Writer/Publisher Buzz

Songwriter D. Vincent Williams has opened Black Ink Music Publishing, a Nashville-based independent music publisher. A former staff writer for Warner-Chappell Music, Williams has penned hits including ACM Song of the Year “I’m Movin’ On,” recorded by Rascal Flatts, and James Otto’s recent No. 1, “Just Got Started Loving You.” He will serve as the new company’s CEO. Joining Williams in the new venture are Melinda Duncan, Eric Gioia and industry veteran Noah Dewey. Black Ink’s roster of writers includes Williams, Duncan, Justin Lantz, Cliff “Crash” Cody and writer/artist Matt Jenkins. The company will celebrate its official kick-off this week at a private, invitation-only event.

NSAI’s annual songwriters festival, Tin Pan South, is coming up Tuesday, March 31 – Saturday, April 4. Venues around Nashville will come alive with a slew of in-the-rounds and songwriter showcases. NSAI will post a calendar of Tin Pan South events on Wednesday, (3/11) and make a “Fast-Access Pass” available that same day. The pass allows attendees advance seating (room permitting) over those who purchase tickets at the door. Fast-Access Passes will also be available online at http://www.tinpansouth.com/tickets.asp. NSAI will hold a Festival Preview Party tomorrow, Tuesday (3/10), from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. at The Rutledge, 410 4th Avenue South. In addition to announcements regarding Tin Pan South details, Kelly Archer, Regie Hamm, James House and Rissi Palmer will perform in the round.

Nashville hit songwriter Layng Martine, Jr. (Reba McEntire’s “The Greatest Man I Never Knew,” Trisha Yearwood’s “I Wanna Go Too Far”) has written a poignant and inspirational story that appeared in Sunday’s (3/8) New York Times. “In a Charmed Life, a Road Less Traveled” tells the heartrending story of the songwriter’s wife, Linda, who became a paraplegic after a devastating car accident. With unflinching honesty and emotional frankness, Martine, Jr. tells of the accident’s effect on their lives and their love, both of which have grown deeper and more meaningful as a result of the tragic event. It’s an inspired read and well worth your attention. You can link to the story at http://tinyurl.com/bnoou2.

The Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Foundation has elected Dr. Bethel “Bo” Thomas, Vice President for University Advancement, Belmont University; and Kelli L. Gabriel, Sr. Vice President and Financial Advisor, Morgan Stanley in Nashville; to its 2009/2010 Board of Directors. The NaSHOF Board also elected its 2009 officers. Roger Murrah will serve a fourth term as Chair. Other newly elected officers are: Vice Chair – Wayland Holyfield, Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member; Vice Chair – John Van Mol, CEO of Dye, Van Mol & Lawrence; Secretary – Pete Fisher, Vice President/General Manager, Grand Ole Opry, Gaylord Entertainment; and Treasurer – Layng Martine, Jr., songwriter.

Nashville music industry veteran Paul Compton has launched Music Highway Writer Services, a music catalog representation and writer management company. Most recently, Compton served as Senior Vice President of Murrah Music Corporation, where he placed the No. 1 smash, “I’m Movin’ On” with Rascal Flatts and also pitched Billy Currington’s 2008 ASCAP Song of the Year, “Good Directions.” To learn more about Music Highway Services, contact Compton at [email protected] or at (615) 289-0769.

Team McGraw Strikes With “Bowling for Brains”

The Tug McGraw Foundation, founded in memory of pitcher Tug McGraw to fund brain tumor research, has announced its return to Nashville’s Country Music Marathon & 1/2  Marathon on Saturday, April 25. As a warmup for the big race, Team McGraw, an endurance sports training program that raises money and increases awareness for the Foundation, will host “Bowling For Brains,” a party celebrating its marathon runners Friday, April 24 from 5:30 pm to 9:00 pm at Nashville’s Tusculum Lanes. The party, which is open to all marathon participants, will feature bowling, a silent auction featuring guitars signed by Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, a “carb-out” pasta and potato bar, and entertainment from the Warren Brothers, Lance Miller, McGraw’s road band The Dancehall Doctors and special guests to be announced. Tickets can be purchased online at www.tugmcgraw.org for $10 to $25, and sponsorship opportunities are available. “Kicking off our 2009 season here in Nashville with the Country Music Marathon and 1/2 Marathon is a thrill,” McGraw said. “We are excited to see so many dedicated new runners joining our running alumni to take on Music City.”

Hall of Fame, Dolly Unplugged & Sheila E. Goes Country

Ray Talks Hank
The legendary Ray Price visited the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum recently (3/7) to share memories of his close friend and mentor, Hank Williams. The interview was hosted by WSM-AM radio personality Eddie Stubbs and was presented in conjunction with the museum’s exhibition Family Tradition: The Williams Family Legacy, co-Presented by SunTrust and Ford Motor Company. (L-R): Stubbs, Price and museum writer/editor Michael McCall, who curated the Family Tradition exhibit. Photo:  Donn Jones

Sheila E. Named CMT Gone Country Winner
CMT’s Gone Country host John Rich tapped Sheila E. as the third season winner during the finale on March 7. Sheila won with “Glorious Train,” the song she penned with Nashville songwriters Angie Aparo and James Slater while taping the series. The single is produced by Rich and went out today via the CMT Radio Network. The accompanying video, directed by Sean Weber-Small, debuted after the finale and is currently in rotation on CMT and CMT Pure as well as via CMT.com.

Dolly Unplugged
Dolly Parton stopped by CMT last week to to record an episode of the CMT online series Unplugged At Studio 330, including classics “Jolene” and “I Will Always Love You,” as well as songs from her new album, Backwoods Barbie. The episode will premiere online at CMT.com on Tues., March 31. (L-R): Brian Philips, Exec. VP/GM CMT; Parton; Dolly’s manager Danny Nozell; and Jay Frank, Sr. VP Music Strategy CMT. Photo: Brian Tipton

Carrigan on Nashville Cats
Legendary drummer Jerry Carrigan told humorous anecdotes and spoke candidly about his storied career on Feb. 21 at the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum. Carrigan was honored as part of the Museum’s quarterly series Nashville Cats, which shines a light on Music City’s renowned session musicians. (L-R): pianist Hargus “Pig” Robbins, guitarist/producer Jerry Kennedy, bassist Bob Moore and Carrigan. Photo: Donn Jones

Godin Warns Radio At CRS

Seth Godin describes himself as “bestselling author, entrepreneur and agent of change.” (sethgodin.typepad.com) Judging by the intensity and depth of his CRS Keynote address (3/4) his quote seems accurate. Godin has written ten bestselling books including Tribes, Purple Cow and Meatball Sundae plus holds an MBA from Stanford University.

The speaker began by suggesting that root level changes in our culture and technology, are forcing mass media companies (i.e. newspapers, radio stations, music, TV) to evolve. “The entertainment industry was perfect,” Godin began, “but things have changed. Either your boss gets it or you will have to leave them behind,” he replied to a question from the audience. “When mass media attracted the masses, people designed products to be average so they would appeal to that large mass of average consumers. But mass media no longer has a mass audience. It’s fragmented.”

According to Godin’s view, the music industry used to be perfect because there were entire chains devoted solely to selling its products (record stores) and there was scarcity created by the high costs associated with recording and marketing. These factors limited the number of record labels, and FCC-created scarcity limited the number of radio signals. The result, he explains, was a type of oligopoly with a high barrier to entry. But Godin warns that these barriers are dramatically changing. “Wi-fi in cars will mean consumers have an infinite number of stations to choose from. And the cost of recording is no longer a barrier at all.” Summing the new problems Godin said, “Piracy is unstoppable, scarcity is gone and having the RIAA sue your customers hasn’t worked.”

Aiming squarely at the radio audience, Godin urged the industry, to “leap from the old biz to the new. Timid trapeze artists are dead artists. Start dating your listeners and getting their permission for you to send them emails. Radio needs to again be in the scarcity business and can do that by finding a unique niche. The longtail is coming to radio. People want to LOVE what you are playing, not just LIKE. Be their curator and they will pay attention.” The Long Tail concept is all about niche marketing and having smaller, but very loyal audiences.

Godin believes the music industry has passed from an A&R mentality to Brand Management and is now moving toward Tribe Management. “Tribes are key to who we are, our work and our spirituality,” he says. “We can belong to lots of tribes at the same time, all connected. But mediocre won’t work for a tribe. A Tribe must earn its authority to exist from the members and building a tribe requires commitment before success. You can’t market average stuff to average people. Tell a compelling story and your fans will spread the word. “When your communications are anticipated and personally relevant to each member,” says Godin, “then you know you have a loyal tribe.”

Some of the Tribe-building ideas mentioned were; Authenticity—do what you said you are going to do, all the time; challenge the tribe to spread the word; create a culture or secret handshake; be curious and commit to growth; and stand for something.”

Godin readily admits that not all ideas will be strong enough to form and attract a tribe. “You must be able to convince at least 10 industry folks to join before moving forward,” he advises. According to Godin, this concept of Tribes is the rationale for the behavior that is driving the meteoric growth of social networks like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter. Understanding it will be essential toward building careers and media loyalty.

Injured Jewel Dancing With the Stars, NOT

She was psyched for the competition, but Jewel’s appearance on ABC’s Dancing With the Stars has been cancelled due to injuries. The singer collapsed during early rehearsals for the top-rated dance show. What was initially thought to be an attack of tendonitis or ligament strains turned out to be much more serious — fractured tibia in both legs. The “stress fractures,” just below her knees, were reportedly very painful, forcing Jewel to withdraw from the competition. Doctors expect a recovery period of 6-9 weeks. Her husband, rodeo champion Ty Murray, will go ahead with his participation in the show. Also forced to pull out of the competition due to injury was TV host Nancy O’Dell, who suffered cartilage tears in both of her knees. Replacements for the two stars have yet to be named.

ACM Names New Artist Award Winners

The Academy of Country Music has named Julianne Hough, Jake Owen and Zac Brown Band Top New Female Vocalist, Top New Male Vocalist and Top New Vocal Duo or Group, respectively. The Academy, along with Great American Country and dick clark productions, partnered to allow fans to decide the winners of the three categories through online voting on the GAC website. Each winner will perform and receive their trophy on the Sara Evans-hosted GAC special, ACM Top New Artists, which premiers March 19 at 9 p.m. CT.

Finally, one of the three artists will be chosen as Top New Artist, a new category that will also be decided through fan voting at www.VoteACM.com. Online voting for ACM’s Top New Artist begins on March 16 and will close on April 5. The winner will be announced live during the 44th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards Sunday, April 5 at 7 p.m. CT on CBS.

CRB Announces Humanitarian, Radio Promotion Awards

Country Radio Broadcasters, Inc.® announced recipients of its Radio Promotion Awards, Artist Humanitarian Award, Radio Humanitarian Award and Tom Rivers Humanitarian Award yesterday, (3/5) at CRS-40.

Radio Promotion Awards:
Large Market
1st Place: KILT/ Houston, TX — “Ten Man Jam”
2nd Place: WUBL/Atlanta, GA — “A Taste of Trisha Yearwood”
3rd Place: WXTU/Philadelphia, PA — “Text 2 Win Julianne Hough at Your School”

Medium Market
1st Place: KCCY/Colorado Springs, CO — “Acoustic Happy Hour”
2nd Place: KFDI /Wichita, KS — “Christmas in a Box”
3rd Place: WQMX/Akron, OH — “Send Me Backstage”

Small Market
1st Place: WKKR/Opelika, AL — “Wall of Water”
2nd Place: KRYS/Corpus Christi, TX — “Independence Day”
3rd Place – Tie: WFYR/Peoria, IL — “Valentine” and KZPK/St. Cloud, MN — “We Fest”

Artist Humanitarian Award: Randy Owen
Owen co-founded Country Cares for St. Jude Kids® in 1989. To date, Country Cares has raised more than $345 million to fund cancer research. Past honorees include Brad Paisley, Brooks & Dunn, Garth Brooks, Charlie Daniels and Kenny Rogers.  Last year’s recipient, Clay Walker, presented Owen with the award on Wednesday, (3/4).

Radio Humanitarian Award:
Large Market: 97.3 WGH, Norfolk-Virginia Beach, VA
This year’s honoree pursued year-round public service efforts benefiting  Country Cares for St. Jude Kids, the Center for Child and Family Services in Hampton Roads, the March of Dimes and the Susan G. Komen Race For The Cure. Their monthly guitar auction “Chords For The Cause” benefits a different non-profit each month. WGH is also involved in military causes and provided aid to those affected by local tornadoes.

Medium Market: 107.7 WIVK, Knoxville, TN
The 2009 honoree enlisted Randy Owen for a benefit concert for victims of a local church shooting and John Michael Montgomery to help collect 1,400 pounds of food for Second Harvest Food Bank. Performances from Joe Nichols and Jewel helped raise money for local Knoxville schools. WIVK also sponsored “Feed The Need” to help feed the homeless, and “Buddy’s Barbeque Race Against Cancer” to raise funds for Cancer Outreach Services. Radiothons have benefited Variety Children’s Charity and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, among others.

Small Market: 93.3 WFLS, Fredericksburg, VA
This year’s honoree successfully encouraged listeners to contribute more than $150,000 to charities, including the Children’s Miracle Network, the Salvation Army, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and more. The station enlisted listeners to donate blood to the American Red Cross, school supplies to the Spotsylvania and Stafford County School Supply Collection and food to the Fredericksburg Area Food Bank.

Tom Rivers Humanitarian Award: Mick Anselmo, Sr.
During his tenure at KEEY-FM, Anselmo organized and created a radiothon which has helped raise more than $12 million for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. His partnership with Sharing and Caring Hands of Minneapolis set a food drive record. Anselmo also created Project Northern Lights, which collected calling cards for troops in Baghdad.

P1 Study Shows Popularity of Social Networks

This year’s Country Radio Broadcasters, Inc.® and Edison Research’s National Country P1 Study 2009 polled more than 13,000 listeners online via email invitation to explore what listeners expect to see and hear on their favorite stations’ web sites, how listeners feel about syndicated versus local programming and the importance of social networking sites among Country P1s. It is the largest ongoing national study of country music listeners and marks the fourth year the survey has been conducted and results presented at CRS. The results were announced today (3/6) at CRS-40 in downtown Nashville. According to Tom Webster, Vice President of Strategy and Marketing for Edison Research, “The majority of the country radio listeners we surveyed have profiles on one or more social networking sites. Status updates and other ‘presence apps’ are how listeners increasingly share their interests, videos and even new music that they like. Though country radio is still the most widely cited means of discovering new country music, radio stations must learn to embrace social networks and interact with their listeners wherever those conversations are happening.”

Of those surveyed, 62 percent reported having a profile on at least one social networking site. Facebook was the most popular site reported (42 percent). 27 percent of online audio listeners surveyed listened “at least a few times a week” to their favorite local country station on the Internet.

77 percent reported that they are listening more to country music on the radio than they did last year. 84 percent of those expressing an opinion agreed that Country music makes a positive contribution to American life, with 57 percent “strongly agreeing.”

19 percent were “very pessimistic” about the economy, while eight percent reported they were “very optimistic.” 18 percent said the economic situation changed for the worse, with 20 percent reporting that someone in their household lost a job in the last year. 77 percent of the sample reported cutting back on discretionary expenses.

CRS—Scene & Heard

E1 Music and PLC Records held a showcase at Second Fiddle last night (3/5) for CRS attendees. Cledus T. Judd debuted new music from his forthcoming CD, Polyrically Uncorrect and Cody McCarver was announced as the newest performer on E1 Music’s artist roster. Dennis Haskins, the actor who played Mr. Belding on Saved By The Bell, co-emceed the Bull of the Woods Gear-sponsored showcase along with Judd. Performers included Daryle Singletary, McCarver, Danny Shirley of Confederate Railroad, Sammy Sadler, Amanda Henkel and Brock Hawkins. (L-R): Sadler; Singletary, McCarver; Henkel; Haskins; and Hawkins.

Holly Williams photo: Peyton Hoge

Holly Williams photo: Peyton Hoge

UMG Nashville hosted a showcase at The Stage last night (3/5). With a line that stretched down Broadway, artists such as Darius Rucker, Charles Kelley, Michelle Branch, Randy Rogers Band, David Nail and Jake Owen came for a night of music with Holly Williams and Jamey Johnson.


ASCAP’s Connie Bradley and Pat Rolfe congratulate Gerry House on his induction in to the Country Music DJ Hall of Fame. (L-R): Bradley, Allyson House, Gerry House and Rolfe. Photo: John Briggs

CMA Presents Consumer Research To CRS Attendees

CMA Consumer Research Committee Co-Chair David Ross; CMA Chairman Randy Goodman; former EVP, Chief Consumer Officer for Starcom MediaVest Group and current Principal for The Right Brain Consumer Consulting, LLC Jana OBrien; CMA Consumer Research Committee Chairman Joe Galante; EVP/Director of Research Services for Leo Burnett Carol Foley, CMA Chief Executive Officer Tammy Genovese; CMA Board Member Ed Hardy; CMA Board Member Jeff Walker; and CMA VP Strategic Marketing & Communications Dan Bowen gather after the CMA consumer research panel at CRS-40. Photo: Amanda Eckard/CMA

CMA Consumer Research Committee Co-Chair David Ross; CMA Chairman Randy Goodman; former EVP, Chief Consumer Officer for Starcom MediaVest Group and current Principal for The Right Brain Consumer Consulting, LLC Jana OBrien; CMA Consumer Research Committee Chairman Joe Galante; EVP/Director of Research Services for Leo Burnett Carol Foley, CMA Chief Executive Officer Tammy Genovese; CMA Board Member Ed Hardy; CMA Board Member Jeff Walker; and CMA VP Strategic Marketing & Communications Dan Bowen gather after the CMA consumer research panel at CRS-40. Photo: Amanda Eckard/CMA

The CMA presented findings from its Country Music Consumer Segmentation Study to CRS attendees this morning, (3/5). The data presented is part of an extensive study commissioned by the CMA to define and examine the key consumer revenue drivers for country music. The study, was based upon a phase one sample of over 7,500 consumers, with a call back sample of 1,850 and also featured 10 focus groups from three regions—Charlotte, Chicago and Phoenix. “The project is perhaps the most far-reaching and comprehensive study of Country Music consumer attitudes and behavior ever undertaken,” said Brian Philips, President of CMT and a member of CMA’s Board of Directors. “The broad sample of more than 7000 consumers gives it statistical reliability we haven’t seen before.”

The study was conducted by Leo Burnett Company and Starcom MediaVest Group using proprietary BrandProspect Segmentation techniques. The CMA Consumer Research Committee was chaired by Joe Galante who, together with other CMA stakeholders, was instrumental in helping to design and fine tune the study’s mission. “We intend to present the findings in a very direct way and continue to respond to changes in the marketplace,” said CMA CEO Tammy Genovese. “We want our constituent groups to fully understand the challenges we face and have a clear vision of what needs to be done to find and engage our consumer in a way that will help build a base of revenue.”

CMA will provide the complete CRS presentation on the CMA member Web site, where CMA members can access the presentation and audio files with their member password. Information will also be included in CMA’s bi-monthly member publication CMA Close Up, beginning with the April/May edition.

The Key Findings presented below are from a CMA press release. Music Row will present its own analysis and questions based upon this data early next week.

•   •   •

Country Fans—Core & Low Funding
[CMA Press] Approximately 2 in 5 American adults ages 18-54 (39.6 percent) qualify as “Country Music Fans,” as defined by the study. These individuals further split into two major groups based on current and potential revenue contribution: a small group or “Core,” who account for the vast majority of Country Music spending; and the larger group “Low-Funding” who engage heavily for free in the Country Music pipeline, but represent future revenue growth potential.

“The ‘Low Funders’ don’t spend a lot of money, but they do spend a lot of time with Country Music,” Jana O’Brien (former EVP, Chief Consumer Officer for Starcom MediaVest Group and current Principal for The Right Brain Consumer Consulting, LLC) explained.

For the most part, they are who you think they are. Demographically, The Core Country Music user is “a bit” more likely to be Caucasian and from smaller towns. They skew slightly female, but there is no significant age or income difference from non-Country Music users.

What does distinguish them from Poor Prospects is a blend of attitudes and behavior across three key dimensions: Affinity (“I like it”); Engagement (“I consume it for free’); and Revenue (“I buy it”).

When it came to “Affinity,” consistently across ages and genders, County Music and some form of rock music were the genres the subjects of the study would not want to live without. Country was favored because of the relevance to real life and universal truths; appropriateness for the family; buddies, BBQ, beer, dancing and fun; the outdoors; and its staying power and enduring appeal.

All genres can be mapped perceptually. In perceptual research, Country Music owned an area characterized by meaning and virtue. Rock on the other hand, is largely perceived as provocative and music-based. This helps explain why Country and rock were “can’t live without” formats for the Country Music core.

A key learning from this data was that it was important to present new artists in a manner that illustrated their personal ties and commitment to the essence of the genre in order to connect with the people who buy the records and concert tickets in a very tangible and sincere way.

Both qualitative and quantitative revealed a clear hierarchy of engagement in Country Music across predominantly free media pipelines with radio at the top, followed by television, Internet, and print. With 79 percent of Country adopters listening to Country radio it is the pinnacle Country Music connection with an average of more than 24 hours spent listening each month.

They know what they like, and don’t like. They like the “free” nature of the medium. They appreciate that it is family-friendly and acceptable for all ages. They like the mood enhancing, energizing quality of the music. And, in general, DJs are a plus. But there are minuses, too, including radio’s perceived repetitiveness and limited song list; the general lack of identifying the artists was a frustration; and the number of commercials led to channel surfing or switching to CD or iPod listening.

An aggregate 81 percent engage in one or more TV pipelines to find Country Music, but spend less time doing it – 13 hours a month versus 24 for Country radio. Popular choices include CMT (53 percent); the CMA Awards (48 percent); the ACM Awards (40 percent); GAC (27 percent); and “Nashville Star” (25 percent).

The Internet is reshaping the media habits of Country Music users and consumers with Web access. The key to online engagement is access – for those 71 percent of those who have it, the Internet becomes the central medium. Not surprisingly, younger Country Music enthusiasts are much more likely to have a digital Country Music engagement focus and will undoubtedly carry this tendency into their future years.

Like their interests, the dollar of the Country Music user is spread across a range of revenue sources. The largest percentage still purchase CDs (54 percent). Among Country consumers ages 18-54, 65 percent are “CD-dominant” and 35 percent are “Digital-dominant” based on total Country Music acquired. And once they become “Digital-dominant” Country Music acquirers, they contribute very little CD revenue.

Digital-dominants pay for less than half of the Country Music they acquire with far more unpaid acquisition via CD ripping versus illegal downloads. The percentage of Country Music volume paid for by Digital-dominants is 38 percent, compared to 67 percent for CD-dominant users. Currently CD copying (piracy) is more prominent than illegal downloads. Thirty-eight percent have borrowed a Country CD to copy compared to 23 percent who have gotten free downloads. “They look at copying CDs as ‘sharing’ not ‘stealing’,” O’Brien offered.

Overall, 1 in 4 Country Music supporters attended a Country concert in the past year, which translates to 11 percent of the US adult population ages 18-54. They see it as the “best way” to experience the music. They believe it deepens the artist/fan relationship. There is a strong interest in cross-genre concerts with Country and rock. On the negative side, they felt “ripped off” by the price of merchandise and they were frustrated by unknown or hidden fees that increased the cost of the concert-going experience.

Poor Prospects
So, who is not a fan? There are three types of “Poor Prospects” that account for 60.4 percent of the American adult population ages 18-54:
1.    Disengaged Gift Givers (7.9 percent), who dislike Country Music, but sometimes give it as a gift to people who like it
2.    Music Rejecters (34.5 percent), who are not engaged with music of any kind
3.    Country Music Rejecters (18 percent), who are engaged with music, but dislike Country Music

“Don’t waste valuable financial resources or time on this group,” said Carol Foley (EVP, Director of Research Services for Leo Burnett). “We encourage you to write off the ‘Poor Prospects’ because this group is the least likely to become Country Music consumers capable of generating future income for the industry.”

The industry’s “bread and butter” is the “Core.” They are music lovers who drive extensive revenue and they can be divided into two groups: CountryPhiles and MusicPhiles.

CountryPhiles
CountryPhiles skew slightly female (54 percent) versus the average American adult, they are more likely to be married, Caucasian and from small towns. They are passionate fans of Country Music. They appreciate the core values of the format and the artists. And, their commitment translates to both significant engagement time and industry revenue. “Protecting and more fully leveraging this group should be the Country Music industry’s top priority, because even small erosion among this group has substantial negative revenue implications,” Foley said. “The good news is that they are not entirely drained as a revenue stream and the study revealed opportunities to generate more engagement.” They engage with many Country Music portals, but less with digital. Only half have home Internet, but many access the Internet elsewhere – at work or away from home. There were three key reasons driving lack of home Internet access: the cost, they had no interest/or need, and their inexperience or content concerns. Fifty-eight percent of this group did claim that they want to have Internet connectivity in the near future. This group accounts for a major proportion of total Country Music related media hours – especially with radio (33 percent). CountryPhiles claim Country radio as the No. 1 vehicle for introducing new Country Music. They are very CD/album oriented and are willing to pay for music. More than half (55 percent) believe you really miss something when you only purchase songs rather than the whole CD by an artist. Fifty-six percent believe it is important to support the artists they love by paying for their music.

MusicPhiles
MusicPhiles skew male (55 percent) versus the average American adult, they are younger, more diverse (especially Hispanic) and more urban. They are extremely hip, high tech, engaged music lovers who happen to include Country Music in the mix. “They like it, more than they love it,” O’Brien said. MusicPhiles are “music ambassadors” who spend as much or more on buying Country Music CDs for others as for themselves. Though heavily involved with all sorts of media, they are not as deeply engaged with Country radio, TV or Web. In contrast to the CountryPhiles, they are much more tech-savvy and digitally focused. They have large CD and digital libraries and their Country Music collections exceed those of CountryPhiles. While they spend less time with Country radio than CountryPhiles, they still cite it as their No. 1 source when it comes to discovering new music.

MusicPhiles and CountryPhiles collectively contribute a significant amount of money to the format, so it was important to look at the impact of current economic conditions on these two Core Country Music segments with additional research conducted in November.

Economic Factors
Nearly 9 in 10 CountryPhiles have negative perceptions of the overall state of the economy and 6 in 10 express personal financial challenges. Versus total American adults, MusicPhiles are less intensely negative about the overall economy, and fewer (51 percent vs. 59 percent) express personal financial challenges.

More than half of CountryPhiles claim they are already spending less on Country Music as well as many other discretionary items.
“We do not see this trend reversing anytime soon,” O’Brien said.
With that in mind, it is important to maximize and grow the potential spending of the “Low-Funders.” There are five distinct types of people who have a strong Country Music affinity and a fair amount of engagement, but who fail to generate much revenue:

1.    Today’s Digital: have some potential to engage with digital content, but are resistant to traditional media and to revenue of all types
2.    Today’s Traditional: CountryPhiles in training. This group just hasn’t made the revenue commitment, yet
3.    Classical Digital: Men, very into gritty rock-influenced, classic artists. Operating almost entirely online with weak revenue
4.    Classic Traditional: Older and fixated on classic artists. They are feeling “left behind.” They spend time with traditional media, but are having declining revenue behaviors because of the impression that there is nothing left to buy
5.    Pop Country: Very urban, responding to new, female, pop-leaning Country artists. MusicPhiles in training.

Obviously, “Today’s Traditional” and “Pop Country” groups have better revenue growth potential than the other three.

Implications
The implications for CMA and the Country Music industry are clear. The Core Country Music target is small (7.6 percent), but dedicated and a huge revenue generator for the business. They account for a major proportion of Country radio listening and they feel and crave a strong connection to the format.

The Low Funding segment is a much larger consumer base (36 percent) with potential growth. They are listening to radio online and offline and are notable and diverse in their unpaid engagement with Country Music.