A commitment to conservation
SAN DIEGO ZOO WILDLIFE ALLIANCE’S MULTIPRONGED APPROACH IS HAVING GLOBAL IMPACT
The northern white rhino is the most critically endangered animal on Earth. With only two remaining, a mother and daughter pair, their species is fighting for survival. Integrating their expertise in wildlife care and conservation science, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance (SDZWA) is working to save these gentle giants. The living, beating cells of 12 northern white rhinos are cryopreserved in their Biodiversity Bank’s Frozen Zoo, holding a key to conservation that transcends the test of time. Home to more than 10,000 living cell lines from over 1,150 species and subspecies, it is the largest collection of living materials of its kind in the world—and an invaluable source of hope for the future of our planet. When Kurt Benirschke founded the Frozen Zoo nearly 50 years ago, he did so because he saw the unique hope and skill sets that only zoos can provide to conservation. “Conservation is truly at the heart of San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance,” says Paul A. Baribault, the organization’s president and CEO.“To take the revenue from our parks and invest it into our conservation work, alongside [that of] our donors, is literally the most important thing we can be doing.” This focus on global conservation is a big reason why San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance was selected as one of Fast Company’s 2023 Brands that Matter.
A COLLABORATIVE EFFORT
SDZWA’S conservation efforts are anchored in eight global biodiversity hotspots around the world. In each of these “conservation hubs,” Alliance conservationists collaborate with local communities and experts to work toward specific biodiversity goals. For example, in the Amazon rainforest, SDZWA teams work with partners to help demonstrate how responsibly managed logging concessions can help secure crucial jaguar habitat. And they work with Rainforest Expeditions, a tourism company, to run a grid of trail cameras allowing scientists to study the long-term population dynamics of jaguars. “The word alliance is in our name for a very important reason,” Baribault says. “It reminds us that we’re much more than a zoo, and that great conservation work needs to be supported through partnerships, where everyone brings their strengths, because no one organization has all the tools themselves to change the future for wildlife.”
INSPIRING THE NEXT GENERATION
That said, the San Diego Zoo and San Diego Zoo Safari Park remain central to the organization’s mission. Together, the two locations welcome nearly 6 million guests each year, resulting in a local economic impact of more than $2.4 billion annually. This past year, the San Diego Zoo opened Wildlife Explorers Basecamp, a new interactive wildlife experience aimed at the next generation of wildlife allies. Set on three acres, this experience immerses visitors in four distinct ecosystems, allowing them to gain a better understanding of how species adapt to live in their own native environment. Its massive treehouse allows opportunities for parallel play with squirrel monkeys, and underground tunnels take guests alongside burrowing owls. Meanwhile, touchscreen games, microscopes, and scented environments give visitors the chance to enter the sensory worlds of wildlife. “We want to inspire the next generation to care about the planet,” Baribault says. “And we do that by bringing them into these ecosystems—and giving them exposure to the wildlife and ecosystems they might otherwise never encounter—while learning how we all fit into the bigger picture.”
book—for $80. Ethan Diamond, an entrepreneur who had created an email platform called Oddpost that got absorbed into Yahoo Mail, turned this model into Bandcamp in 2008, a platform where artists would set their own prices and offer a variety of digital and physical goods, and the company would take a 10% to 15% cut of the sales.
Today, one of these companies commands a market cap of more than $26 billion and its app is probably on your phone right now. The other, despite becoming the world’s largest seller of independent music, may evoke little more than vague familiarity. But within this discrepancy lies a paradox: Bandcamp, as comparatively threadbare as it may seem, with about $20 million in net revenue in 2022, is almost certainly profitable—based on the fact that the company has stayed lean and taken on no new funding since 2010. (Bandcamp announced it was being acquired by Epic Games in March 2022.) Spotify, a platform with a mind-bendingly complex bricolage of machine-learning algorithms wrapped in a state-of-the-art UX, has been in the red for 14 of the past 19 quarters since it went public in 2018, and it has not posted a positive quarter since September 2021.
In the recent, yet now bygone, days of low interest rates and growth obsession, Spotify’s lack of profitability was less concerning to the company—fashionable, even. But in an economic environment that’s led recently to bank runs and mass layoffs across the tech industry, it’s worth pondering what success really looks like.
FOR THE PAST THREE YEARS, AS the founder of a research project called Components, I’ve analyzed tens of millions of Bandcamp’s sales, user profiles, and albums and tracks, and I have come to view the differences between these companies in two distinct ways.
The first is a fundamental asymmetry in the way people spend on each platform. While Spotify’s customers are capped at paying a maximum of $10.99 per month, the spending of any given Bandcamp customer is theoretically limitless— and affected by nearly endless variables. For example, one of my earlier analyses of the platform found that customers voluntarily paid more money to musicians from their own countries, as well as to those whose releases were associated with charitable causes. Some customers buy one track a year, while others spend thousands of dollars. Jazz listeners are more likely to buy CDS, techno DJS are more likely to buy individual digital tracks, and so on.
Bandcamp bakes heterogeneity into its platform in a way that Spotify’s one-size-fits-all service erases. So while Spotify has created a technically complex platform for simple transactions, Bandcamp has created a technically simple platform for complex transactions.
The result is that Bandcamp is able to reap the benefits of what’s known as fat-tailed distributions, in which a minority of individuals comprise the majority of sales—the same logic followed by venture capital firms, whose bets on one or two unicorns make up for all the other portfolio companies that go bust. As I found in a recent analysis, about 20% of Bandcamp customers account for 80% of the site’s total revenues. And within this 20%, the sale of physical goods becomes increasingly important. More than half the objects that the very top spenders buy on the site are physical. And among those objects, vinyl records are more popular than all others (including CDS, tapes, and miscellaneous merch) combined.
On average, artists who sell the most physical stuff make the most money on the platform, and among the different kinds of physical stuff they sell, the association is strongest with vinyl. Among the highest
selling artists on the platform, 30% of all the items sold (including all nonmusical merch, like T-shirts) are vinyl records. Among the lowestselling artists, vinyl was roughly 5%. Downloadable albums and tracks move in the opposite direction, with top-selling artists moving fewer digital goods as they move up in the sales rankings.
Why does vinyl reveal itself as such a disproportionately important channel of spending? The music business at large has suddenly found itself asking the same question. In 2022, LPS and EPS brought in $1.2 billion in revenue, according to the Recording Industry Association of America, the most in inflation-adjusted dollars since 1988, and double the 2019 amount. Highprofile artists including Taylor Swift and Harry Styles have made the format central to their sales, with Swift selling nearly 1 million LPS of her album Midnights in 2022, and Styles selling about half a million of Harry’s House. By the end of last year, a format the mainstream once deemed moribund to all but crate-digging aficionados accounted for nearly 8% of money made in recorded music, a figure that has been growing.
Many of the explanations commonly offered for vinyl’s resurgence seem unsatisfactory upon closer scrutiny. Framing the trend as merely a retro craze raises the question of why we haven’t seen a similar spike in 8-tracks and cassettes. Focusing on the collectibility and scarcity of vinyl doesn’t solve the equation either: Both qualities were primary features of NFTS, and we watched the NFT market bottom out the same year that vinyl sales hit their multidecade record.
The most persuasive explanation often cited by vinyl’s advocates is that it’s “tactile.” In using the word, buyers indicate something profoundly important about vinyl’s rise and point to the second reason for Bandcamp’s success and Spotify’s struggles: the value of experience.
The media theorist Marshall Mcluhan defined tactility in the 1960s as more than mere physical touch, framing it as “that very interplay of the senses, which we call synesthesia”—the way we see and hear a bird chirp at the same time, or the multisensory operation of driving a car. (To Mcluhan, the revolution in electronic media, including television, was largely owed to its ability to convey the sense of existing in an active, multisensory environment by proxy.)
When fans call a vinyl record “tactile,” they are implying that streaming is not—or at least it’s less so. While vinyl, with its album art, liner notes, and ritual of being played on a turntable, commands all the senses, Spotify has mostly presented streaming as an earsonly, always-on channel designed to be played in the background from the moment a user wakes up to when they go to bed. While the former presents recorded music in an active, multisensory form, Spotify’s is passive and unisensory.
Why does this matter? Because the tactile space is the one where all the stuff we assign irreducible value to—from attending live concerts to sex to playing basketball— resides. And all those examples have what the philosopher John Dewey, one of Mcluhan’s most important forebears, referred to as “aesthetic” properties—they are marked by a beginning and an end, cohere into a unifying whole, and reach a consummating moment. The tactile space is where we find meaning, fun, and pleasure regardless of economic conditions. And understanding this