š³This Song Plants Trees (At Artists’ Expense)
How streaming services calculate royalties, featuring trees.
Every spin on Spotify – or any streaming service really – giveth, and every spin taketh away.
Your humble royalty accounting professional refers here to the way streaming services calculate royalties. Every time you spin a track past the 30 second mark, a royalty is generated for the rightsholder (the catalog and/or artist), right? Wrong. After all, you’re not pumping tiny little quarters into Spotify at ~ .004 a spin. You’re paying them $10/month or so, they’re keeping around $3, and the rest is going into a big ‘ol pool of money.
What you’re generating with each play is simply a spin, the sum total of which is the denominator to the money total’s numerator, in what is often referred to as the monthly “pro-rata rate.”
$$$ / Spins = The Monthly Pro-Rata Royalty Rate
Let’s say there’s $70 in the money pool in a given month, and there were 100 spins that month. That’s $0.70/spin! The catalogs and artists who own the rights to whatever generated those spins are going to be psyched.
Now letās add another 100 spins, from a new catalog/artist. The rate is now down to $0.35/spin ā the new catalog/artist is now earning $35, but the othersā income has gone down accordingly, from $70 to $35. Spins donāt add money to the pool ā they simply change how the money gets divvied up. Hence: the spins giveth, and spins taketh away.
Which brings us to the curious case of āThis Song Plants Trees.ā This nifty 31-second number has generated over 1,000,000 spins, the money from which has been used to plant 10,000 trees (according to TSPT, āAround ~100 streams makes enough money to plant one treeā).
That moneyās coming from somewhere. Itās not really coming from Spotify (theyāre still keeping their same 30%), nor is it likely coming from new subscribers who started paying for their preferred streaming service just to hear āThis Song Plants Trees.ā
As illustrated above, the tree money is coming out of the overall money pool, and therefore the pockets of other catalogs/artists, many of them trying to make an honest living from music. Without those virally-generated million spins, the pro-rata denominator would be that much lower, and the resulting rate would be ever-so-slightly-higher.
Personally Iām a big fan of trees ā especially their leafier work ā and I donāt begrudge anyone hacking a system to benefit the planet. This isnāt a criticism of Matt Gordon (creator of TSPT and self-described maker of viral webapps) ā indeed it is a testament to their genius, or at least their ability to use their powers for good.
But genius can have unintended consequences. In this case, real money is being redirected from real artists to (also real) trees. I reached out to Matt for comment and had a fascinating chat, in which he noted he was indeed aware of the way streaming servicesā calculates royalties, feels that TSPT is its own kind of art, and that the real enemy here is the streaming services for putting artists and rightsholders in this zero-sum game, where every spin giveth and taketh away. He also noted the experiment generated way more money than he expected, a testament to the fact that those streams do add up.
This wasnāt written as a criticism of Spotify et al, so much as an opportunity to illustrate how things works. Clearly thereās consumer appeal in a system where I can pay a flat amount and stream all I want, vs. having to think about it with every spin. Radioās enduring appeal comes to mind.
Perhaps itās the pro-rata model thatās worth reconsidering. The user-centric, or āfan poweredā model, where your $7/month gets split between what you actually listened to instead of the whole pool, would yield the same take-from-artists-give-to-trees-with-every-viral-spin effect, but would also help the listener understand that their spins are literally allocating money rather than generating it.
However they do it, the main takeaway is that streaming is currently a massive, commonly misunderstood system of redistribution that is rife for manipulation. Leaky pipes, scams, and viral spoken word tracks for trees abound, and catalogs and artists just trying to earn a living from music pay the price. Streaming services arenāt incentivized to do much about streaming fraud (and indeed are incentivized to get in on it), though again, the user-centric model, which Spotifyās long fought against, would help on that front. Maybe this is a criticism of Spotify after all?