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iTunes Sales Ban Does Increase CD Sales

Guinnessy writes "According to the New York Times, some music labels have deliberately stopped selling some new singles on online stories such as iTunes or Rhapsody while promoting songs on the radio, so that listeners will rush out to buy the CD album instead. The album appears in itunes at a later date. Not everyone seems to think this is a good idea. From the article: 'The labels are shooting themselves in the foot,' says Rhapsody's Tim Quirk. However, Ne-Yo's CD In My Own Words sold 301,000 copies using this method. Chris Brown's Run It, that was in the itunes store, sold 154,000 copies in its first week. Ne-Yo's So Sick was downloaded approximately 3.4 million times on the peer to peer networks during the week of his album release while the album Run It!"was downloaded approximately 5.3 million times in the same release period."

2 of 185 comments (clear)

  1. Re:From one sample to conclusion by op12 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Agreed...if the study is not based on numerous samples, this is garbage. And even then it can still be skewed. This is no way to measure the effectiveness/ineffectiveness of iTunes sales. You'd be just as accurate flipping a coin to tell you whether it impedes sales or not.

  2. try this by troll+-1 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Search online before you rush out and drive 15 miles in your SUV to get that latest CD.

    Message to the music industry:

    The horse and buggy distro system of funny plastic disks has been superceded by an Internet. Tune in or drop out.