CNN/Fortune hated the idea so much that they listed it in their 101 Dumbest Moments in Business article. In 2007, Radiohead made their album In Rainbows available for download before physical copies were available in stores. You could choose to simply download the album or voluntary pay an amount of your choice. Radiohead didn’t reveal any statistics related to the download; the known data comes from comScore, who reported that:
- 62% of the downloaders chose to pay nothing
- The remaining 38% voluntarily paid an average of $6 for the album
Based on these numbers and Radiohead’s silence, the CNN/Fortune article inlcuded the sneering line “Can’t wait for the follow-up album, In Debt.”
It turns out that Radiohead’s experiment was actually a success. Techdirt points to a report on Music Ally that says that Radiohead’s publisher Warner Chappell will tell all about the In Rainbows experiment at the “You are in Control” music conference now taking place in Iceland.
The “success” of which they speak isn’t the hand-wavy “artistic”, “critical” or “proving a point” kind, but the sort of success that bottom-line thinkers like: In Rainbows made more money before the the album was physically released than the total sales for the previous album, Hail to the Thief. Even when preceded by a free or “pay what you can” downloads, In Rainbows has still sold 1.75 million copies of the CD to date, and it’s still in the top 200 selling CDs in the U.S. and U.K..
The Music Ally article has more details and includes these statistics:
- After being made available online for free for 3 months, In Rainbows hit number one on both U.S. and U.K. charts.
- 30,000 copies were sold on iTunes in its first week.
- 1.75 million CDs of the album have been sold since its release.
- 100,000 box sets have been sold through Radiohead’s sales and merchandising site, W.A.S.T.E..
- 17 million plays on last.fm.
- 1.2 million fans will see their tour.
- The digital income from the experiment made a material difference to Warner Chappell Music’s UK digital revenue this year.
8 replies on “Radiohead’s “In Rainbows” Experiment was a Success”
There’s a few questions that come up from this though:
1) Will it work for another Radiohead album? Or was it the hype that caused so many extra sales?
2) Did it sell better than the previous album because it was a better album? I can’t say either way because I haven’t listened to either. Not a huge Radiohead fan.
The figures show that In Rainbows was a major success for Radiohead. CNN comment was not a good act as it was against the sales figures.
More proof business reporters are an especially clueless bunch. Making judgements with out all the facts. How many people downloaded it? I don’t know but if it was downloaded 1 time for every physical CD sold that is$3.99 million. I bet that is a lot more than a reporter for Fortune makes.
I bought it. You couldn’t get it completely free. There was a ‘payment processing fee’ they hit you with at the end of the checkout (about $1 IIRC).
The approach must have worked really well, because the album really *stunk* (and I love some of the earlier albums). Totally self indulgent crap.
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