在线音乐市场中的明星与失败者:信息技术对知名度、艺人传播和粉丝活动的影响

M. Bourreau, Sisley Maillard, François Moreau
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引用次数: 4

摘要

在文化市场,如书籍、音乐或电影,销售集中在少数非常成功的产品上。对销售不平衡的一种解释是信息不完整:消费者对大多数产品知之甚少,因为只有一小部分产品在线下世界可见和推广。根据长尾假设,随着数字化的发展,利基产品的可见度不断提高,可以改善消费者的信息,从而降低销售集中度。在本文中,我们研究了在音乐产业中,网络推广是否提高了“弱势”艺术家或“明星”的知名度。我们使用原始的大型可见性指标数据集,包括离线(例如,新闻报道)和在线(例如,Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, YouTube或LastFm),在新专辑发行后的6个月内,大约1000名艺术家。首先,我们调查了互联网在多大程度上民主化了获得知名度,我们检查了艺术家及其粉丝为克服潜在的缺乏知名度而采取的在线推广行动。我们发现,虽然线下最受欢迎和最受关注的艺术家在网上也是最受关注的,但弱势和首次亮相的艺术家的观众更强烈地参与支持他们的推广工作。然后,根据艺术家在传统媒体渠道的知名度,我们使用面板向量自回归(PVAR)模型来探索艺术家的广播活动(艺术家生成的内容)、粉丝活动(用户生成的内容)、艺术家的在线声誉(粉丝数量)和一种免费的在线消费形式(音乐流媒体)之间的相互作用。我们的主要结果表明,网络观众支持的推广只对弱势艺人有积极的影响,而艺人在社交媒体上的直播活动对音乐流媒体没有直接的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Stars vs. Underdogs in Online Music Markets: The Effect of IT on Visibility, Artists’ Broadcasting, and Fans’ Activities
In cultural markets, for books, music or movies, sales are concentrated on a small number of highly successful products. One explanation for the skewness of sales is incomplete information: consumers are poorly informed about most products, because only a small proportion of them are visible and promoted in the offline world. With digitization, as suggested by the Long Tail hypothesis, the increasing visibility of niche products could improve consumer information, and thus reduce sales concentration. In this paper, we study whether, in the music industry, online promotion improves the visibility of “underdog” artists or that of “stars”. We use an original and large dataset of indicators for visibility, both offline (i.e., press coverage) and online (e.g., Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, YouTube, or LastFm), for about 1,000 artists over a 6-month period following a new album release. First, we investigate the extent to which the Internet democratizes access to visibility, and we examine the online promotional actions taken by artists and their fans to overcome a potential lack of visibility. We find that, while the most popular and visible artists offline are also the most visible online, audiences of underdog and debut artists are more strongly engaged to support their promotion efforts. Then, we use a panel vector autoregression (PVAR) model to explore the interplay between artists’ broadcasting activities (artist-generated content), fans’ activities (user-generated content), artists’ online reputation (number of fans) and a free form of online consumption (music streaming), according to the artist’s visibility in the traditional media channels. Our main results suggest that the promotion supported by online audiences has a positive effect on music streaming only for underdog artists, whereas artists’ broadcasting activities in social media have no direct impact on music streaming.
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