The Long Tail sparked a rush of investment and euphoria, only to crash into reality a few years later. In 2010, is the theory of "1,000 True Fans" a similar fantasy?
Like the Long Tail, the idea seems quite elegant on paper, but seems to encounter problems in the real world. In fact, the theory itself is partly predicated on the Long Tail and was hatched in 2008 by another Wired journalist, Kevin Kelly. For those unfamiliar, the theory holds that an artist can live comfortably by developing and nurturing a core fanbase of 1,000, each of whom contributes $100 annually. The resulting annual salary of $100,000 is enough for most to enjoy a comfortable lifestyle without the need for a day job.
Part of the allure of the theory is that it appears totally practical and achievable, and offers a direct-to-fan antidote to big, mainstream strategies. Instead of reaching for Gaga-level fame and riches - and the devilish contracts that come with it - this post-opulence theory offers the magic of middle class success with fewer strings attached.
But years later, what's the verdict? Is there real data to support the idea that this emerging class is growing, or even exists in substantial numbers? Digital Music News occasionally hears from artists who claim to make more than $100,000 annually. But most seem to be struggling to quit their day jobs, and are honest enough to admit it. And some are quite open about their struggles.
And, many of these artists have lots of fans - tens of thousands or more - but have difficulty converting high-paying devotees. That raises the question of whether superfans are really super-spenders. "Ask yourself: Who among all the artists you enjoy or admire have you spent more than $100 on in the last year?" well-accomplished author John Scalzi posed as part of a larger critical deconstruction of the theory. Scalzi had actually sold more than 100,000 books by 2007, and accrued 40,000 followers online. But even at this mid-level of fame, Scalzi found that attracting and maintaining a heavy-spending group of followers proved difficult. "Lots and lots of people will spend $20 a year to be someone's fan," Scalzi continued. "A much smaller number will spend $100."
Too pessimistic? Direct-to-fan artists like Amanda Palmer and Jill Sobule offer serious counterexamples, among others. On stage at the New Music Seminar recently in New York, publicist and DIY expert Ariel Hyatt also pointed to the successful efforts of Ellis Paul, an artist that reported annual profits of more than $100,000 on a superfan base of 2,500. That core took about ten years to develop, according to the artist.
Impressive story, though the question is whether this represents a model that is scalable to the broader direct-to-fan (and DIY) community. Hyatt appears almost religious on the matter. "I refuse to listen to the naysayers who are refuting 1,000 True Fans and I am going to focus on featuring as many artists as I can who are proving the model," Hyatt declared in 2009.
But separating the impact of marketing teams and label resources is difficult. Both Paul and Palmer have had significant label support in the past, and Hyatt herself hoisted Trent Reznor and Radiohead as prime validations of the theory. "Trent Reznor and Radiohead proved 1,000 True Fans practically overnight and they will always remain as the two cornerstones of artists who did it quickly and efficiently for obvious reasons that don’t need to be rehashed here," Hyatt continued. Of course, these two artists were created by massive, major label machines in the 90s.
Perhaps a lot more data - and time - are required to truly allow the theory to breathe. But anecdotally, only a slim number of artists appear to be surviving the DIY war, suggesting that some alternative theories may be worth considering.
Paul Resnikoff, Publisher

Comments Closed
CraigDiPaolo Thursday, July 29, 2010
"Sad But True"
I think this is the right question to ask.
I can count the number of D.I.Y. artists living off their music with my fingers. And I mean really living, not stuffed in some lower E. Side hole with no health insurance.

MisterSoftee Thursday, July 29, 2010
1000TF has a major math issue. If it's not a soloist but a band then you have to split $100K. So, how about a 5 pieces band. $20K using that philosophy?

bydesign Thursday, July 29, 2010
so let me get this straight:
Radiohead is embodying 1,000 True Fans?
So, is Bono long tail then? doesn't make sense

Suzanne Lainson Thursday, July 29, 2010
I know an artist who was grossing about $150,000 a year based on an email list of about 3000 local fans. She didn't get to keep all of that. About $45,000 a year went to pay band members she hired on a show-by-show basis. (She also played many solo gigs.)
So I know it is doable. We even built a business plan to calculate how many fans she needed to spend between $10 and $100 a year to gross $1 million annually. We estimated we needed around 35,000 to 40,000 paying fans (assuming some paid $10 a year, some $20 a year, and some $100 a year).
We projected a 10% conversion rate. In other words, for every 10 fans at a show, at least one would buy a CD or t-shirt (this was based on about three years of her sales data).
What this meant for her, and for anyone trying to do something similar, is that to get one paying fan, you'd need to play in front of at least 10 non-paying fans, and even more to find paying fans willing to spend $100 a year.
So to make the 1000 fans model work, an artist needs to reach out to far more than 1000 people. Perhaps as many as 10,000 to 100,000 fans. How do you do that? How many shows do you have to play each year to be seen and heard by 100,000 fans?
Yes, it is a numbers game, but the numbers are much bigger than most musicians can reach. And if you are trying to reach fans online rather than via shows, you've got to reach even more people because an online fan isn't necessarily a spending fan.

alias2u2 Friday, July 30, 2010
The posts here that breakdown payments to multi-band members and maybe a manager, agent, studio, engineer, CD manufacturer, art director, accountant, attorney, etc. properly recognize the fallacy of the $100,000 all goes to one guy theory. Not to mention that it is nearly impossible without real promotion and marketing formerly supplied by labels. Perhaps the authetic goal and payoff for DIY bands is still to get signed to a label with real distribution and marketing support.

NathanJE Friday, July 30, 2010
I think the right answer is that some artists will reach this milestone of $100,000, but in reality most will not be able to cut it. So maybe the theory is better for artists as a totally stretch goal, sort of like getting signed in the old business.
The funniest thing is that this reminds me so much of the vc world, where entrepreneurs are famous for writing down some numbers that seem easy to reach then multiply them times 10 or something and joila! I always seems so easy, but depressingly hard when you actually go out there and try it. Maybe that's why there are so many entrepreneurs and pseudo musicians who look at some success and think, this is easy!

CrowfeatheR Friday, July 30, 2010
This is CrowfeatheR, the voice of reality.
Getting anyone to spend $100 (net profit!!!!!!!!!!!!!!) on you is a pipe dream. Sure someone could spend $120 on a KISS ticket, but even then after expenses it is far from a NET $100. There are basic business math problems with the 1000 fan theory, it is childish and naive. Not only the simple fact that to get to a true $100 profit fans would need to spend much more than that, it is unlikely that anyone would spend a gross $100 a year. The more likely Gross would be $50 from a "super fan", given a $10 cd, A shirt and a few small hall tickets for you local shows. In reality using a REAL BUSINESS MODEL! you would need 10x more than 1000 real fans to even net $50,000.00 for your act. For a 5 person act your looking a $10G a year, not enough to buy new amp tubes and guitar strings and still eat. Which is why even the top echelon of DIY artists still must wait tables and work the day job.
"Don't quit your day job"
well at least until you've got 50,000 true fans.
http://www.myspace.com/crowfeatherproject

Jeremy Saturday, July 31, 2010
The larger point isn't that it's impossible to make it on your own as a musician. And the internet is certainly a potentially effective way to reach out and touch people. But as Paul suggested at the outset, the musician community would be best served by entertaining alternate theories because 1,000 True Fans is little more than a pundit gimmick--a nifty catch phrase that becomes a better tool for the consultants wielding it than the musicians working against all odds to employ it.
Because look, if you have to hunt around for the one or two or three folks (out of literally millions) who are actually succeeding with the 1,000 True Fans concept, and if you have to include NIN and Radiohead as "proof" that it works then the idea is pretty much dead in the water as a generalizable condition. Any isolated success story is more or less the exception that proves the rule, as the saying goes.
I am interested too in the cultural ramifications of the idea that musicians might start each playing to little universes of 1,000 devotees, and don't like how that looks either. I wrote an essay about that last year, which you can see here:
http://www.fingertipsmusic.com/classic/comment_casual.htm

Ignacio Sunday, August 01, 2010
"But as Paul suggested at the outset, the musician community would be best served by entertaining alternate theories because 1,000 True Fans is little more than a pundit gimmick--a nifty catch phrase that becomes a better tool for the consultants wielding it than the musicians working against all odds to employ it."
I would agree with this point.
It seems like all of these nifty theories are getting made up by smart people who are really just theorists, not really business people or artists really doing it in the real world. They're sipping lattes in SOMA with their iMacs but could never hack it for more than 3 dates on the road. It really matters because why is it that one essay here can debunk a stupid theory that has been around for years? Why were the voices of artist NOT making 1000 true fans in this whole thing? And where are all the people who were making the case for 1,000 true fans now? I haven't seen one response to this article from them, which says it all for me really.

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