Music 2.0 is here
Music is mid-revolution. It's a quiet revolution but a sure one.
While marketers and industry experts spend time debating the
impact of new technologies, Asia's youth are simply using them...
or are poised to do so.
In research conducted as part of the Music Matters conference,
MTV, Branded and Synovate, surveyed over 3,800 city-dwelling
15-34 year olds in 10 Asian markets to find out how passionate
they are about music, what music-related activities they engage
in and their attitudes towards a digital future for the industry.
30 million young urban Asians can't be wrong
More than half the region's urban 15-34 year olds have played
music on a computer in the past month - that's 30 million people.
There are as many as 84% engaged in this activity in just four of
China's large cities*.
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Mobile music rocks my world
More than half (57%) of the region's young urban consumers are
ready to replace their digital music devices with music-playing
mobile phones.
Executive Director of Branded and organiser of the Music Matters
conference, Jasper Donat, said that music on the move is driven
by convenience.
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Nature versus nurture - does culture or environment drive music habits?
The biggest mistake Asia's marketers can make is seeing the region as
homogenous. MTV Networks Asia's VP Research & Planning, Ian Stewart,
said that musical tastes, attitudes and preferences across Asia's youth
vary from market to market and marketers need to change their approach
accordingly.
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About the Music Matters survey
The MTV, Branded and Synovate Music Matters survey asked over 3,800
urban respondents aged 15 to 34 in ten key markets about their music
habits, activities and attitudes. It covered China, Korea, Hong Kong,
Taiwan, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand
and was conducted in March 2007 on AsiaBUS, Synovate's
monthly omnibus survey.
* The survey covered the cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chengdu in China.