eMusic, haemorrhaging features
// July 4th, 2009 // p2p
- | P2P | Music:- “eMusic, imeem and others would be wise to take note,” Mike Masnick posted on TechDirt last Monday. “Taking features away and pretending your customers are stupid enough to believe it’s for their benefit isn’t likely to fly.” The comment came in a post which kicked off with, “For example, when eMusic raised prices and disabled features it put up a blog post trying to spin it as a positive, claiming ” more of the good stuff !’ Yes, at a higher price, with fewer features, but why let that get in the way of claiming good news?” Now, “This is really unfortunate,” he says in a TechDirt follow-up, continuing »»» eMusic used to be a great example of how treating customers right and with respect and trust could win over more customers — but in the last month or so, it seems like the company is throwing all that out the window and pissing off customers left and right. Beyond the big price increase at the same time as signing its first major record label (bad PR to announce both together), the company has censored critics and removed the feature that let you redownload songs you’d purchased before, at your convenience. However, now we’re hearing that there were a bunch of other features that were removed as well. An anonymous reader notes: “July 1 was the first day in the Sony era over at eMusic. Despite published interviews with eMusic executives, FAQs on the eMusic web site and messages from eMusic employees on the eMusic forums attempting to clarify the new pricing structure, there were quite a few surprises. Some of the changes I’ve noticed (or read about in the forums) include: Certain tracks can only be downloaded with “paid” credits, not the free credits eMusic hands out for trial memberships. Individual track downloads disabled for tracks longer than 10 minutes - you must download the entire album Certain (popular) sub-10-minute tracks disabled for individual download No downloading individual discs in multi-disc sets Most new albums use 12-credit album pricing (very few reports of 6 or 9 credit album pricing) Many (a significant portion in the classical section at least) albums with fewer than 12 tracks cost 12 credits Many albums previously available on eMusic have been re-priced (in some cases, tracks available for 1 credit on June 30 now require 12 credits) IMO, the fact that eMusic did such a poor job communicating these important changes suggests that they deliberately withheld (or downplayed) this information, possibly to keep from fueling the outrage generated from last month’s Sony/pricing announcement.” “This seems like an increasing disaster,” Mike says, adding: “Hopefully some of these changes are mistakes, rather than permanent. But the way this whole situation has been handled is going to make a terrific case study in how not to do PR. eMusic has turned from a company that customers really loved into one that many seem to hate … and it’s happened in an incredibly short time frame. “That’s really unfortunate.” - . More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi TechDirt - If You’re Taking Away Features From Users, Don’t Tell Them It’s For Their Own Benefit, June 29, 2009 TechDirt - Even More eMusic Features Disabled?, July 2, 2009 - - | | rss feed: http://-/p2p.rss | | Mobile - http://-/index-wml.php -? -





