A New Life for Napster?

After terrorizing the recording industry and almost single-handedly ushering in the future of the music business, Napster is going mainstream. Gone are the rule-breaking, paradigm-busting pioneers—replaced by traditional thinkers and strict adherence to the law. Napster lost its battle with the music industry and for a while lingered in bankruptcy, and now wants to play by the rules and make a go of it as a legal music service. Unfortunately, it is no more likely to succeed this time around.

Why? Even though Napster is a small startup in a hip new industry, it is already racing ahead to the Flats portion of the business lifecycle, and will soon be entering the Swamp along with all the other players in the online music market. Roxio, Inc. purchased Napster with the intention of leveraging its famous name into a large share of the music download market. That’s a tenuous hope at best.

One of the basic tenets of the Phoenix Principle is “be distinct or be extinct,” and Napster is not yet distinct. This is a crowded market with very little differentiation among the players, and new companies are still getting into the market. The latest heavy-weights to enter the fray include Microsoft, Virgin, and Yahoo (through its purchase of Musicmatch). Napster’s strategy, to provide subscription services, is already being offered by established music services and it puts forward nothing new there. Nor are its marketing ploys such as pre-paid gift cards and targeting college students with giveaways likely to distinguish it from the crowd. These are simply too easy to copy.

The online music services industry is still in high growth mode, projected to grow at a double-digit rate for several more years. That puts it in the Rapids, so all the players should enjoy high growth for a while. But what happens when the music stops (so to speak), that is, when growth slows and the market becomes saturated? Commoditization, that’s what. When that happens everyone who doesn’t have a differentiated service offering will be plunged into the Swamp, and companies will begin to fail or consolidate in a Defend & Extend effort to find and preserve some profits.

Napster isn’t earning any profits now and won’t for a while, so Roxio is depending on $100 million in cash to keep it afloat. That won’t be enough. Napster needs to revisit its Success Formula now and devise a truly distinct value so that when the industry stops growing, it will remain strong. For instance, it could leverage its bad boy image in many ways—constantly “tweaking the nose” of the majors might help it develop a huge and loyal following among the rebellious youth.

The Phoenix Principle predicts that Napster is already set up to fail and the clock is ticking. Perhaps it would have been better for this industry icon to remain a martyr than to end up as just another business model gone belly-up.

Tags