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IMS 2018: IMS Business Report 2018 reveals overall Electronic Music industry down 2% YoY to $7.3bn 


International Music Summit  released the annual IMS Business Report, an in-depth economic study of the Electronic Music Industry, covering all aspects of the genre. Today it was delivered directly to the key leaders in the music industry at IMS Ibiza by author Kevin Watson.

The IMS Business Report is the annual leading industry study that provides vital and telling statistics of how the industry has grown or declined each year. The contents and data are used by professionals across the industry, referenced countless times in market research and journalistic reports, and is an essential tool for the electronic music business.

The following report illustrates some shifts in the overall value of the genre with a slight fall by 2% YoY, encouraging statistics and activations for Spotify, how social networks are helping artist to grow their fanbases at extraordinary rates and how investment is remaining positive overall.

Some of the main points that were revealed today included:

North America:

Overall N.A. recorded music revenue grew 12.8% in 2017, but Dance/Electronic share in the USA & Canada fell YoY

Part of this was the crossover of many tracks by electronic djs and artsist into other genres such as pop and R&B.

Plus an adjustment was somewhat expected following recent growth so slight dip was expected.

Europe:

Dance share of recorded music also fell in Germany & UK in 2017, on the back of significant gains in prior years

Europe is a similar story electronic music share down YoY.

Asia:

A Nielsen study into music habits in Asia-Pacific found that Koreans are most likely to listen to Dance music.

In Asia recorded music is growing with 74% of the 500 people surveyed saying they listen to Dance Music.

Music Sync:

Electronic music can benefit from sync revenue growth (7% pa since 2013), partially driven by Netflix & Amazon.

YoY growth in sync, likely driven by Netflix and Amazon spending on original content.

Spotify:

Business valued at $28bn, subs forecast to double by 2020; Electronic music over indexes on the platform.

71 Million people worldwide subscribed and electronic music is at the heart of this streaming platform. The ‘Mint’ playlist greatly influencing this with 6th most popular playlist. The 3rd / 4th most streamed tracks on Spotify also are electronic music related.

Beatport:

Track sales growth almost doubled in 2017 and acquisition of Pulselocker enables launch of new services in 2018/19.

A fresh resurgence from Beatport – with growth of 8pc in Q1 and the introduction of the much anticipated future streaming service.

Forbes:

Estimated DJ Earnings rebounded in 2017, rising c.10% YoY; Calvin Harris down to $49m, Tiesto up to $39m.

The estimation of the highest earning djs - this year up to 279 million, most DJs earning more than year before.

Merchandise:

DJs are tapping into the rising demand for music merchandise; global sales grew by 30% between 2014 and 2016.

Merchandise helping to fuel DJs growth in earnings including brand collaborations. With electronic music events alos partnering with brands.

DJ Rankings:

Role of public votes is changing – RA Poll has ceased, Billboard Dance 100 also uses chart and touring data in its algorithms. DJ Mag also gets upward of 1 million votes per year and Billboard doing there own poll which includes chart success and touring.

Instagram:

Social network has just announced Spotify & Eventbrite integrations; Top 10 DJs now adding 50k followers a week.

The growth drivers can be attributed to two elements from Instagram. Instagram is now the focus of djs to increase their fanbase especially with the new activation of Spotify linking directly to Instagram stories.

You can also buy tickets for events from Instagram through eventbrite - this is a huge development and other ticketing platforms could come on board to instagram.

Online Fanbases:

Most popular DJs are continuing to focus on growing their fanbases on Instagram, YouTube and Spotify.

Marshmello has added 2 million Spotify followers within the past 12 months.

A number of emerging DJs & artists are growing their online fanbases on those platforms at even higher rates.

Festivals:

Worldwide expansion continues – China events expected to double in 2018, Ultra launched 23 new events in 2017.

Festivals continue to grow outside the core markets of North America and Europe. China showing extraordinary expansion led by Storm Festival.

Ultra adding 23 new events around the world making 45 in total.

Ultra Worldwide:

Attendance of 1m+ at 45 events in 20 different countries puts Ultra on par with the attendance of The Winter Olympics & Formula 1

Ultra operate in the same number of countries that f1 visits and is now one of the few entertainment brands that can deliver large scale events across the globe akin to properties such as formula 1.

Sonar:

Events now attract 124k attendees & 700+ artists a year, who represent over a third of the countries in the world.

25th anniversary this year.

Boiler Room:

In the 5 years to 2017 Boiler Room has grown its audience from 10m to 303m, and nearly tripled average viewing time.       

We don't have to be physically at an event to enjoy to enjoy it or take part in it.
Number of events doubled, but what they have delivered in terms of audience growth is phenomenal growing to 30 x the audience to 303 million.

BE-AT.TV

Top 10 locations on BE-AT.TV are from four continents, with Argentina, Germany & Mexico the most popular.

Argentina now being the most popular location to stream events.

M&A:

Spinnin Records acquisition by Warner for $100m is the 3rd largest Electronic Music deal in the past six years

Their YouTube channel has racked up almost 13 billion views and continues the trend of majors buying electronic music labels.

Investment:

Funding remains strong for companies focused on Electronic music, with a number of deals in the past year.

Native Instruments, Mixcloud and Splice have attracted 100 Million US dollars between them.

Hardware & Software:

Pioneer DJ & Native Instruments sales continue to rise; music production software market to grow at 9% pa.

Industry Value:

Overall Electronic Music industry down 2% YoY to $7.3bn; value of integration into mainstream culture immeasurable.

With the influence of electronic music impacting on many other pop culture musical genres. Not surprise that there has been a bit of an adjustment after such growth. Thinking 5 years ahead what would it be worth.

Industry Value:

If Electronic Music maintains share in each segment of the music industry, it could be worth nearly $9bn by 2021.

Additional info: