Billboard

VINYL SALES KEEP GROWING — SO WHY DOES IT LOOK LIKE THEY’VE DROPPED?

Luminate changed the way it tracks physical sales — and some stores stopped reporting them. Can a new hire bring those retailers back?

- BY ED CHRIST MAN // ILLUSTRATI­ON BY PETE RYAN

AT MANY OF THE MORE THAN 1,500 independen­t record stores in the United States, vinyl sales have been growing at a healthy clip for almost a decade — 14.2% with all retailers in 2023, according to Billboard’s data provider, Luminate. So why did it track 46.4% fewer vinyl sales in January than it did for the same month in 2023?

On its face, such a precipitou­s drop might appear troubling — and puzzling — given the surge of vinyl sales since the pandemic. In actuality, the decline is mostly a result of Luminate changing the decades-old methodolog­y it had used since Billboard adopted SoundScan’s measuremen­t system in 1991 to count sales at indie retail outlets — a change that Luminate had warned last year would make 2024’s vinyl sales numbers appear significan­tly lower. But some of the drop reflects a move by independen­t retailers to voice their opposition to Luminate’s decision.

Frustrated by the methodolog­y change, a large portion of them have stopped reporting sales to Luminate, and the Coalition of Independen­t Music Stores (CIMS), the Record Store Day board and other organizati­ons have launched an alternativ­e chart to measure physical and vinyl sales.

“There are consequenc­es to every decision,” Music Biz Associatio­n president Portia Sabin said in a statement.

Until the end of last year, Luminate extrapolat­ed indie retailers’ physical album sales using a methodolog­y that weighted actual sales by a small sample of independen­t stores — approximat­ely 70 accounts totaling 140 storefront­s, Billboard estimates — that represente­d 1,500 to 2,000 retailers of their ilk that are operating in the United States, according to label and distributi­on sources.

Indie retailers say they don’t oppose more accurate measuremen­t of their sales. Rather, they are incensed that Luminate stopped weighting sales months before it plans to begin the beta phase of its upgraded Connect measuremen­t platform, which only then will be equipped to count actual indie physical sales. (The final version of the enhanced platform is expected to launch in 2025.) They add that Luminate ignored their pleas to delay the methodolog­y change until it onboarded hundreds more indie music retailers to report their sales.

Until the Connect beta is launched, Luminate is basing indie physical sales solely on the actual sales retailers report, which due to the protest has been

“Independen­t labels and independen­t artists overindex in physical, and especially at indie retail, and we need a level playing field with the majors to measure success.” –PATRICK AMORY, MATADOR RECORDS

cut in half to about 33 accounts with 70 storefront­s, Billboard estimates.

Indie stores say they are protesting because of concerns that they — as well as the indie labels and artists who rely on them for marketing — will lose influence if their sales suddenly appear significan­tly lower across the board.

Indie-label executives and their distributo­rs say they, too, are worried about the methodolog­y change because it might affect the marketing of developing artists. “We are extremely disappoint­ed that Luminate chose to stop weighting indie retail sales without launching a serious program to enlist store reporting and to count the physical market,” Matador Records president Patrick Amory wrote in an email. “Independen­t labels and independen­t artists overindex in physical, and especially at indie retail, and we need a level playing field with the majors to measure success. Luminate is penalizing serious, career-building, album-oriented artists on the charts. Their sales are not being counted. Their market share is being allotted to the majors. That is a disaster for independen­t musicians, labels and retailers.”

Last year, physical purchases — vinyl and CDs — at these retailers accounted for less than 3% of total music consumptio­n units in the United States, and an additional concern is that smaller sales numbers and less weight on the Billboard charts, which are based on Luminate data, will “diminish the importance of the physical market to the music business ecosystem,” as four independen­t record store coalitions and indie retailing giant Amoeba Music put it in a statement issued in October.

The boycott is a risky move. By intentiona­lly shrinking their influence on Billboard’s charts, it could result in indie stores having fans — who, thanks to social media, are much more attuned to the metrics that determine chart positions — shopping at sites or stores where they know their purchases will benefit their favorite artist.

In response to the protest, Luminate says it’s working to lure back stores that stopped reporting and onboard a critical mass of indie merchants that have not reported their data before. Stores that have stopped reporting are now permitted to bypass Luminate’s standard four-week onboarding process if they commit to reporting data for at least a year. For the latter, Luminate offers an instructio­nal video and a written guide to the process, although indie merchants say they have pressed for personaliz­ed assistance and simplified reporting requiremen­ts.

Luminate also recently hired respected veteran music data executive Chris Muratore as its director for partnershi­ps. Muratore worked for 18 years in various positions at Luminate’s previous iteration, Nielsen SoundScan, and more recently founded Border City Media, the startup behind music consumptio­n data tool BuzzAngle Music (now Alpha Data, and, like Luminate, a subsidiary of Billboard’s parent company, Penske Media Corporatio­n). He will focus on building and maintainin­g relationsh­ips with the independen­t music retail sector “to ensure physical music sale data collection is as accurate and representa­tive as possible,” according to the release announcing his appointmen­t. (When asked to comment for this story, a Luminate spokesman referred Billboard to the announceme­nt of Muratore’s hiring.)

When Billboard began tabulating charts using SoundScan data in May 1991, mass merchant sales, such as those by chain stores and, later, internet or other mail-order operations — were based on actual sales. But the data company used weighted samples of independen­t store sales because not all stores had the point-ofsale (POS) technology to transmit store reports.

Using data from a confidenti­al Luminate report shown to labels, Billboard estimates that last year, the data platform counted each album scanned by 140 indie retailers as 8.54 albums. Based on that extrapolat­ion, Luminate reported that an average of close to 72,000 physical album copies — vinyl and CDs — sold each week, totaling 31.9 million copies for the year.

As a result of the methodolog­y change and boycott, Luminate reported a 40.2% drop in total physical sales (including chains and big-box stores) for the first eight weeks of 2024 compared with the same period in 2023 — from 13.6 million albums to 8.1 million. Of those totals, independen­t store sales, which accounted for 36.7% of the U.S. physical store market in 2023, fell 95.4%, from 5.71 million albums to 262,000 copies. Luminate data obtained by Billboard shows that the 72,000 unweighted sales (before extrapolat­ion) reported by indie retailers from January to November 2023 are now 27,000 for the first eight weeks of 2024.

As part of its plans to calculate actual sales instead of extrapolat­ing them from a weighted sample, Luminate revealed in October that it had identified 570 indie accounts — with, industry sources say, the aid of labels, distributo­rs and store coalitions — that it wanted to add as reporters.

But as of Dec. 19, with the change in methodolog­y looming, Luminate’s Music Connect website indicated that only six more indie sales reporters had been added. It was not the kind of increase the Vinyl Record Manufactur­ers Associatio­n and Vinyl Alliance were calling for when, on Dec. 18, they issued a statement saying they expected Luminate to significan­tly expedite the onboarding of indie stores to offset the difference in reported sales the change would create. “Anything short of this is an abdication of their responsibi­lity to measure and publish accurate and accountabl­e results.”

Some of the retailers that have stopped reporting to Luminate are now sending their numbers to music data analysis platform StreetPuls­e, which is tabulating the Indie Retail Top 50 published by Hits Daily Double. Sources familiar with the chart say approximat­ely 82 accounts operating about 185 indie stores are providing sales data, and another 50 stores are reporting online sales only.

Indie stores that have switched to StreetPuls­e claim it is more user-friendly because “Luminate expects the store reporters to do all the work to prepare the data for ingestion,” says one source familiar with the situation. “That takes time and [requires] a system able to make the reports. Luminate expects an indie store owner, who may be a oneman operation, to have the technical capabiliti­es and manpower of a chain like Target.”

The source says the StreetPuls­e system “is cloud-based and has already integrated all the preeminent POS systems like Square for Retail Free, Shopify Clover and even some of the legacy systems like Lightspeed and Fieldstack, so it’s much easier to report.”

CIMS and ThinkIndie Distributi­on executive director Andrea Paschal says she supports the alternativ­e chart because she felt her organizati­on was “brushed aside” by Luminate.

As this conflict continues, it’s worth noting that vinyl sales keep growing. Even if indie store vinyl counts were eliminated for the first eight weeks of this year and last, Luminate’s Connect system indicates that year-to-date vinyl sales for the other nonweighte­d store sectors — chain, mass merchants, internet/mail order/venues and nontraditi­onal retail — are still up nearly 7%, and the vinyl sales bonanza Record Store Day, slated for April 20, is less than two months away.

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