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Besides venting here, I suggest we all contact HDTracks, and share our opinions regarding their 12.5% price hike. I just emailed them, suggesting they reconsider the price hike, and wait to see the impact on sales with the forthcoming Squeezebox Touch. Their contact link is...http://www.hdtracks.com/index.php?file=contact
Quote from: sleepysurf on 20 Sep 2009, 03:53 pmBesides venting here, I suggest we all contact HDTracks, and share our opinions regarding their 12.5% price hike. I just emailed them, suggesting they reconsider the price hike, and wait to see the impact on sales with the forthcoming Squeezebox Touch. Their contact link is...http://www.hdtracks.com/index.php?file=contact+1. Done. Great idea.
I received an email reply from Norman Chesky today. Basically he said the price increase is needed to attract the larger labels and bring more content to HDtracks. I can understand his position and am genuinely sympathetic...but I don't think that really changes anything for me. If the higher value content ends up on HDtracks then sure, I will give it due consideration just like any other purchase. But as I look over the content that is presently on the site, there really isn't anything else for me there that I could justify paying $17.95 for a 24/96 download.I sent him a link to this thread.--Jerome
I do understand that new labels need to be attracted but don't buy the logic that a price increase has to be applied to recordings/labels already attracted
Quote from: Philistine on 21 Sep 2009, 11:44 pmI do understand that new labels need to be attracted but don't buy the logic that a price increase has to be applied to recordings/labels already attracted Well, if I may play devil's advocate for a moment. Let's say HDtracks tries to do as you suggest. So new content gets priced at $17.95 and everything already there stays at $15.95. If I am an exec at one of the "already attracted" labels and see new stuff coming in at $17.95 then I pick up the phone and call Mr. Chesky and the conversation goes something like this: "Norman, I was one of the few labels who supported you with 24/96 content when you tried to build those offerings into a viable service. Now you are proposing to give other labels who were not there at the beginning an extra $2.00 per title incentive. Is this how you reward loyalty? Perhaps I should just pack up all my content and go home." I don't think he can stab the labels that helped him build that business in the back. If he did then that would effectively kill high resolution downloads at HDtracks.--Jerome
That's a reasonable point Jerome - but where's the new material that the price increase is attracting? If an overall price increase was announced at the same time new material was being introduced then that's fair enough. But an increase on material already on the site, and nothing new, doesn't sell the rationale for the increase to me. So for me it's not an issue of a dual pricing strategy but one of a poorly implemented and argued increase.
The price increase is unfortunate and I can't quite see how this is going to benefit them. I bought a number of albums on impulse that I had not heard before when HDTracks first started and they were offering 20% discounts. But at $18 each, that's just not going to happen. They need to increase the number of customers and volume of sales to make it a viable business I would think. Unless somehow the royalties per hi-res album have increased by $2 each, this seems like it's only going to hurt sales.
I must have missed something in the thread... do we know for a fact that something other than a price increase for 24/96 downloads is coming?