Bangkok Post

Fender ventures into online learning

- STEPHEN NELLIS

SAN FRANCISCO: Fender Musical Instrument­s Corp, whose electric guitars have powered music from Jimi Hendrix to Nirvana, is getting into the software business with an app for guitar lessons.

The Scottsdale, Arizona-based company is launching “Fender Play,” an online system for learning guitar that chief executive officer Andy Mooney, a veteran of Nike Inc and Walt Disney Co, hopes will cut down on the number of would-be guitarists who give up.

He said 45% of the company’s guitars sell to first-time players, but 90% abandon the instrument within a year and never become repeat customers.

“The 10$ who make it through the first year own an average of seven guitars,” Mooney said in an interview.

“When we gathered the data and looked at the facts, we said, ‘Oh my God, if we just reduced the abandonmen­t rate by even 10 percent, we could perhaps double the size of the industry’.”

The musical instrument industry grew 9% to $7.1 billion in retail sales over the past five years but remains well below its 2005 peak of $7.7 billion, according to data from

The Music Trades magazine.

Moreover, the electric guitar was virtually absent from the Top 20 music charts in the past five years.

The guitar industry hoped video games like “Guitar Hero” would ignite interest among teenagers. Instead, electric guitar sales fell from 1.2 million units in 2011 to just over one million in 2016, according to

The Music Trades.

The overall guitar market held steady at around 2.5 million units per year during that period, thanks to growth from acoustic instrument­s.

“Fender Play aims to address some key trends,’’ Mooney said.

“About half of first-time buyers are women, according to Fender’s research, and they are buying acoustic guitars online and going to sites like YouTube for lessons.

“For those new players, traditiona­l music stores can be intimidati­ng,’’ he said.

After a free introducti­on, Fender Play costs $19.99 a month and consists of a series of video lessons that assume no prior knowledge.

Mooney said his model was Lynda.com, the online learning platform acquired by LinkedIn for $1.5 billion that defied expectatio­ns it could not compete with free videos on the internet.

Next year, Fender will make an instructor edition available to dealers so they can use it to manage their guitar students.

Fender will compete with other feebased sites like JamPlay, but is the first guitar maker to dive into the online learning market.

Brian Majeski, editor of The Music Trades, said including dealers should help Fender avoid the impression that it competes with stores for guitar students.

Majeski called t he software i nitiative a credible strategy to try to spur growth.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand