The Commercial Appeal

Artists, advertiser­s plan to stick with Tiktok

But contingenc­y plans being made over law

- Sheila Dang, Dawn Chmielewsk­i and Danielle Broadway

Ban or no ban, Tiktok’s partners in the music and advertisin­g world plan to stick with the massively popular short-form video platform until the bitter end, seven industry leaders told Reuters.

The U.S. Senate passed a bill late Tuesday that gives Chinese tech firm Bytedance up to a year to divest Tiktok, or the app will be banned altogether. President Joe Biden has signed the bill, capping a four-year battle over concerns the Chinese government could influence content or access user data.

Tiktok has rivaled larger companies such as Meta Platforms for user attention and ad budgets, and its cultural power is reflected in its ability to catapult emerging artists into viral hits, changing how young people discover music.

As long as Tiktok’s users remain engaged with the app, “advertiser­s will ride it all the way until the door slams shut,” said Craig Atkinson, CEO of digital marketing agency Code3.

Adamm Miguest, CEO and founder of Rapid Launch Media, which creates marketing campaigns designed to make songs go viral, said he will advise clients to stay on Tiktok as long as they can.

Even Universal Music, whose artists’ songs disappeare­d from Tiktok in March as licensing talks stalled, has resumed negotiatio­ns in recent weeks, according to two people close to the discussion­s. The talks reflect the realizatio­n that, whatever the outcome of the legislativ­e process, Tiktok is not going away tomorrow, one of the sources said. Universal declined to comment.

The app’s importance is also underscore­d by how superstar Taylor Swift, a Universal artist, defied her label by putting her music back on Tiktok just weeks later.

“I think we have to look and ask, why did Taylor Swift do that? Even she recognizes the power that Tiktok yields,” said Johnny Cloherty, CEO of Songfluenc­er, a creative marketing firm that has worked with artists like Dolly Parton and Miranda Lambert.

Musicians aim to get songs circulatin­g on Tiktok or other platforms such as Instagram Reels and then have users listen to the music on streaming services. Tiktok posts are far more likely to lead to streams, said Miguest, who has worked with musicians including Muni Long and Sueco.

“From what I’ve seen, you have to get 10 to 20 times the amount of posts on Reels for it to even come close to translatin­g to what you might get on Tiktok,” he said.

Tiktok also beats Google’s Youtube as the most common music discovery source for teens in the U.S., said Tatiana Cirisano, a senior music industry analyst for Midia Research.

Tiktok has long said it has not and never would share U.S. user data with the Chinese government. It is expected to challenge the bill.

“This is the beginning, not the end of this long process,” Tiktok told staff on Saturday, Reuters previously reported.

“This unconstitu­tional law is a Tiktok ban, and we will challenge it in court,” a spokespers­on said on Wednesday. “We believe the facts and the law are clearly on our side, and we will ultimately prevail.”

The company did not respond to a request for further comment.

Other tech platforms are waiting in the wings for Tiktok’s users and ad revenue.

Youtube has been particular­ly aggressive in going after Tiktok marketing budgets, asking ad agencies to test one of its advertisin­g products to see how it performs against Tiktok specifical­ly, according to one advertisin­g agency director, who declined to be named to discuss conversati­ons with the platforms.

Recent surveys have shown that Gen Z is increasing­ly using Tiktok to search for informatio­n and businesses rather than Google. Google did not respond to a request for comment.

Spotify CEO Daniel Ek told investors on Tuesday that short-form video content is “a big focus of ours,” which would make its way to the service’s music streaming product in 2024.

Even with their commitment to the platform, advertiser­s are beginning to shift from their theoretica­l contingenc­y plans, which have long been in place, to actively testing Plan Bs, Atkinson said.

“If we imagine a continuum of ‘maybe this will happen someday,’ to the idea that Tiktok will be turned off, we’ve moved one step over,” he said.

Both advertiser­s and music artists have taken steps to test and diversify their strategies across other platforms. “But none of them have quite garnered the attention that Tiktok did,” said Gabriel Lister, managing partner of record label Independen­t Co.

 ?? DADO RUVIC/REUTERS FILE ?? Tiktok has rivaled larger companies for user attention and ad budgets, and its cultural power is reflected in its ability to catapult emerging artists into viral hits.
DADO RUVIC/REUTERS FILE Tiktok has rivaled larger companies for user attention and ad budgets, and its cultural power is reflected in its ability to catapult emerging artists into viral hits.

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