My colleague Michael Morgan did an interesting evaluation of the search experience on AmazonMP3 Beta, and I wanted to share his thoughts here because I think it's a very good overview of what works and what doesn't...
Overview
Some of the high points include DRM (Digital Right Management) Free music that can play on iTunes and Windows Media Player, a nice collage of fun facts (Top MP3 songs, Top Artists, and Artists Spotlights), and very inexpensive full albums and single tracks (.89 to .99, compared to iTunes costs of .99 to 1.29). As a comparison, Pink Floyd’s The Wall, a 26 track album costs $16.99 on iTunes but only $7.99 on AmazonMP3.
First Impressions of the Finding Experience
I really liked the Top MP3 and Top Artist Spotlights as I found this engaging and a place where I would come back to check who is in the Top 25 week to week. However, the music search experience is mediocre. The default sort is by relevance but I found the list of music arduous to comb through. After applying the ‘Best Selling’ sort, I had an easier time traversing the list as the songs that I knew (i.e., the popular ones) were at the top. The "sort by" setting does not stick from session to session so that is a bit annoying.
Albums are presented like all other merchandising is on Amazon, off to the side and on the left. After initial discoverability issues, I did find the albums as this was what I was originally looking for. There are not many reviews as the site is new but the music is very old so they could have easily used the CD reviews. I was initially unimpressed with Amazon’s search experience.
Final Thoughts
The Finding experience needs some work but I think the value and abundance of cheap DRM-free music is enough for me to come back and at least try it out. I don’t think there are any breakthrough experiences with respect to Finding, but there are other aspects that make this service compelling. Although I was not compelled to buy any music right away, I do think the new service as a few things going for it:
- Value. Songs are very inexpensive compared to iTunes DRM-Free tracks that sell for $1.29
- Abundance. Unlike the iTunes Store’s DRM-free tracks that only come from EMI, AmazonMP3 has secured 2 million DRM-free songs by more than 180,000 artists from over 20,000 major and independent labels
- Engagement. Publishing top 25 lists on songs and artists is very interesting.
- DRM. All songs are DRM-free, encoded at 256 kilobits per second, in comparison to iTunes' low bit rate, DRM saturated site.
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