Our first utility is the DEMU Jukebox. Users will be able to connect their digital wallet to any DEMU-compatible music player, and pay-per-stream, directly to the artist they’re listening to. Like a digital jukebox. Users pay less, while paying artists more, using crypto. With royalties paid directly to every collaborator involved with the record, automatically, instantly. Anywhere in the world.
This is how it works. We will build a repository of “smart” music files (DEMU), that anyone can link to any Web3-enabled site or app, then any user can connect their wallet to this Web3-enabled site (or app), in order to transact with it. When a record label uploads a song to DEMU, an NFT of the song is minted. This NFT enables a smart contract with the royalty distribution instructions of every collaborator of that song. So anytime anyone anywhere in the world presses "play", from any platform (web, mobile, eventually, metaverse, or any other digital space), every collaborator that was linked to the song at the minting of its NFT, gets paid. Microtransactions are not yet possible on Cardano in its current iteration. Our platform will batch transactions until a threshold set by the rights holder is reached, and then send payment for the “batch” of music streams.
This is just the first of many tools DEMU will build for the music business. Additional Web3 products like a Music NFT marketplace, event ticketing, social tokens, etc. can all be powered by DEMU and managed from one dashboard for the record label to better manage their roster & their content library as well as for the artists to better manage their careers and their relationship with their fans.
We define a record label as a company who owns the trademark of music recordings & videos, so while the DEMU suite of tools will be developed in partnership with established labels who support the creation of music, these tools will also be available to independent artists who seek to be their own record label.
This is the <u>Dapps</u> & <u>Integrations</u> challenge. Most Project Catalyst proposals are either/or, but hardly ever a Dapp and an integration. We’re both. The DEMU Jukebox Dapp will be our music player. It will simply be our own “portal” into this repository of music we’re creating. Record labels, artists, DJs, playlisters, etc can also connect to this repository via APIs for their own music players.
On the other hand, the DEMU platform will help integrate music into other company platforms. An example of one such integration would be a social platform, who would then be able to license music and transact directly with the record label, in a similar way to what Audius does with TikTok. But with a blockchain pipeline that ensures artists get paid for every play (unlike Audius, who do not pay artists at all).
Our value proposition impacts the trifecta of the artist, record labels, and most importantly, the fans. And if we're going to break the fourth wall… Cardano. The utility we build for the music business will lead to an influx of potentially millions of users, and thus value, to Cardano.
The biggest risk is not getting this done on Cardano. What I'm describing is inevitable in some form for the future of the music business. Music professionals are going to want automated royalty payments. NFTs. Web3. etc. and most importantly, control over their business. And once we become the financial platform-of-choice for an entire industry, it will be very hard to move them. We must build this music platform on Cardano before it is built on a competing blockchain. <u>We only have a small window of opportunity.</u>
We already have major label interest from legendary record label Def Jam Records. As the benefits of true music sovereignty become apparent, trust in the system and in blockchain overall grows, we can go from one major label - to their parent company, Universal Music Group. With a 54.5% music market share, they are the biggest record label in the world. Once that domino falls, Sony Music (23.4%) and Warner Music Group (12.1%) will soon follow. This would be huge for Cardano.
This is what your vote on our proposal would be supporting.
There are three additional, smaller risks:
1) Technical risk: Development on Cardano is ongoing. Will we be in sync with how the appetite of the music industry develops? What happens if Def Jam gets really excited & says “we want this now”, only to be required to wait on Hydra?
2) Budgetary constraints: $100k is not enough to build a paradigm-shifting revolutionary tech such as this platform. We will have to raise more money. Can we get enough built with $100k to satisfy an important use case for a major label client? And with that early success, warrant the raise of additional funds?
We have a plan to overcome these hurdles, but decided to mention the risks, so as not to create a credibility flaw by leaving them out of our proposal.
3) Will people be willing to pay-per-stream versus an all-in subscription?
Spotify pays artists $0.003 per stream, on average. According to this study commissioned by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), the average user spends 4 hours per week listening to audio streaming. If we estimate 3 minutes per song on average, that would mean that the average audio streaming user streams about 80 songs per week, or 320 songs per month.
Using the math above, you can see how the average Spotify listener is paying $9.99 per month to listen to $0.96 worth of music. In fact, the consumer would have to play music for over two weeks straight (3,333 songs), to warrant paying a $9.99 monthly subscription if they could pay per stream.
We're offering to help users pay less and simultaneously paying artists more. We think that listening to music in a way that directly supports the artists is also an amazing value proposition.