Napster cuts music plan to $5 a month

May 18, 2009  7:27 PM (ET)

By RYAN NAKASHIMA
Associated Press

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20090518/D988UTUO0.html


LOS ANGELES (AP) - Napster.com on Monday cut the price of its online 
music streaming service to $5 a month from $12.95, and threw in five 
song downloads for customers in a move to better compete with rival iTunes.

The Los Angeles-based company gained notoriety in the early years of 
music downloading with its free browser-style music swapping service, 
but following copyright lawsuits emerged as a subscription-based 
service. It has struggled to grow its user base from over 700,000 last 
August, and compete with music retailers like Apple Inc.'s iTunes store.

It was acquired by Best Buy Inc. in October for about $122 million in cash.

Napster Chief Executive Chris Gorog said the new offering stands up well 
against iTunes because 5 songs a month will cost just $5 even if they 
are new releases. By comparison, Apple Inc.'s iTunes recently began 
charging up to $1.29 for newer, more popular tracks.

Napster also allows unlimited full-length song previews versus iTunes' 
30-second samples.

"It's a killer offer we believe stands up nicely across any competitive 
lens you put it through," Gorog said.

Subscribers can also buy additional MP3-format songs priced between 69 
cents and $1.29.

Gorog would not say how Napster's $12.95-a-month streaming service had 
been affected by other sites that stream songs for free, such as MySpace 
Music, which launched in September.

Sites such as MySpace, Pandora and imeem pay for song streams with 
advertising revenue, but Napster does not have any ads.

Music analyst Rob Enderle of the Enderle Group said the offering lacked 
real synergy with its acquirer, consumer electronics retailer Best Buy.

"I'm struggling to see how this helps Best Buy," Enderle said. "I don't 
see how you get store traffic with this."

Gorog said the plan will be marketed through Best Buy stores starting 
Tuesday including with pre-paid cards that will cost from $5 for one 
month to up to $60 for a 12-month subscription. Online buyers of 
lengthier subscriptions will get a few extra song download credits 
thrown in.

He said the company plans to offer a streaming service on mobile devices 
in the future.

Users of Napster's existing $12.95-per-month computer-based music 
streaming service will be switched over automatically on their next 
billing cycle.

Others who pay $14.95 a month to be able to download unlimited numbers 
of songs and play them from portable devices, will be given a choice to 
stick with their plan or switch to the new plan. Subscribers who pay 
$7.49 to have five over-the-air song downloads to mobile phones will not 
be affected.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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