Automating Google Workspace (GWS) & more with Apps Script
Music2: The Future of Radio (media futurist Gerd Leonhard)
1. Gerd Leonhard
Presentation at RadioDays 2007
Music 2.0 and the Future of Radio?
www.mediafuturist.com
Gerd Leonhard www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 1
2. Radio used to have a
Monopoly in
Attention!
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 2
3. The problem is not the new
ideas - but how to get rid of
the old ones.
So let’s start there.
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 3
4. Radio today: competition coming from all sides
Social Networks and Blogs
Car Audio Systems
Wimax Music
Ipod
Podcasts
iphone
Satellite Radio
Mobile Music
What’s good about all this: Choice
What’s bad about all this: The Paradox of Choice
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 4
5. Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 5
6. Me, September 2007
Friction is Fiction
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 6
7. SMS +41 79 79 353 84
Across the world, 1.1 Billion
People use the Internet, 1.4
Billion watch TV, and 2.2 Billion
use Mobile Phones
So HOW will RADIO be consumed in the Future,
and what is its value proposition (both for music and for audio)
Gerd Leonhard www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 7
8. The Net Generation:
I program my media
- it does not program
me!
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 8
9. The key drivers of Change
• Broadband
• Mobility
• Social Networks
• Blogs and User Generated Content (UGC)
• Total Fragmentation of the Audiences
• Globalization (and localization)
• Convergence
Gerd Leonhard www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 9
12. W e a r e h ea d i ng int o a a cc el e ra t i ng
c o nverg enc e o f A ud i o a nd V i d eo .
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 12
13. And in advertising
By 2008, online advertising
spending in the US is
expected to surpass radio
advertising spending
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 13
14. A few shocking facts from the U.S.
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 14
15. In the US: tuning
out of Radio is
guaranteed
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 15
16. Radio ad
revenues
are not
going
away -
they just
won’t be
growing.
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 16
17. and then comes...
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 17
18. ‘How’ will matter less and less. ‘What’ will matter more and more
Gerd Leonhard www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 18
19. Remember when Radio had a
Monopoly in
Attention?
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 19
20. Consumers inevitably use the best
innovations that are available - legal
or not
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 20
21. three
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 21
22. Imagine a page, a button, a Canvas where
you simply put all the stations that you
want to listen to.
A canvas that you can always have with
you (see Netvibes, iGoogle), no matter
how you receive the content.
Radio fills the need
to filter Choice.
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 22
23. Consumers are, now more than ever before,
seeking consolidated, trustworthy content,
recognition and community - even more when it
comes to mobile and Internet entertainment
This is still the biggest
opportunity in Radio.
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 23
24. New technologies often disrupt ecosystems
but always make the market bigger
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 24
25. The De-Walling:
• Music formats will be either open or 100% compatible -
DRM is the past
• Music as a service will become a default setting, and
the ‘sell units’ paradigm is ending
• Creation of new revenue flows will be more important
than controlling distribution
• The People formerly known as Consumers are gaining
more power by the minute
• Music licensing will be drastically simplified
Isn’t Radio the definition
of Music as a Service?
Gerd Leonhard www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 25
26. Thanks to the Net Generation & the
Digital Natives,
Social Networks on the
Internet are the
Next Radio
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 26
27. Global Social Networking is already bigger than Radio in the U.S.
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 27
28. The People formerly
known as Listeners
(aka Consumers)
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 28
29. The Medium formerly
known as Radio
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 29
30. Soon, most of them will
get most of their ‘Radio’
via any digital network
- the Internet dominates
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 30
31. Why is your station not broadcasting on
Facebook, Lunarstorm, Sulekha.net or Orkut?
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 31
32. Because
In all Media, Push is
becoming Pull
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 32
33. Just different words for the same thing...
Broadcasting
Streaming Tubesocking
Public Playlisting
Performance Download
Listening Streamripping
PodcatchingCopy
Buffering
Caching Digital
Renting Phonographic
Delivery (DPD)
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 33
34. The most important development in the
Context of Radio Licensing is The
Flat Rate for Digital Music
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 34
35. And for Public Radio
The Net Generation will not
continue to pay a public
Radio or TV License without
archiving, time-shifting,
place-shifting and device
shifting - i.e. with build-in
DELIVERY options
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 35
36. The Reality is:
• The Internet is a Giant Copy Machine
• Digital Radio IS Distribution
• From the listeners standpoint, Digital Radio
MUST offer time / place / device shifting
which is... Distribution
• Case in point: RSS and the Google Reader
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 36
37. The bottom line:
In media, Friction is now
Fiction
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 37
38. Very soon -
listening IS receiving
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 38
39. A Logic Challenge
Radio is Free
Records / CDs are not
If the Internet is the New
Radio -
are Copies are ‘free’ ?
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 39
40. EU Radio in 3-5 years
• 100% digital (in all its variations), and 50%
converged with the Net
• All stations everywhere,anytime, any way
• Video and Audio converge
• Community features are a standard
• Geography fades, borders become soft
• License is both questioned and then expanded
(based on a Flat Rate for Digital Music)
• Advertising2.0 emerges
• Public Radio offers full archives on-demand
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 40
41. EU Radio in 10 years
• The term “Radio” simply refers to
‘curated programming’
• Public radio is the #1 curator of a huge
digital library
• The ‘Copy versus Performance’ (listen
versus own) distinction is over
• Everything is on demand - few or
nothing remains scheduled
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 41
42. The trigger factors:
• Highspeed Wireless Internet everywhere
• WiBro in the car
• 4G Wireless cell phone networks fully
deployed How
long?
• Radios with WLAN chips
• Cell phones with DAB receivers (and WLAN)
• Mobile computing devices that talk
effortlessly to each other
• Web5.0 as easy as a TV remote control
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 42
43. What is good about Radio?
What is good about Audio on the Internet?
***
*** **
• Free or feels like free
• Ubiquitous
*
• Easy to use for anyone
**
• Does not require engagement
***
• Trusted, professional curators
***
• Known brands
*
• Local context
• Strong tradition
• Great way to discover music
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 43
44. Radio’s Future is on the
Internet, with the Net
Generation, and with fully
integrated Content Delivery
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 44
45. The 5 Inevitables
1.Radio must support time-shifting
2.Radio must support space-shifting
3.Radio must support sharing
4.Radio must support interactivity
5.Radio must support community
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 45
46. Radio is a perfect fit for the experience economy
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 46
47. This is where the growth is
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 47
48. The new currencies in Media
• Getting (and keeping) attention
• Trust
• Influence
• Reputation
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 48
49. And advertising follows the trends of
mass-personalization
Souce: Booz Hamilton Report
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 49
50. From
Impression to
Relevance
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 50
51. Integrate the audience! Provide a
platform!
The NYT went ‘open access’ 3 days ago - after
maintaining a wall for the past 5 years (incl. RSS)
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 51
52. You must take Radio’s walls down,
too:
• Archive Access
• Web-based access on all platforms
• Radio as social medium
Don’t hide behind any wall.
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 52
53. Changes in the content industries
Content 1.0 Content 2.0
Distribution Attention
Shelf Space Mind-share
Mass Marketing Niche Marketing
Monolog Dialog
Influence &
Control
Reputation
Control Attention & Trust
Gerd Leonhard, Music & Media Futurist
Monday, January 21, 2008 53
54. So if I ran the circus, I would...
• Widgetize my radio stations (syndicate radio shows
via embedded players), turn them into channels on
social networks
• Turn my listeners into active network members, roll
out Engagement programs
• Offer archives of everything, no matter what
• Mobilize my radio station
• Demand extended licensing grants, and one-stop
licensing
• Lobby for a digital music flat rate
• Push converged service: audio, video, text
• Build my brand and become an EXPERIENCE
Gerd Leonhard Music & Media Futurist www.mediafuturist.com
Monday, January 21, 2008 54