How Service Oriented Architecture Helps a Music Promoter Keep the Hits Coming

Artist 2 Market clients Spinal Tap, Dolly Parton and Tommy Lee use service oriented architecture-based applications to promote their work to fans

By
Wed, September 23, 2009

CIO — As with paper and plastic, "reduce, reuse, recycle" works for software. Especially when you're a small company in a cutthroat business, where squeezing as much life as you can out of an IT infrastructure can mean the difference between breathing easy and landing on the garbage heap.

Software reusability—in particular, applications built on service-oriented architecture—is helping music promoter Artist 2 Market run with big record companies. The company, which had $1.8 million in sales last year, has lured clients such as country star Dolly Parton, hard rocker Tommy Lee and heavy metal satirists Spinal Tap with customized services that help these artists promote their music in venues such as MySpace and Facebook.

"We had this idea to create a menu board of new services that the record labels didn't offer, or only offered for high extra fees," says Mike Skinner, CIO of parent company Eurpac, an employee-owned provider of sales and marketing services. "SOA let us build those quickly and keep adding on to them and open them up to artists themselves. That's our advantage."


To read more on this topic, see: Leadership: How to Get Inspired for Innovation.

SOA makes it easier for companies to support new platforms, such as social networking and mobile computing, says Anne Thomas Manes, vice president and research director at Burton Group. To market products effectively, companies must have a presence—including applications for customers to use—in many online places. These include Facebook, Twitter, MySpace and various mobile platforms. SOA offers a streamlined way to adapt applications for these channels, just as it has provided a way for companies to more easily integrate and share internal applications. "We're no longer just building a website to access via laptop," says Thomas Manes. "You have to support a number of channels with your application."

The Band Plugs In

Skinner wanted clients to access applications via the Web as well as mobile phones, but he didn't want to hard-code the software for each platform. The components were built with Java tools and run mainly on Unix systems.

Spinal Tap, members of which include actors Harry Shearer, Michael McKean and Christopher Guest, is a quarter-century old, but the band knew that reaching a new crowd via social networking would be vital to the success of its "Unwigged and Unplugged" reunion tour this summer.

When it signed with Artist 2 Market, Spinal Tap got to choose which services to buy. Those included tools for creating and monitoring social networking fan sites as well as views into Artist 2 Market's supply chain, so the band can track CD shipments of its new album, "Back from the Dead." (Turn it up to 11!)

For example, the band, or its minions, can go to an Artist 2 Market website to see what consumers are saying online about the music. If the 25-year-old tune "Big Bottom" generates more enthusiastic comments than the brand-new "(Funky) Sex Farm" on MySpace and Twitter, Spinal Tap can modify its social networking promotions and even its concert playlist, accordingly. "They have passion for their art," Skinner says, "but it's also a business."

Contact Senior Editor Kim S. Nash at knash@cio.com.

Do you Tweet. Follow me on Twitter @knash99. Follow everything from CIO Magazine @CIOMagazine.

This quick-reference document lets small and medium organizations (i.e. those with five or more devices) to easily compare the available Microsoft Volume Licensing programs to create a simple, cost-effective and flexible way to benefit from volume licensing.
Learn how your answer to this question compares to your peers by taking this quick poll. See how your peers are dealing with the challenge of ensuring a highly capable server infrastructure as technological shifts impact the application server platform.
With increasing data growth, comes increased need for data security.  The existing DLP model, with a focus on compliance/enforcement is not sufficient as the data discovery and classification capabilities are not granular enough.  Read this paper to find how you can efficiently and accurately manage your risk by rapidly inventorying and classifying your data and then developing remediation workflows that support business needs. 
This paper breaks down attack sources into four categories: external, malicious insiders, accidental insiders, and unknown.
The rapid growth of data and technology is creating challenges for organizations as this digital data is considered to be business communications and must be preserved according the same industry-specific regulations governing the retention and discovery of emails and more traditional forms of electronic communications. This paper examines the role that Data Loss Prevention ("DLP") technology can play in helping organizations address the challenges of locating information in response to electronic discovery.
This research, conducted by the Ponemon Institute, focuses on issues relating to the use of data protection solutions such as endpoint encryption and data loss prevention within the workplace.
As greater numbers of datacenter servers transition from the physical to the virtual world, the components of virtualization success come to the fore. What scores of organizations have discovered is that success is derived from an optimal pairing of the right software platform with the right hardware platform.
Have you been looking to hear about customer's experiences with the new VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager product? View this webcast to learn about VMware customer, Navicure, and their experiences testing and evaluating the recovery manager, their progress in implementing it in their environment and their advice other customers considering using vCenter.
Many enterprises have discovered that the use of virtualization to support desktop workloads creates a range of significant benefits. These benefits include price efficiencies, improved IT management and greater agility and choice for end users.

This VMware sponsored webcast with IDC will provide both quantitative measurement of the business value -- defined as the expected ROI -- and qualitative analysis associated with the use of VMware View™. IDC will also provide an analysis of the View Composer and ThinApp™ features of VMware View, including the business value of these solutions and an overview of how they work.

Attend this webcast to learn about:
- Challenges and barriers that might impede the adoption of desktop virtualization
- Navigating roadblocks to facilitate a strategic implementation
- Optimizing qualitative and quantitative benefits to IT and your business
VMware recently announced VMware vFabric™ Data Director, a new database deployment and operations platform that enables enterprise IT organizations to offer database as a private cloud service. Built on top of VMware vSphere 5, vFabric Data Director enables IT organizations to ontrol database sprawl through automation and consistent policy enforcement and accelerate application development cycles with self-service database management. Attend this webcast to learn how vFabric Data Director can help you build database-as-a-service in your datacenter.
A simple, cost-effective disaster-recovery solution for virtual environments is high on the agenda for IT organizations as they virtualize more business-critical applications with VMware. VMware vCenter™ Site Recovery Manager-the market-leading disaster-recovery product-ensures the simplest and most reliable disaster protection for all virtualized applications. VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager provides centralized management of recovery plans, enables nondisruptive testing and automates site-failover processes.
Traditional disaster recovery solutions are often too expensive, complex and unreliable to meet business requirements. As a result, IT departments are hesitant to expand disaster protection beyond their most critical applications, largely because they are uncertain whether the quality of the protection is really worth its cost. VMware vCenter™ Site Recovery Manager 5 is the market-leading disaster recovery product that addresses this situation for organizations of all kinds. It complements VMware vSphere to ensure the simplest and most reliable disaster protection for all virtualized applications.
Newsletter Sign-Up »

Receive the latest news test, reviews and trends on your favorite technology topics

Choose a newsletter
  1. View all Newsletters | Privacy Policy
Resource Center