Large Entities on the Web3: What does the future hold? | Web3 Summit 2023

thank you well hello hello hello everyone uh thanks for being here uh thanks to all the sponsors uh of the event and thanks to Primavera Pro for organizing this uh amazing uh Summit that we have been creating from good zoo which is the company that I have co-founded uh we are so PR so proud to be together with such uh interesting people building amazing projects in this new and emerging space called uh web 3 that people says uh it could disrupt uh music industry my name is arnao as I said I am the CEO and co-founder of go to but I have a background working for big corporations in in the music industry I have been working for uh Brands like Jagermeister I work also for this Cox which is the biggest music Marketplace in the world and after I got my dream job at Primavera sound where I was one of the main Bookers but last year together with my partner Frankie we decided to move to the web 3 space so I explained my background because I come from Big corporations and normally big Corp when I when you are in big corporations it's difficult that they do invest in Innovation and here with us today we have some people who works for big corporations and who works in the field of innovation with something so specific which is uh web3 then well I I like it to to introduce you guys to introduce yourself you will be you will be doing this better than myself if you want we can start with ujr sure playing who you are and what do you do yeah so J.R Walker I am the director of web3 and metaverse at Sony music and the orchard um so yeah we do everything from Consulting to uh like project managing went through projects and managing them you know end to end um prior to Sony I was working at a web 3 agency where I worked with the likes of Steve Aoki Timbaland um and then on the web3 native side guys like G money Catalina Wales Ledger market and yeah part of that was dropping my own project so been in the space for about four or five years now and that's me what's up I'm Sam and I own a studio called forward we manage emerging Technology Solutions for entertainment companies uh we work with Coachella I worked at Coachella for about seven years before that focusing on digital experiences for fans and digital Partnerships with technology companies and we also work with Universal Pictures helping them with some of their web free strategy across their film division hey I'm Jackie I'm the head of web3 and Innovation at Warner Records and basically I just look at any sort of new technologies and how they can help the artist fan relationship general manager of Sky which is the Spanish CMO for music audio visual and theater and just to correct this is not a big Corporation it's a pro and I am I don't think this guy should be involved in actually technology what we are trying to do is see how we can protect composers and our members facing this new technology cool well thank you so much it's true that this guy is not a corporation or a big Corporation but it's true that it's like a relevant player and everyone is looking at what the big players are doing normally because when big players Embrace uh an innovation it's because Mass adoption is is near so web3 is likely to play a very important role in different fields of the entertainment industry I remember recently talking with Ursula from polka that here she mentioned that mass adoption from web3 will likely come from Fashion gaming and and music so that's likely how it it will get so let's uh discover what these companies or organizations will be embracing web 3 in their in their strategies but before that I like to hear how would you get engaged how did you get engaged with uh web3 on on a personal level if you like to start uh Christina Well I probably am the one which is less involved with web 3 I think perhaps because of my age but I think what we're trying to do is to try just to see how what this is to discover what we're talking about because there's so much noise around you know blockchain and artificial intelligence and all of that and I think my approach to this is first to try to understand what we're talking about really what we're talking about but I'd say from a personal View I'm not a content creator or a musician so I what I try to see is how that may impact our composers and our members but obviously not directly because I'm not a Content producer uh for me I I was working in management and it was end of 2020 and one of the artists I was working with at the time uh Chet Porter you know like a Indie you know producer he um was doing physical paintings because he just wasn't feeling creatively inclined and we like auctioned off his physical paintings on his website and one of his fans who happens to be Cooper Turley said you should sell this as an nft and I was like nft and luckily I started investing in crypto in 2017 so it was like a light bulb went off on my head so we were on Nifty Gateway a couple weeks later we were there before the big boom which was a bummer and from there I was totally hooked and I did multiple projects with chat and as well as Alice in Wonderland who I was also managing at the time cool and what about you guys are you members of adao or have you ever minted an nft you're trading with crypto so all of the above yeah um for for me personally I got involved in the space through Coachella I think Coachella is like the way we think about Coachella across both the physical festival and then all these different digital mediums that we produce experiences on those as a pedestal for creators right and I think what was really interesting everybody at Coachella at the time was musicians and artists making money off of digital art for the first time and they're all coachella's the Music and Arts Festival so there's all kinds of art there and so we just immediately began getting involved and thinking about a lot of the video content that we have over the years or performances and what that could look like as nfts back when NBA Top Shot was a really big thing and that kind of just led us down this path into a number of our different Partnerships that yeah so for me uh I got to be honest I kind of stumbled upon crypto and web3 uh a high school basketball teammate of mine made a ton of money lost a ton of money uh trading Bitcoin time I had no idea what it was try to you know decipher you know white papers and things like that um with not much luck um but then after that another you know ironically enough another high school friend of mine started working in crypto full-time um and you know at the time I was working in artist management um you know dabbling into music industry and I remember being so upset about how like broken I thought it was right without not or without like a ton of of knowledge about it but uh I remember thinking or looking at web3 as this like Silver Bullet of sorts um so uh from there I I guess it was really NBA Top Shot you know I got introduced to the guys at Dapper and you know as a basketball player at the time and uh you know obviously trading basketball cards was something that made perfect sense so that's really when the light bulb went off for me um and then from there it was you know about getting my hands dirty and doing things so launched a couple of projects in I guess the rest is history amazing uh okay uh so I'm I'm a bit very curious person uh and I always like to to know things like why uh big players like for example uh Warner or Sony the orchard or um Coachella has decided to create a specific department on on web3 so I like you to explain more or less your experience in there and if you're feeling alone or if if you have like a team working with you and if it's easy to present ideas and to make it real um I joined Warner Records in January and I'm a team of one and I stay within the digital marketing team so I feel like I'm part of a team even though I'm sort of on my own Island and I feel like you know this was a big moment that Warner Records wanted somebody to focus on this stuff and they realized like we can't sit back you know they need an expert in the building and someone to help guide artists and the team um and I feel like At first I kind of came in and sat down with everyone on the digital and the marketing team and I was like forget everything you know let's start it a new you know because I think there's a lot of like nft sort of a bad word like I always find myself saying digital good digital asset digital ownership you know kind of using new terminology to not scare teams off but you know one of my co-workers somebody on the marketing team said something great a couple weeks ago he's like ah I get it you're just an extension of marketing and I was like yep you got it so now I feel like all the marketing team is like hey Jackie come work on this project with me you know so it took a little bit of time but I feel like everyone understands the value that someone like me and you know and what we're doing can bring to the space and it's awesome yeah I think um I originally started off as a team of one as well in the marketing department because it makes a lot of sense right what we're doing is uh for consumers as is as is marketing and so I think it does make sense for it to be an extension um we're we're we were more of like an innovation Department which was me and then eventually one other person and in order to really kind of grow that we had to leave and like be able to grow that outside of the company and partnership um and I think the the the why is like primarily consumer experience people are people love Coachella because they have really fun artistic experiences at Coachella and I think a lot of these Technologies provide new ways to create those things and then there's also like a a obviously the artist approach and supporting artists like I discussed and then there's the business development approach and I think that these Technologies can unlock new business opportunities for for companies when used the right way and so I think we're kind of a focus on the three of those things yeah a lot of what you said resonates for sure um team of one started in January um we're still working out the Kinks internally honestly a lot of as far as like how we work together um but yeah I guess you could say you know I do fall under um like the marketing arm of Sony as far as like why we got involved Sony's been kind of like in stealth trying to you know figure out web3 so a lot of strategic Partnerships like even before I came on board the past like two years they've been pretty invested in the space um but I think they they wanted to actually hire and have an expert in the building when uh you know the the bull runs happening all their artists are coming to the various labels under Sony asking about this thing like what should we do what can we do um and none of our guys could really like field those questions or help them um so those artists took that business elsewhere a lot of the time so um yeah that's that's why and you know how it's going is um it's a it's a slow burn you know education is definitely the name of the game right now and we're you know just chipping away at it it's interesting you know because um well you mentioned both that your departments are very new so you started less than a year ago so that's that's very interesting meaning that we are still on on a very early early stage of of adoption but well if uh the the big players are creating this kind of department is probably because this will play really an important role and and what about you Christina obviously uh it's a different situation because uh you explained that but um I like you to explain what uh the position that guy has uh in terms of of web3 so what like a right Association like you uh [Music] um what opportunities do you do you see in this in this field well I mean it's curious because you're saying that this is from one year ago um actually because I just joined Skype but Sky belongs to csac which is his International Confederation of of societies of authors and composers and there with this guy we've been working on addressing the challenges of artificial intelligence and madeovers for at least three years because we saw that this was coming and this was coming this was going to be something very big I think the idea here and and and that's what sky is trying to do and and most um CMOS at least in Europe which we're working with is to try to have like a coordinated approach to try to facilitate licensing to to be to allow creators to monetize to be part of this and especially to allow composers and other creators that they also have to be on the table that they have to have a seat on the table that we're talking about big corporations we're talking about technology but at the end you need the musical work or Naja visual work so you know sometimes we talk so much about technology but we forget that the core of everything is music or Audio Visual and if you don't protect the Creator if you don't protect the composer you're going to end up with just you know music created by artificial intelligence or completely autonomous AI generated music which actually also needs to be fed by pre-existing music right so I think the position of of sky and and of this you know this International approach is to make sure that we're there that the Creator is part of this that we can educate and explain to composers and to creators what the risk and what are the opportunities of all of this but also that they can monetize this that they're part of this because I think when when you know when probably all of you are very young for this but when we had these discussions about peer-to-peer and the internet I don't know 20 years ago I think the the reaction of the musical industry and the CMOS was sort of to resist to this to say no no we can use technology as a tool to stop this right to prevent this from really and we saw that was a huge mistake so I think here the approach is exactly the opposite to make sure that we're part of this but part of this making sure that the Creator is the center of all of this that really resonates I think because uh like so much about this whole Space is about ownership and like self-empowerment right and if you don't start like the nucleus of what it's all about which is the human beings who are making the art and then from there figure out the what and the how and the why it probably isn't going to work out very well yeah yeah well and it was about to be like uh the so the super hype a few months ago or or a year a year ago exactly but then it came the crypto crash um there were a lot of newspapers talking about that nfts were a scam and still people do not trust in nfts well you mentioned uh earlier we everyone uh is looking to avoid the nft uh world and then suddenly AI appeared and all the everyone started looking towards uh AI so still bullish about web 3 so is it still the the future so how would we be normalizing this yeah I think it comes down to you know you weren't able to sort of track ownership prior to being able to use blockchain technology so it's not a matter of like unfortunately web3 is tied to crypto in a certain sense but it's more of like what this technology can do and I think it's once people understand what it does and that isn't this bad thing listen there's Bad actors and players in the space and I think we're slowly but surely seeing that go away but like I remember I mean I started investing crypto in 2017 then we had a crash and then D5 came along and Nate's came along so I I think it's a healthy pullback but it's you know all of those of us who work on the space we have to do it's a bit harder now we have to really educate people and be like here's all the cool things you can do this is the technology that doesn't you can buy it a credit card you can literally do all this stuff and a fan never has to know that they're touching crypto they don't have to if they don't want to I think like the the all of those things for sure and and maybe like a point of advice like consumers don't really care about technology and I think and every new wave of technology is the tail is all this time right everybody talks about it's AI it's web three is crypto and consumers actually just don't care what they care about is like what value is being provided to my life or how is this making my life more entertaining or connecting me with friends or you know helping me make money right and I think that uh when you abstract away all the technology and just focus on those things that's when new technologies really break out and and really become adopted I don't know if you guys have seen this series uh Netflix series called the playlist about Spotify um yeah I've seen it you're saying that I I I feel there are a lot of similarities between that time and and the current and the current moment so I obviously didn't uh I was so young to live at that at that time but I feel it's exactly the the same thing so we are about to uh see something that will change forever but nothing no one is trusting in it yet so yeah and I think it's more of a matter it always takes time I mean even social media and and all sorts of streaming there was always this hesitation but I think it's important for for artists and creators in other fields to you know don't don't get left behind and let the big players decide how it gets used you know I come from management so for me I'm always thinking artists first even though I'm part of a big Corporation and it's always about how does this bring value and how can this help artists and fans alike and uh so I think it's similar but it's different at the same time because it's so geared on towards ownership versus you know when streaming happened it was more about um you know who owns digital music and who's going to put it out the fastest and and make deals with the majors and that's sort of what you see play out and we're sort of dealing with it now there's a backlash towards streaming and the payout royalties and I think that's why web threes exciting to many artists yeah cool well when when one of the critics I have been hearing uh from yesterday from the panels that the that the people attended was that no one uh was talking about cases of success or at least uh people was trying to avoid um talking about success and I don't understand really why no one is talking about cases of success in in the web 3 space so I like you guys to to explain or get in further detail on what you consider that something that involved uh web3 strategy that that you developed it came up with a with a case of success involving nfts metaverse AI whatever so it's now the moment to explain the audience there is hope and there is really examples that uh things that can be done to generate revenue and to the to the artists and so you can you can explain if you if you want I could take a little bit of a different spin on it I think um success right very relative and objective but I think that there are some really interesting social media platforms out there uh Noster Mastodon uh there's a few that I'm forgetting and I think the key like difference with these social media platforms is that you own your own data you own the post that you've made the photos that you upload the things that you've liked and if you want to leave that platform and go to another social media platform you just connect your wallet or your profile and all that stuff is uploaded and I think that's really really interesting because it kind of presents a paradigm shift for how people own their own data across these different platforms that we interact on and when I think about like in my opinion five years from now investing in crypto or nfts could be just 20 of the total value that's provided with this technology whereas a lot of it really could come down to data ownership and not being locked into platform arms and some of the like really interesting capabilities that I think blockchain unlocks yeah I think the platform thing is such an important thing to mention every time I'm talking to different companies or Partners I'm not interested in helping some new platform whether it's web free ownership it has to be a white label service it should be owned and operate on artist sites you know I think eventually we'll see how that all plays out you know but I think there's such an important thing as we let basically three four big companies own the whole internet and that's what this is in response to and every time I explain to my friends who don't even work in entertainment what web3 is I'm like think about your data your Instagram photo you don't own that they're monetizing that that's your content and that's always what everyone thinks in terms of success for me my biggest success was in 2021 when I was in management and I did a project with Alice in Wonderland and at the time it was like board ape happen but it wasn't really it was slowly bubbling up and we did a pfp project it was called the Wonder Quest Alice Wonderland loves fan Embassy so you basically got like a dragon egg and you could hatch it or not and we partnered with decentraland and they gave us a whole build and you had a tokengated experience there with uh quests and and performances and stuff um and that went on sale and we grossed like over three million dollars so that was that was fun for me um and then most recently it Werner records we had an artist BB rexa who did a song with Snoop Dogg about smoking weed in space that came out on 420 for those of you not who don't live in America 420 is the international pot smoking day and I had this crazy idea that let's create a virtual spaceship where everyone can smoke weed together and it was eight days before her album came out so you got to preview her songs and you were a little Avatar and you rolled a joint and it was all on her website and it was a really fun little metaverse experience didn't generate any Revenue but it was just like a very cool marketing plan the fans absolutely loved it and I just thought it was something really fun that you could do and I know Samuel will have a lot to say about this but everyone always talks about how all album and single releases in the future will be like game-like and it's like let's do it now today why why wait we have the technology now yeah yeah for from rpov like at Sony in the orchard um we feel like 90 of what we're seeing out of this space uh the web 3 music space when it comes to projects specifically so not like platforms and you know different products and services but um music projects that artists are putting out um they fall in either two categories um for the most part so you have your drops that are like what we call skeuomorphic which essentially add nothing new like there's no like real value there's no reason why this thing should actually be an nft or be like a web 3 thing it's more so uh you know artists and their teams leaning into that side of things for the novelty kind of aspect of it and to get people to spend their dollars on this quote-unquote new thing and uh at the end of the day it's empty promises and then the other side of it is you know maybe they're too Innovative or they're too catering towards this Echo chamber that is you know kind of like the the D gen world for lack of a better term so people are very familiar with web3 are kind of buying into buy sell trade essentially um so what we're what we view as successful is you know a project that actually adds something new and and real kind of like tangible value um to music fans so not not as much like Traders um so you know you feel like key metric for success for a while was like minting out you know x amount of dollars but for us you know we're looking at different metrics and I'll give you an example I haven't launched a ton um you know in the few months that I've been um in the seat that I'm in now but we did launch something uh for the metal community so it's a band called the shredders it's a virtual band so similar to you know so similar to uh like the gorillas you could say um you know the team behind it is you know kind of like iconic real metal musicians um and they wanted to create a space for uh metal fans who they felt like were getting like left out of this increasingly like digital world that we're living in today um and so we did that um kind of the idea was to really put you know this band in the community's hands they kind of control it they vote different things into existence and you know it was very well received for the most part from the metal Community who's super vocal about what they do and don't like um but it's cool because you could take that feedback back and kind of like Implement some of it and I guess like on the on the Innovative end of that project we wanted to test a couple of things and we're going to continue to do that this just launched by the way like about a month ago now um and minted out um which you know I was just saying isn't like a key metric but we were excited to see that um but anyways on the Innovative end uh we wanted to test out uh you know what would happen or how we could get like the community to Rally around um this band and so we linked the first digital collectible offering which was an access pass you know everyone's pretty clear about like what that means but um we linked the access pass to Spotify data um that was like a long and hard conversation with Spotify because they're pretty strict about um you know commercial rights and things like that um but uh the nft was linked to Spotify data so it you know essentially like Powers up visually in holders wallets as the shredders hit these different streaming Milestones um different rewards are unlocked Etc and we're going to continue to kind of test that model for subsequent drops interesting and well this this question goes to Christina being the representative of uh the main Collective Society for writing in Spain uh I like uh to know um how is guy would use uh web 3 to help the artists that you represent to generate more Revenue well I mean what sky does is ensure that the creators that their members are correctly remunerated so we're talking about all these new spaces and platforms and and services but you know but even going back to Spotify you know very very few composers actually can make a living out of Spotify I mean it's you know we're talking about all these great opportunities but at the end if nobody's paying for anything creators will not continue to to create because they they need to make a living out of this so um web 3 and metaverse and all that well what this guy is trying to do is to make sure you know what is this is this like a live stream then we have these rights which are involved we need to get a license the problem here is that um create I think all creators all composers are really excited they want to get their music out there they want to get their works out there you know it's not just to make money they really want to to make their Works accessible to everybody but if if there's no return for that they have to find other jobs obviously and we just want to make it possible for composers to make a living out of their work and when you talk about all these new metaverse and all of that you know I always think that it's you know these really good ideas and these really you know really cool um Technologies whatever but we're always forgetting about the composer you know it's always the intermediaries and it's always been the same way I mean even the the beginning of collective management it was in theater and it was Crea it was directors and and authors trying to make a living and knowing that there was an intermediary there which was actually the one which is putting the space and and charging the money for the computer the consumer but they always needed the work and then when you know when when when internet started it was the same you had the internet platform saying oh I'm just putting the space but they were the ones making the money and here for me it sounds a little bit similar I mean we've all had talked about technology it's all great I think composers love technology they use it to to create but if you don't remunerate correctly the the work the musical work they're just not going to be more works because they can't live from this and so what's Sky's approach to this let's license this let's make it as easy as possible in many cases we don't really know what I mean I used to be the head of the digital licensing department it's guy I remember people would come to me with really nice ideas really cool ideas many times I didn't even know what they were talking about but you know it sounded really cool it sounded like oh we're going to get all the music out there they're just gonna you know with this with this um little device I have and I can do this and that and I have an avatar but at the end it's you know most of these unfortunately didn't really weren't very successful but Skye what they have to do is to make sure we can give quickly a license and that we don't do any type of obstacles so that that business can develop but we have to think about the author I mean we have to remunerate the author if we don't remunerate the author correctly there will simply be no content for all you guys to put in your spaceship and you know but don't you think blockchain technology could help an artist get paid faster because I know for my management days you know I had an artist who didn't have a publishing deal and we just signed an admin deal because you're like you just have money sitting there for those of you who don't know you need a publishing deal to just unlock money that's their whole job and I think with blockchain technology like let's say Spotify paid well and Spotify your stream happens your you know 0.001 Cent goes directly to your account right afterwards versus now or it takes a month to get paid I mean to me that's well it's true it's not what I'm spending my time doing but I think to me that's gonna be the game I mean I've I've listened to this many times these past years chain and with other types of services where you could directly link the musician or the composer with his with this public right yeah but at the end you need strong rights you need strong copyright laws in order to allow that Creator to actually be entitled to receive something in exchange I think if you leave the Creator Alone by himself in some cases they'll be successful they'll be able to monetize directly with an nft or whatever but if you but most of them need the protection of the entire community of creators that's when you put all the repertoires together and you offer that to Spotify to whatever that's what makes that repertoire that you're capable of really negotiating a good deal because if you just if you're on your own unless you're a really really big Superstar which usually it's not the case especially for young creators you just don't have the Levering The Leverage to negotiate with these platforms and at the end there are big giants behind this and they want your data and they and and they're not interested in the musical Works they're interested in your data so they can sell it to Google and to YouTube and to whatever to Microsoft so that they can you know also one of the things we're a little bit worried is you know all these platforms you have all these algorithms which are actually telling you what you have to listen to what you have to watch you know where's the transparency there I mean my kids they're they have no choice really because the machine is telling them what they have to listen to what they have to buy and what that and what they're what I mean last time I was on Netflix I didn't even end up watching anything because there were so many recommendations and there were so many different you know links if you like this you'll like this and then at the end I'd even watch any movie because I was too exhausted after so many you know so many recommendations and playlists and everything I ended up just saying okay I'm not I'm too late anyway but but the idea that there's I think it's almost like a too romantic idea you you have to protect the author and at the end there may be many of these initiatives are you know young people and but I think usually they're controlled by very powerful companies which are controlling all of this and they're controlling the data so I think we have to make all of this much more transparent talking about algorithms I'm talking about who is behind all of this who you know who is really manipulating all of this and you have to allow for a safe environment for creators to be able to create I have a little bit the impression also that they're all almost a little bit like obsessed with having to put content out there like hysterically because they have to get viral they have to be on all the platforms they have to be on all social media it you know it's almost like you're not letting the Creator create you know because they're they have this pressure to put all this content out there they don't even call it a musical work anymore it's content no so I think you know it's it's a great idea but I just think that we have to sort of settle down and remember that we're talking about creators when which need time to create it's very interesting and I hope there are few questions uh after and we can uh get the discussion uh further because it's really really interesting what were you uh saying now but this this question uh goes to Jackie because she represents Werner which is uh one of the measures that has been showing more Advantage uh in building and deploying strategies uh into the web3 space more actively uh we were discussing before that in web 3 there's no competition but there is competitive there is competition between companies I like it due to to explain briefly what are the top uh strategies that you are now doing um yeah at the current moment so what have you been doing um yeah for sure I mean I actually was at Universal before this uh and part of the reason uh I left was because I wanted to be at a more Innovative uh major um and you know obviously I work at work records some of the front line labels so I'm the one who actually you know is working day in day out with the artists and their teams and the marketing teams and then we have we're actually talking about it you know sort of the corporate teams who helped do those larger deals and you know they have deals with sandbox um I think there's Open Sea I think it's public uh or on on the road to that and and various different companies but for me it's more just about finding the right opportunities and being part of a company that doesn't just say no right off the bat and says all right let's find a way to make this work let's make sure you know everything looks right and is safe and the correct way to do it but like I feel like being at you know the the smallest of the three Majors they're incentive to be Innovative and things is great we have our new CEO who comes from YouTube who's really uh building you know our Tech infrastructure so I feel like it's a good place to really experiment and uh and work on these sort of things but at the end of the day it's a major label you know and the focus is not it always I don't know what I'm going to say I'm gonna I'm gonna rail back okay Jr you work for for the orchard but at the same time you work for Sony which is like another major record label that have been deploying and uh some web3 strategies I wanted to extend another another question that might be embarrassing but we are here just to to to discuss so web 3 uh wants to bring the creators uh the control over their content over the their rights so uh where the major record labels fit into this new paradigm um I I guess I'll give you a cop-out answer we're figuring it out we're trying to figure it out uh we're trying to figure out how to like add the most value I think like the I think we're we're we've moved from that this territory like when I when I started at Sony I feel like we were for the most part like the teams that I would that I would speak to so like legal Finance marketing um all these teams that I have to work with now um the the vibe for lack of a better word was that you know web3 is potentially you know this existential threat to like you know our business like our model um you know for you know reasons that you were alluding to but I think um like I was saying like education was a huge part of my first you know few months um in the door um so now I think people see the opportunity people also and and to be a little bit more direct I think people see us investing time and energy into web3 as an opportunity to actually retain this talent and um like unlock new opportunities for ourselves as well um so I just wanted to add to that because actually when I was at Universal I spent a lot of discussions what is the role of the label in web 3 and trying to figure that out you know and uh I I truly believe that it's you know it's part of your sort of marketing plan so for every album or single release you always have you know what's our social media strategy what's our tour strategy our merch strategy and all these sorts of you know different verticals and now you're gonna have what's my web three strategy so when you're releasing anything you're always going to have it be part of your marketing plan and whether it's purely marketing promo play or if it's Revenue driven it's kind of both or is it integrating into merch I love playing with like nfcs and doing the physical and digital and that sort of stuff so there's so many opportunities that it can all play in together but I think it's really part of that marketing strategy and that's what major labels are you you sign them for two reasons money and for the marketing and promo and without that you know I think those are the two main areas that they can really help uh so that's that's sort of what I believe and I see we're gonna see as we move forward okay and we were highlighting before uh Warner as one of the companies in the music space that have been more Innovative but we need to talk about Coachella as well because Coachella was one of the major brands to first use nfts as a strategy and it was really a big success then it happened something and everything went down my question is are you still bullish on on nfts and if you are still bullish how has the concept of the nft changed towards uh the first uh strategy that you took yeah the uh so the first strategy was like early 2022 and was very very much so of the moment where we were creating nft media attaching physical goods and benefits and experiences to those and then selling them to fans and then rewarding the artist that created that so you know there's over six figures given out to photographers and videographers and musicians and like illustration artists at Coachella and then people got really amazing photo books and posters and lifetime tickets to Coachella which was like those those nfts sold for a lot but they also have literally lifetime value and that was the first time because of nft Technology the first time that Coachella could ever sell lifetime passes because someone could buy that and then when they get tired of Coachella six years later they can go sell that to somebody else and it retains its value so it's a really a win-win for everybody the way that we think about it now is in addition to what we want to do the collaborations we want to build with performing artists very much so around loyalty I think that and that's like really the Hot Topic word for nfts and crypto as it relates to Big Brands these days you see it with Nike and swoosh and Starbucks and their whole loyalty program that they built and loyalty really is about like knowing who your consumers are no knowing the actions that they take and then rewarding them for those actions right and uh nfts provide a really really great way to do that if you can let people by just scanning a QR code or an NFC chip tell you the actions that they've done online or offline and they can receive a token for that that token can be free it can be a few dollars it can be thirty dollars in a large amount of cases for Coachella we see these as being just free and that tells us that gives us a group of people who have taken this particular action that we can then reward with a personalized experience online or a personalized experience at the festival itself so I think that is a really interesting Innovation on the Loyalty model and it makes that data around who your consumers are and what they're doing a lot more are visible and also a lot more shareable right like if we have random example Coachella has a big partner that's going to be on site activating and they want to reward everybody who went and did this action we can easily they can see that data it's just transparent on the blockchain right and allows people to really start building their own kind of um tacked on loyalty programs around Coachella consumers and I think that's why you see Starbucks and Nike and some of these other big Brands really investing in web 3 loyalty yeah it's very interesting now it's in the end a festival has a major a big Community a huge Community same as artists same as record labels for example so it's very interesting how in the next two two years the use of nfts will probably change completely but I want I like to extend like the question to all the room and I like you to raise the hands to all those who are still bullish on on nfts who of you are still bullish on nfts how many have you done or been involved in the nft project cool oh and you're not all bullish no my question is is this is it specifically because that because uh well there are a lot of interesting platforms like sound serenade gudu who are uh in well thinking of well or trying to put like a a new format of releasing music in in music nfts then there is another use of the nfts that could be Community but my question now is to is to ER and is that that do you think that nfts will be a new format of uh Edition for artists for musicians to be releasing them uh are you saying like to release music in the form of entities or just like Collectibles or in general collecting listening owning be part of the community so yeah yeah absolutely um I'm definitely bullish um so uh yeah I think uh you know brands for reasons that he alluded to um I don't think it's just musicians but um yes definitely artists and does it make sense that uh digital music distribution platform like the orchard uh get integration with music nft platforms like another uh DSP just to provide content leads to them this this is something that you see it is likely to happen in in the next two years for example I think so you know I certainly hope so I think um yeah it's just like I was saying earlier a slow burn um you know we've been operating a certain way for however long um so it's a it's a big ship to turn around um but uh yeah through conversations with guys like you guys and and uh Revelator and others um I think we all like even the higher up see the value in it um so I'm hoping it's it's kind of a matter of time cool well I I got surprised I must to say that um I I expected more Hope on on on nfts in in the room but well I I mean wait let's rephrase it are you bullish on web3 what'd she say I maybe um maybe we can we can get a mic from from the control and what word do you like to use now instead it's not very inclusive sorry whoa I I just find it a really cringe term and I just thought if you say are you bullish on web3 I'm never going to raise my hand to that because I just like it doesn't feel like a term that feels like so specific to the space and when you're working with musicians like I don't work with specifically web 3 only musicians they were you know in all Realms um and so like I don't know that that term just feels like quite uncomfortable to me so that's why I didn't raise my hand to that even though I'm like working on something in that space no by the way I totally relate never use these terms you know in my day-to-day job but when you're kind of in this microcosm of web three people you kind of just like all right let's just go with the flow but yeah and I think that's to your point that's part of the problem is that the crypto bro culture is sort of what's the off-putting part of you know where web3 has gone recently and that's why I feel like we kind of need a Rebrand all right so let's try again who's excited and feels like web3 can help the music industry move forward there we go me too okay well there is there any other question in the in the room hi hello um you've been talking about the value proposition for the users and the artists all the time and I would like to know if in the pilots that you have been involved with nfts and blockchain that if there is something that you have done that will have been impossible to do without blockchain or nfts I mean there is an alternative technology that you could have used to do the same thing or it was indispensable to have any of these and blockchain um the one of the examples I gave around lifetime passes for Coachella it would have been Impossible on any other database only possible through like true custody of that digital asset right another thing would have been going back to like the community and loyalty piece being able to organize people by common interests and activities that they've partaken in and allowing them to like meet each other on Discord and having nfts in order to go certain places at Coachella we wouldn't have been able to do that before either I think there was another question hi hello okay um so I wanted to ask um do you have any recommendations for like solid nft strategies for like more sort of Grassroots projects just for context I get the feeling that these strategies generally work when artists or brands or labels be it festivals have already like very big sort of fan bases and then out of that pre-existing fan base there's a subsection that is kind of into the nft space already so within that subcategory then this is where these strategies seem to really have an impact so say that now you know we're working with like much smaller projects much smaller artists and you don't really know you know I mean they have relatively small fan bases and you don't know how what portion of that might be into this space how can we leverage this technology to increase the fan base in general and to you know engage more the people that might actually be into it I think that's a excellent question you know right now you kind of have you know there's more established artists and then there's specific web three artists who you know drop on sound and audience and all those sort of places and I think you know for me kind of the first step is have a Discord server I actually hate Discord but I you know use it all the time and uh and advise and help you know but that's the one place where there's no algorithm unlike you know social media where you can directly communicate one-to-one with your fans and find out what they want do they want a loyalty pass all right cool let's do one do they not one great do they just want to do community meetups but I think using these I now call them Community chat platforms as sort of step one to seeing how large your audience is you know there's this common phrase you know ten thousand strong so in our current music ecosystem you know many people talk about this you have your casual listeners and your super fans they're treated all the same but imagine a world where you can reward your super fans is it 10 people 100 a thousand it doesn't matter you might as you should super serve them because that lifetime deep connection you have with them they're fans forever they're going to evangelize that band to everyone else and now you can reward them or they can showcase that they're the number one fan or they were first to listen they went to x amount of shows that's you know sort of the value are you working at where it can add so I think you have to sort of start at day one like I think that's super interesting the reason we don't have those use cases yet is because it's hard to do so it's easier to do it more established but I'm definitely looking at you know smaller artists and like let's start them in that field and I think especially in the electronic space that audience is always the first to sort of you know like new technologies and that's an excellent place to sort of experiment and try couldn't agree more what I really loved was like figure out what they want first you don't need any technology to do that right just like talk to the fans figure out what they love about whatever Community it is you're trying to serve and then don't refer to it as web3 or nfts it doesn't really matter right like this is just a a pass to some sort of experience or benefit you know and it could be positioned as such yep um yeah just just wanted to test uh the panel's kind of reaction to uh to to sort of a positioning statement and see what you guys react from your your different uh your different positions and this kind of ties into what Arno said about uh about the playlist um and you know the Spotify uh series um it seems like denying that web 3 is going to be a thing for music is just not plausible because we went from analog to digital the CD era um you know we were playing CDs in the 80s and 90s and you wouldn't deny that we'd go to downloads and that was MP3 and P2P file sharing and then you know that went to streaming and you know moved to web 2. like we're not going to stay in web 2 forever as a technology and music's you know not going to be exempt from that so isn't it I just sort of uh you know what's the word I guess inevitable that it's more about when and how than if music will go to web3 did you do you guys agree with that or uh would you postulate otherwise I totally agree I also think it's what is your definition of web3 I'm sure we probably all here have five different uh ways to explain in our world view so obviously technology is constantly evolving so of course it's going to go somewhere else you know everyone always talks about like oh web 2.5 it's like are we at web 2.2 or we have web 2.7 like when do we get into web 3 and what is web3 and time will tell okay you have to add to that I feel like uh I don't know it's also going to be hard to tell like when we are uh like I guess exactly what you just said right like I think it's uh when it does happen um it's you know not gonna feel like the Bull Run of of whatever like 20 20 21 2020 um like I think it's going to be a lot more like subtle than that I think it's going to be a layer um that is kind of like integrated into like how we do things now um so yeah that's the only thing that adds here your response yeah I think nobody cares when like your favorite uh photo platform switches from jpg to PNG right it's going to be probably a similar type of switch and it's going to unlock some capabilities that people will love and nobody will really know and it's a it's like um day by day nothing changes and then looking back everything's different right I feel like that's usually the case with new technologies especially entertainment space okay I mean because I'm probably the only one which is a little bit different from the rest I think that probably it's inevitable but I think that if we're not careful you may end up with very low quality content and um probably that was not the case before I think the big difference now is that before it was as you say no the change between analog to digital for mp3 or whatever but I think here the risk is that you're having you're making composers compete also against machines which and in this enormous technology but if but it for me the risk is if you don't treat creators correctly there's just not going to be content in the future you mean you you need to remunerate correctly in order to give that incentive so that they keep creating quality music or quality content if you just focus on technology I get I know you have to do that and we have to allow all these new platforms to develop but at the end if you forget about the content there's just not going to be anything to include in these platforms or to give an nft next to you know absolutely yeah there are more questions I think there was a question over there and then one here uh thank you um well this is probably more uh like a conceptual question following what Christina said before and also what you were asking are now about what's the role of the labels in this new decentralized universe that we are looking at now but I think that even now we are seeing many artists becoming more than the other artists they have to be Community manager impress officer and video editor and I don't know how many things more so I think that decentralized sounds great in terms of what's the user experience but I also think that they always have to be a team to help the artist to be focused on what he has to do that is making music so we decentralized doesn't mean that we don't need professionals to become a team for the artists being doing what they want to do maybe this is not a question but I really wanted to make this clear because I think that I I maybe be suspect because I spend most of my career in a label but I definitely think that this must be people like you here that need to help the artists to become artists just just relation to this there will I think like a couple of months ago maybe half a year ago it was it wasn't related to music it was related to audio visual and it was a like a Manifesto that was published by French directors and screenwriters they were like trying to object to the what they call the uberization of culture because they were saying that we're being forced to produce so much so quickly to put everything everywhere that at the end they just don't have time to really create no and I think that's one of the risks of all the social media and web 3 and everything is that they they have to do so many things and get out so much content so quickly that you know sometimes they forget that these are human beings which need a creative process in order to make something not to produce content I totally agree with you but I think you're missing the point on web3 I actually had an inter interesting conversation that just happened about a week and a half ago I'm working with an artist on this platform called Medallion it's a white label service so lives owned and operated on the artist's website and you know the manager was saying we're just so concerned about bringing all these things to the art as well when I was like dude I totally get it like I don't care about tech talk but you have to play that ball game and it's an unfortunate part of where the music ecosystem is right now and that's a whole separate conversation but you know the manager came back and said especially Community you know uh pass or a plot you know for for fans and and the manager came back and goes the artist loves this he's so excited about this hell actually because we did a very low lift he's like he'll actually do all these extra things and all this stuff that we were all sort of surprised he's like this is so much better than me having to film a tick tock you know what I mean because forget at the end of the day you're nothing without your fans your art is so important of course but if you're not delivering to your super fans then what's the point and that's sort of my ethos and what I'm trying to build at Warner is deepening that connection and rewarding fans and uh I find it very rare that an artist doesn't want to do that posting on Tick Tock I get and I agree with okay well we are running out of time there's still last question please do it very quickly and we will wrap up Chris okay so Christina thank you for your intervention and for um taking care of artists and authorship because it has [Music] um it has already been seen in the history of um music industry that big Tech corporations and big players I mean have harmed lots of artists and their rights but you mentioned a world a word that is transparent so um and I mean um this guy is not known for their transparency so um have
2023-07-04 09:52