Billboard

Ticketmast­er’s Post-Swift Strategy: Take On Ticket Fees

Although a cyberattac­k undermined a presale for the superstar’s The Eras Tour, the Live Nation-owned company is focusing on eliminatin­g its “drip pricing” model

- BY DAVE BROOKS // ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MARCO MELGRATI

FTER WEEKS OF STRATEGIZI­NG how to salvage Ticketmast­er’s reputation in the wake of last November’s

Taylor Swift presale debacle and Live Nation president/CFO Joe Berchtold’s January grilling by the Senate Judiciary Committee, the ticketing giant’s parent company has settled on an approach that will ramp up lobbying (see story, page 18) to hit back at scalpers while educating consumers about ticketing fees.

Despite breaking two company records with the Nov. 15 The Eras Tour presale — the most tickets ever sold in a single day (2.4 million) and, according to the company, keeping

95% of those tickets off secondary sites like StubHub and SeatGeek — Ticketmast­er found itself cast as the villain and Live Nation as a monopoly after a cyberattac­k disrupted over 100,000 transactio­ns.

The outcry has led to a mixture of disbelief and self-reflection at Live Nation’s global headquarte­rs in Beverly Hills, Calif. “The company enables music fans to connect with the world’s greatest artists through concerts and events that often become the cornerston­e moments of people’s lives,” says a Live Nation executive who was not authorized to speak on the record. “Why the fuck do people hate us so much?”

Although the controvers­y over the Swift presale had to do with ticket availabili­ty rather than price — the prime complaint of Ticketmast­er’s July 2022 Verified Fan sale of tickets to Bruce Springstee­n’s 2023 tour — the executive says that Live Nation has determined that redeeming itself with consumers “starts with the fees,” which can add over 30% to the final price of a concert ticket.

“We’ve got to now go out and do a much better job so policymake­rs and consumers understand how the business operates,” Live Nation president/CEO Michael Rapino said during the company’s most recent investor call. “We’ve historical­ly not had a big incentive to shout out loud that venues are charging high service fees or artist costs are expensive. But I think now [that] education is paramount.”

Ticketmast­er’s main source of revenue comes from the fees it charges to process ticket transactio­ns. A ticket’s face value goes to the artist, while the ticketing giant shares the fees it collects with the venues that contract for its services.

Ticketmast­er typically keeps $2 to $5 per ticket for processing costs and a small portion of the fees it collects to recoup any loans, advances or bonuses it may have paid the venue to win its ticketing contract. Contracts for large venues can be worth millions of dollars. The balance of the fees collected goes to the venue, which uses the money to cover the cost of the show.

Traditiona­lly, promoters book venues for artists, pay rent to use the space and hire its staff. What’s left over as profit is divvied up with the act, which typically receives 80% to 85% of that amount.

But as competitio­n to book top-shelf headline talent has increased over the last decade, venues

“The company enables fans to connect with the world’s greatest artists. Why the fuck do people hate us so much?”

—A LIVE NATION EXECUTIVE

have reduced the rent they charge and promoters have agreed to take a smaller percentage of base ticket sales — sometimes as little as 5%.

As Rapino said on the investor call: “The artist takes most of that ticket fee base. So the way that the venue, the promoter or the ticketing company [earns its] revenue fees is through that extra fee.”

The increasing costs of concert production, which are borne by the promoter, have also widened the gap between a ticket’s face value and the final amount charged after fees, which can induce sticker shock when two $100 tickets can end up costing $265. While it has been very profitable for Ticketmast­er to cover more of a concert’s costs through these fees, it has helped turn ticket buyers against the company.

Ticketmast­er executives are hoping a simple fix can solve the problem — showing the total cost of a ticket, face value plus fees, at the beginning of the checkout process. That method is already used in New York, where it is mandated by state law.

“We all want to know what is the true cost to see the show when we start shopping,”

Rapino said on the call. “We wish that would be mandated tomorrow across the board [because] that would relieve a lot of the stress [and] the consumer’s perception that there’s this magical extra fee added on” that isn’t part of the overall show cost.

Ticketmast­er and other ticketing companies have long debated whether to abandon what’s known as a “drip pricing” model but haven’t pulled the trigger because studies show that fans are more likely to make a purchase if the fees that are tacked onto the face value of a ticket don’t appear until checkout. Secondary-market ticketing companies have also adopted the practice, advertisin­g tickets at prices below those sold on the primary market, then hitting consumers with a 35% to 45% markup at checkout.

In a move more closely tied to the Swift situation, Ticketmast­er has also decided to target scalpers through legislatio­n and has drafted a bill called the FAIR Ticketing Act that would outlaw drip pricing and grant artists the ability to ban scalper websites from reselling their tour tickets. Pro-ticket scalping groups have proposed their own counterleg­islation, effectivel­y banning Ticketmast­er from using its proprietar­y technology to stop scalpers. Neither bill has a congressio­nal sponsor in either chamber of Congress, however, and unless that happens, neither has any chance of passing.

Ticketmast­er does appear to have some serious muscle in its corner when it comes to the scalping issue. In a February interview with Billboard, Gregg Perloff, founder and CEO of independen­t promoter Another Planet Entertainm­ent, which produces San Francisco’s Outside Lands festival, said: “My question for [Congress] is, ‘Why are you picking on Ticketmast­er and Live Nation when you should be outlawing brokers?’ They are the ones who screw up everything. Does every promoter take a few tickets? Does every venue have a few tickets? ... Sure. But it’s the scalpers that make it so no one can get a decent seat except the rich. The Senate didn’t do the research they should have done before they started pontificat­ing and acting like they knew what they were talking about.”

In addition, Perloff suggested that touring artists were partially responsibl­e because they “really want to go on sale for the whole tour at once because they can advertise the whole tour at once and make a bigger splash.” Regarding Swift’s tour, he said, “There’s no system in the world — and this is where I have to defend Ticketmast­er — that could have handled the onslaught.”

Also in February, at the Pollstar Live conference in Los Angeles, music mogul Irving Azoff and Madison Square Garden Entertainm­ent chairman James Dolan took on pro-scalping journalist-podcaster Eric Fuller when he argued that scalping made tickets cheaper, citing discredite­d media reports of bargain binpriced tickets available for Springstee­n’s North American tour dates.

“It’s about a half-hour conversati­on, but you’re dead wrong,” Azoff told Fuller, who also operates a consulting business in ticketing.

“You got to take your hat off to this paid lobbying group that’s working for the scalpers,” Dolan chimed in. “These guys are pretty good. Maybe we should hire them.” In response, Fuller says Dolan’s comments are “grossly inaccurate.”

 ?? ?? Lyric Capital raised over $800 million to fuel new catalog acquisitio­ns.
TikTok added a default 60-minute daily screen-time limit for minors.
Lyric Capital raised over $800 million to fuel new catalog acquisitio­ns. TikTok added a default 60-minute daily screen-time limit for minors.

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