Category Archives: trend

Future of Music Is a Love Story

Where will the music industry be in 20 years, 30 years, 50 years?

Before I tell you my thoughts on the matter, you should know that you’re reading the opinion of an enthusiastic optimist: one of the few living souls in the music industry who still believes that the music industry is not dying…it’s just coming alive.

There are many (many) people who predict the downfall of music sales and the irrelevancy of the album as an economic entity. I am not one of them. In my opinion, the value of an album is, and will continue to be, based on the amount of heart and soul an artist has bled into a body of work, and the financial value that artists (and their labels) place on their music when it goes out into the marketplace. Piracy, file sharing and streaming have shrunk the numbers of paid album sales drastically, and every artist has handled this blow differently.

In recent years, you’ve probably read the articles about major recording artists who have decided to practically give their music away, for this promotion or that exclusive deal. My hope for the future, not just in the music industry, but in every young girl I meet…is that they all realize their worth and ask for it.

Music is art, and art is important and rare. Important, rare things are valuable. Valuable things should be paid for. It’s my opinion that music should not be free, and my prediction is that individual artists and their labels will someday decide what an album’s price point is. I hope they don’t underestimate themselves or undervalue their art.

http://online.wsj.com/

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    According to US business magazine Forbes, he’s the most important man in the music industry. He’s on text messaging terms with U2 singer Bono and 'Zuck' with Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg. But now the year is 2006 and he's 23 years old. He's sold his red dream Ferrari and got…
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  • 55
    Do you keep 50% of your time unscheduled? This sounds like a strange question—in fact, for those of us with back-to-back meetings and to-do lists a mile long, it might sound downright silly. But if you’re a manager, leader, or entrepreneur, it’s one worth pondering. As Dov Frohman explains in…
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  • 51
      Spotify integrated with Facebook, Uber works closely with local partners, Moz built a massive community, Dollar Shave Club launched a viral video. The history of growth marketing is riddled with brilliant growth hacks. Yet so many of these growth hacks have a short shelf life. Facebook has changed it’s…
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  • 50
    Author Steven Johnson talks to the engineer turned philanthropist about the future, technology, ice, capitalism, and optimism. When interesting people hang out, interesting things tend to happen. So when we found out that Steven Johnson, author of Where Good Ideas Come From andThe Ghost Map was going to sit down…
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  • 45
          Motivation is a fire that must  constantly be refueled if it is to continue to burn.      
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Larry Page Has A Fascinating View Of The Economy That’s Startlingly Similar To What Keynes Once Predicted

Google CEO Larry Page recently participated in a fireside chat with Khosla Ventures, where among other things he offered his view on the state of the economy and labor.

People are endlessly musing on the future of the labor market these days, given the idea that robots can perform more and more jobs that were once thought to be the sole domain of humans, and because tech-enabled productivity has enabled a few lucky people to reap huge fortunes with relatively few workers.

In light of this, Page wonders why everyone is working so much, and he suggests that perhaps people don’t need to work themselves to the bone, since it’s relatively easy for a modern society to fulfill most people’s basic necessities.

Here’s part of his comments:

I totally believe we should be living in a time of abundance, like Peter Diamandis’ book.

If you really think about the things that you need to make yourself happy — housing, security, opportunities for your kids — anthropologists have been identifying these things. It’s not that hard for us to provide those things. The amount of resources we need to do that, the amount of work that actually needs to go into that is pretty small. I’m guessing less than 1% at the moment.

So the idea that everyone needs to work frantically to meet people’s needs is just not true. I do think there’s a problem that we don’t recognize that. I think there’s also a social problem that a lot of people aren’t happy if they don’t have anything to do. So we need to give people things to do. We need to feel like you’re needed, wanted and have something productive to do. But I think the mix with that and the industries we actually need and so on are– there’s not a good correspondence. That’s why we’re busy destroying the environment and other things, maybe we don’t need to be doing.

Page goes on to say that the solution may be work sharing, basically everyone doing a little less to help ensure that everyone has a job to do.

His thinking actually echoes the economist John Maynard Keynes, who envisioned this kind of future in his paper The Economic Possibilities Of Our Grandchildren. He anticipated, writing in 1930, that in the not so distant future, our absolute human needs would be easily met, and that how to deal with our leisure time and relative needs would be the pressing issue of the day. He even anticipated shorter work hours as a way to deal with this “problem.”

Here’s a key passage. You can just read the bolded parts if you want to get the point:

Thus for the first time since his creation man will be faced with his real, his permanent problem-how to use his freedom from pressing economic cares, how to occupy the leisure, which science and compound interest will have won for him, to live wisely and agreeably and well.

The strenuous purposeful money-makers may carry all of us along with them into the lap of economic abundance. But it will be those peoples, who can keep alive, and cultivate into a fuller perfection, the art of life itself and do not sell themselves for the means of life, who will be able to enjoy the abundance when it comes. Yet there is no country and no people, I think, who can look forward to the age of leisure and of abundance without a dread. For we have been trained too long to strive and not to enjoy. It is a fearful problem for the ordinary person, with no special talents, to occupy himself, especially if he no longer has roots in the soil or in custom or in the beloved conventions of a traditional society. To judge from the behaviour and the achievements of the wealthy classes to-day in any quarter of the world, the outlook is very depressing!

For these are, so to speak, our advance guard-those who are spying out the promised land for the rest of us and pitching their camp there. For they have most of them failed disastrously, so it seems to me-those who have an independent income but no associations or duties or ties-to solve the problem which has been set them. I feel sure that with a little more experience we shall use the new-found bounty of nature quite differently from the way in which the rich use it to-day, and will map out for ourselves a plan of life quite otherwise than theirs. For many ages to come the old Adam will be so strong in us that everybody will need to do some work if he is to be contented. We shall do more things for ourselves than is usual with the rich to-day, only too glad to have small duties and tasks and routines. But beyond this, we shall endeavour to spread the bread thin on the butter-to make what work there is still to be done to be as widely shared as possible. Three-hour shifts or a fifteen-hour week may put off the problem for a great while. For three hours a day is quite enough to satisfy the old Adam in most of us!

It all sounds great! Now how to get all of society in a different mentality, where we learn to “enjoy” rather than “strive” is a harder matter.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/larry-page-keynes-2014-7#ixzz36mFE457B

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  • 49
    The US Dollar’s status as a reserve currency seems to be a perennial concern for many people these days.  I think this concern is often dramatically overstated.  I was reminded of this point as I was reviewing the slides from Jeff Gundlach’s presentation yesterday which showed the following chart: Source…
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  • 48
    Follow up of my post on BIG COMPANIES NOW HAVE A HAND IN THE COLLABORATIVE ECONOMY Here is one picture.
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  • 48
    http://www.teslamotors.com/sites/default/files/blog_attachments/gigafactory.pdf
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Klarna is the next big thing in Internet payments

PayPal revolutionized the way we buy things online, but Klarna is the next big thing in Internet payments, according to famed venture capitalist Michael Moritz.

Moritz made early investments in Google (GOOGL, Tech30), LinkedIn (LNKD, Tech30),Yahoo (YHOO, Tech30) and eBay’s (EBAY, Tech30) PayPal. His firm, Sequoia Capital, has been investing millions in Klarna over the past few years. He is impressed with how the Swedish company’s technology makes online transactions easier, cutting out passwords and the traditionally slow registration process.

“We’ve invested in payments for a good long time and had started doing that in the 1990s,” Moritz told CNNMoney. “We had been an early investor in PayPal. But that was a long time ago. That was almost 15 years ago now. And the world moves on and changes, particularly with the advent of mobile computing … there’s a vast new landscape to conquer.”

http://money.cnn.com/

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Amazon May Have Just Created a Weapon of Mass Consumption

With its announcement of a new smartphone this week, Amazon unveiled advanced camera technology that could arguably be called “point and shoot yourself in the foot.”

Amazon’s foray into smartphones includes image-recognition technology that lets consumers point the phone at a product to buy it from its online store. The phone’s Firefly button recognizes more than 70 million products, the company says. Mixing compulsive smartphone usage with the instant gratification of point-and-purchase could take impulse spending to a new level. Within minutes of the announcement, the twitterverse saw the potential: “Amazon launches a shopping machine,” one person tweeted, “calls it a smartphone.”

But shopping convenience may come at a high cost for some people. The more removed people are from purchasing with cash the more they tend to overspend, behavioral finance experts say. Research shows that when people pay with plastic they can spend 20 percent to 30 percent more than when they use cash, says Denise Hughes, a financial coach based in San Carlos, California. Casinos use chips, behavioral experts note, to also remove the regulating “pain of paying.”

The phone could remove “frictions and barriers” — like taking out a wallet — that get people to think about purchases in a less emotional way, says Dan Ariely, behavioral economics professor at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business. “The ability to act very quickly on our emotions is going to simply get people to buy more impulsive things,” he says. And those things, he adds, aren’t going to be vitamins or long-term savings bonds. “They’d buy stuff that is more shiny and tempting at the moment, like the new Amazon phone.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/

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    The growth of Amazon and eBay illustrates that businesses and consumers alike are willing to purchase what they need online rather than from a salesperson. That trend toward online buying will continue, according to Gerhard Gschwandtner, publisher of Selling Power magazine, and host of the Sales 2.0 Conference in Boston on July 14, 2014. "The integration…
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  • 44
    We caught up with billionaire entrepreneur and investor Mark Cuban during South by Southwest Interactive in Austin. Our first question: what apps does the "Shark Tank" star and Dallas Mavericks owner have on his smartphone? Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/mark-cuban-13-apps-phone-2014-3#ixzz2wLaru5Rl
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  • 44
    Amazon is offering its warehouse employees up to $5,000 to quit their jobs, even as the company is in the process of adding workers and locations. The "Pay to Quit" program, which was announced by CEO Jeff Bezos in his letter to shareholders late Thursday, is an effort to make…
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  • 44
    Amazon plans to launch Project Kuiper, a network of 3,236 small satellites to create an interconnected network that beams high-speed internet to anywhere on Earth. Morgan Stanley estimates Project Kuiper represents as much as a ”$100 billion opportunity.” The firm’s estimate is based on its expectation that the space economy…
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  • 43
    Thanks to PricewaterhouseCoopers’ (PwC) 2014 report on Cities of Opportunity, job seekers have a handy list of some of the best cities to find a job across the world. Using 10 indicators to look at the factors that contribute to a well-balanced city, the study compared 30 different cities and…
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What Television Will Look Like in 2025, According to Netflix

In the future, Netflix will know exactly what you want to watch, even before you do. You won’t have to spend all that time browsing through endless lists of shows on your television.

That’s according to Neil Hunt, Netflix’s chief product officer. It’s just one of many predictions for the future of TV that the forward-thinking executive laid out on stage today at New York City’s Internet Week conference, and no one would be surprised if all that came to fruition. If there’s one company that knows about changing the way we watch TV shows and movies, it’s Netflix. From its humble origins as a DVD-by-mail outfit back in 1997 to its current status as a video streaming powerhouse and original content creator, Netflix has already overturned the status quo more than once.

As a slew of other tech companies, from Amazon to Yahoo, compete with Netflix to move television online–and traditional broadcasters fight to protect their old business models–Hunt has a clear vision for how the war for our attention will play out by the year 2025. Here are a few of his predictions:

You’ll Have 48 Million TV Channels

People have traditionally discovered new shows by tuning into the channels that were most aligned with their interests. Love news? Then CNN might be the channel for you. If it’s children’s programming you want, Nickelodeon has you covered. And yet, none of these channels can serve 100 percent of their customers what they want to watch 100 percent of the time.

Netflix's Neil Hunt. Image: Netflix

According to Hunt, this will change with internet TV. He said Netflix is now working to perfect its personalization technology to the point where users will no longer have to choose what they want to watch from a grid of shows and movies. Instead, the recommendation engine will be so finely tuned that it will show users “one or two suggestions that perfectly fit what they want to watch now.”

“I think this vision is possible,” Hunt said. “We’ve come a long way towards it, and we have a ways to go still.” He said Netflix is now devoting as much time and energy to building out that personalization technology as the company put into building the infrastructure for delivering that content in the first place.

Url : http://www.wired.com/2014/05/neil-hunt/

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  • 52
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  • 51
    Social network Ello, which operates in Vermont, is riding the rocket ship usually reserved for Silicon Valley’s hottest consumer tech startups. The ad-free social network, which has to be the most well-known product from the Green Mountain State since Ben and Jerry’s launched in the late ’70s, has taken the…
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Trends coming in 2014.

This is the third year in a row that I’ve asked friends and colleagues of mine to make predictions for the coming year.In the past, when I’ve done these predictions, I’ve turned to mostly traders who follow public stocks.  The predictions have been about the best long ideas, the best short ideas, and the estimated return of the S&P 500 in the coming year.

Rather than continue with that format, I decided to change it this year.

Instead of market predictions, I asked people for their best “sleeper ideas” for 2014.  A sleeper idea is something that few people see coming.  It’s a little followed idea that suddenly goes mainstream.

Read more on http://www.forbes.com/

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  • 67
    ( Source : http://www.web-strategist.com/blog/2015/02/03/google-enters-the-collaborative-economy-in-a-big-way/ ) Here comes Google, with a series of five market moves injecting them as a central player for the collaborative economy. Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information. But it doesn’t just start and stop there. They also want to organize the world’s logistics, commerce, local…
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  • 55
    (Source : http://outthinker.com/outthinkerblog/?p=250 ) Picture this scenario. A bomb has exploded. You’ve been working for the last two weeks in a remote part of Mongolia. Your boss promised this short-term assignment would prove your commitment and accelerate your career. But now, unsure of what happened or which coworkers were injured or…
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Forget ‘the Cloud’; ‘the Fog’ Is Tech’s Future

I’m as big a believer in the transformational power of cloud computing as anyone you’ll meet. Smartphones, which are constantly seeking and retrieving data, don’t make sense without the cloud, and any business that isn’t racing to push its data and software into someone else’s data center is, in my view, setting itself up for disruption by a competitor who is. 

….

Stop focusing on the cloud, and start figuring out how to store and process the torrent of data being generated by the Internet of Things (also known as the industrial Internet) on the things themselves, or on devices that sit between our things and the Internet.

http://online.wsj.com/

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  • 59
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  • 53
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7 Things We’ve Learned About Impact Investing in 7 Years

 The term “impact investing” was first coined at a convening hosted by the Rockefeller Foundation at Bellagio Conference Center. Seven years later, the Rockefeller Foundation are proud that impact investments are punching bigger than the weight of those two words, providing a vibrant and viable option for investors looking to generate both financial return and make social or environmental impact.

The new e-book hit the digital shelves, “The Power of Impact Investing: Putting Markets to Work for Profit and Global Good.” 

http://www.rockefellerfoundation.org

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  • 33
    The market does not run on chance or luck. Like the battlefield, it runs on probabilities and odds. David Dreman (1936-) In the realm of investing, the notion that success stems from luck or random chance is a myth that has been debunked by many of the world's most successful investors.…
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  • 32
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Hedge funds turn to Asia – and airlines

 

New York’s hottest young hedge funds are turning their attention towards Asian equities and airlines for the next big trade.

 

At Sohn Next Wave, held in New York’s Lincoln Centre ahead of the prestigious Sohn Investment conference, Chinese travel agent Ctrip, Indian telco Bharti Infratel, Japanese property company Goldstar and US airline JetBlue were the best trades touted.

 

Jason Karp, of $1.3 billion Tourbillon Capital Partners, could hardly contain his enthusiasm for the enormous potential of Nasdaq-listed Chinese travel company Ctrip.

 

As China’s middle-class grows, so does its propensity to travel. While China as a nation spends more on travel than other countries, on a per capita basis, it spends the least.

 

“Just imagine when the per-person spend on travel catches up,” Karp says. “There are very few companies that can give you 20 to 40 per cent growth in the past and in the future.”

 

Karp expects revenue for Ctrip to reach $7.3 billion in 2020, from less than $1 billion today, and says it is a Chinese version of runaway online travel stock Priceline, but with higher growth and a bigger market.

 

As these factors change, Ctrip’s revenue could grow by seven or eight times.


Read more:  http://www.smh.com.au/

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  • 63
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  • 60
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  • 57
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  • 57
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Kris eller uppgång för världen ?

För 10 år sedan verkade den globala ekonomin att vara på bättringsvägen.  Räntorna gick ner till 1 %, Storbritannien var i sitt 12:e år av oavbruten tillväxt, Kina var en del av WTO och alla trodde på att marknaderna själva kunde korrigera sig.

Den monetära systemkrasch som kom var oförutsedd och en total överraskning. IMF erkände att det hade gjort sig skyldiga till grupptänkande och tonade ner tecken på problem.

Ser man tillbaka och jämför, är dock 2014 inte så annorlunda jämfört med 2004. Den globala ekonomin är aktiv igen, med stor tillgång på billigt kapital.

En del optimister tror att perioden med låg inflation och fortsatt expansion har återvänt efter ett uppehåll som orsakats av kraschen. Lågkonjunkturer är sällsynta och länder återgår så småningom till en trendmässig tillväxt. Detta kan antingen vara början på en ny lång global uppgång, eller i ett annat fall en del av grupptänkande.

Kanske har IMF ännu en gång valt att ignorera de tecken som kan anas i 2014 som återigen kan leda till turbulens:

1. Den globala ekonomin är beroende av exceptionellt låga räntor. Räntorna är lägre i varje efterföljande cykel och räntorna är nu knappt över noll.

2. Obligationsmarknaden kan krascha eftersom världens centralbanker försöker återvända till en mer normal penningpolitik med en måttlig och gradvis höjning av styrräntorna.

3. Alla åberopade att skiffer olja och gas skulle bli vår nästa energikälla. Men 15 stora företag har skrivit av $35 miljarder i investeringar sedan boomen inleddes. Att få olja och gas ur marken har visat sig dyrare och mindre lönsamt än väntat.

4. Risken för resurskonflikter inom de kommande fem till tio åren, om inte det internationella samfundet blir bättre på att hantera den globala uppvärmningen . Extrema väderhändelser – från översvämningar i Storbritannien till torka i Australien – ökar.

5. Ökande ojämlikhet – en liten elit tjänar på den globala tillväxten. Längst ner, och i allt högre grad även för dem i mitten, är det en fråga om lönesänkningar, högre arbetslöshet, skuldsättning, åtstramning och fattigdom. De 85 rikaste människorna i världen äger tillsammans lika mycket som hälften av världens befolkning, men verkar omedveten om risken för omfattande social oro .

Vi får hoppas att dessa tecken inte blir mer reella och att vi ser en uppgång istället för en längre och djupare kris.

Posted on http://hedgenordic.com/

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  • 84
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  • 72
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  • 68
    10 years ago, the global economy seemed to be on the mend. Interests rates down to 1%, UK was in its 12th year of uninterrupted growth, China was a part of WTO and everyone firmly believed in self correcting markets. The monetary system crash was unforeseen and a surprise. IMF…
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