, it collaborated with DJ Shadow and his digital marketing agency Fame House to create a bundle with exclusive content around his release Hidden Transmissions From The MPC Era (1992-1996), and it ran ads for free software alongside those bundles. Mason said the company wasnât happy with the download interface, so it limited the ads to a few geographies, but even so, the campaign saw 18.5 million impressions, with 4 million people agreeing to check out the free software â" an impressive conversion rate of around 21.5 percent.
Mason described another partnership where BitTorrent worked with the filmmakers behind the movie Kumaré to create a bundle of promotional content (including the first 10 minutes of the film), spurring a fan campaign that helped expand the release from a single theater to 15 cities.
Listening to Masonâs examples, I noted that they covered a lot of ground, but never involved charging the consumer directly â" instead, BitTorrent drove purchases elsewhere (for example by promoting movie ticket sales or iTunes downloads) or monetized through advertising. He responded, âThatâs what weâve been able to do so far, but maybe weâre just not very good at this.â As BitTorrent expands its efforts, it could add tools for fans to pay artists directly, Mason said. At the same time, he said the company doesnât want to repeat its past mistakes, which include an unsuccessful experiment with opening a storefront (an effort that eventually led to the company giving back its Series C and downsizing dramatically). BitTorrent needs to focus on his strength, he said, namely âmoving data,â and around that core focus it aims to build whatever tools artists might need.
Mason was willing to make one generalization about the way the music industry is changing. Music was once a âfast-moving consumer goodâ and could be marketed accordingly, he said. Now itâs more ârelationship based.â Instead of running an ad and trying to convince someone to buy a song or an album immediately, musicians need to focus on building a relationship, then in six months they can sell their fans a t-shirt or a digital download â" and hopefully continue selling to those fans for the rest of their career.
But doesnât that sound like a lot of work for relatively little reward? Mason countered that in the traditional system, convincing radio DJs to play your single wasnât easy, either.
âItâs a hard business â" only 0.1 percent of people are going to make it,â he said. âThatâs always going to be true. People ask me, âShouldnât artists have all the time in the world to create great music?â But most of the creative artists Iâve had the fortune to work with have also been great hustlers. The hustle is changing, and what it means now is understanding data.â
BitTorrent creates advanced, innovative technologies to efficiently move large files across the Internet. The companyâs two main products today include the original BitTorrent software and the tiny-but-mighty µTorrent, which combined boast over 150+ million users. BitTorrent is based in San Francisco, Calif. and is backed by Accel Partners and DCM. BitTorrent is a globally-recognized creator of software and technology designed to help help people find, share and move digital media over the Internet. The company has built an orchestrated ecosystem...
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