Brian McAndrews, the new Chief Executive Officer of Internet radio giant
Pandora, faces competition from Apple's new iTunes Radio service.
By Kathleen SeccombePosted September 20, 2013 12:00 pm
After just a few days on the job, Brian McAndrews, the new Chief
Executive Officer of Internet radio giant Pandora, is already faced with
a serious challenge. As of Wednesday, the company is competing with
Apple’s new iTunes Radio service, which many analysts believe could end
Pandora’s long-standing domination of the Internet radio market.
McAndrews’ arrival comes at a challenging time for the 740 person company.
iTunes Radio has 27 million tracks in its catalog compared to
Pandora’s one million. Listeners also have the ability to buy a song
while they are listening to iTunes Radio, an option Pandora doesn’t
offer. Will Abramson, founder of Yours Truly, a music blog based in San
Francisco, says that it remains to be seen whether iTunes Radio will
surpass Pandora as the leader of internet radio.
“The listeners like [Pandora’s services] because it has the human
touch,” Abramson says, noting that Pandora has music professionals
vetting each song they put into their catalog.
Abramson also added that the iTunes Radio catalog is so vast that a
listener won’t have enough hours to even hear a fraction of the
songs. “Having a huge catalog is an asset, but the fact is you are only
going to cover a sliver of those 27 million tracks.”
Since Pandora launched in 2000 it has accumulated a deficit of $139.6
million due largely to a burdensome royalties contract. The company had
a huge jump in revenue over the past two years, from $138 million in
2011 to $427 million in 2013. However the operation expenses, including
royalty payments, marketing and administrative costs, increased at an
even faster rate than the revenues. In 2011 the company reported a net
loss of $1.8 million. Two years later the company reported an even
greater loss of $38 million.
The current contract Pandora has with Sound Exchange, a non-profit
responsible for managing the distribution of royalty payments,
compensates the artists and recording label on a per play basis. Each
time a song is played on Pandora, the artist receives a fraction of a
penny (.0001). The 14 billion hours of radio that Pandora streamed in
2012 cost a hefty sum, with more than half of Pandora’s $427 million in
revenues going to royalty payments.
Preparations for the negotiations of a new royalty contract lasting through 2020 are already underway, says Westergren.
As CEO, McAndrews will be expected to make the company financially
sustainable even at a time of increased competition. From 1999 to 2007,
McAndrews was the CEO of fastest growing digital marketing company of
that time, aQuantive.
“He has a rare combination of ad, technology, media experience,” says Westergren.
Pandora announced on September 11th that McAndrews would
succeed Joe Kennedy as the company’s CEO. Speaking at the Bank of
America Merrill Lynch Media Communications and Entertainment Conference
in Beverly Hills the same day, Pandora founder Tim Westergren told an
audience of media business types, “[McAndrews] is digging in already…We
want to get him up to speed as soon as possible.”
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