Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 53,770
Abuse of a dominant position.
It seems that there is vertical integration with the promotional end of it with long-term contracts with venues.How are they abusing it?
Real issue here is Oasis and their management allowing the dynamic pricing to kick in, the artist sets the price, not ticketmaster.
So Oasis are charging some people €1,000 to stand up and listen to them.
If they want to pay that, they should be allowed to do so. I wouldn't. But Gordon's friends would.
I wanted to fly to Birmingham last week at short notice. The flights were €325. I chose not to go.
If you don't want to pay €1,000 to see Oasis, then don't. Let someone else who wants to pay that price go.
If you look at the cold hard numbers though, there were 160,000 tickets and around 500,000 people looking to buy them. If it was a bond issuance, we’d say it was too cheap.
The dynamic pricing piece, whilst very irritating, is genius. I have two friends who paid €1,200 for two normal standing tickets (insane). It’s genius and just commerce at its best/worst to have a system which can extract that sort of money from paying customers.
That’s my biggest problem with it. People spend hours in the queue and then have to decide in a split second if they want to buy tickets. I think it’s aggressive sellingSure, I get that, and agree - but not when your are messed around for periods of up to 5 hours, to find out the price!
Keep in mind, you can't simply ask for a quote and come back later when it arrives, to decide if you want to take it, or not, with TM.
If they weren't permitted to have such a dominant position, their service would be better, amongst other things..
If they weren't permitted to have such a dominant position, their service would be better, amongst other things..
That’s my biggest problem with it. People spend hours in the queue and then have to decide in a split second if they want to buy tickets. I think it’s aggressive selling
Sure, I get that, and agree - but not when your are messed around for periods of up to 5 hours, to find out the price!
This is best for the fans that aren't willing to pay high prices. It's not the best way for the band (if they're looking to maximise revenue, which Oasis probably are) or for the fans that are willing to pay high prices to be guaranteed a ticket.I think a pure lottery is the best way to allocate tickets. Like Wimbledon
The majority of tickets for events are sold at fixed prices with different prices for different areas.What else can they do?
Go back to the old way of selling the tickets from HMV shops and see 500 000 people queuing for 150,000 tickets.
To save you wasting your time, they could have an auction open for a week or two. You bid what you are prepared to pay and they allocate the tickets that way. That might work quite well. But I would be annoyed if I paid €200 a ticket to find myself sitting beside Mr Earl who paid only €50.
A bit like when I pay for the extra leg room on a flight only to find some cheapskate student randomly allocated the seat beside me that morning.
Brendan
I think a pure lottery is the best way to allocate tickets. Like Wimbledon
That doesn't excuse the industry, in any shape or form, as I'd hope you will agree.The live entertainment industry has always been notorious for shoddy customer service and aggressive selling.
What else can they do?
Go back to the old way of selling the tickets from HMV shops and see 500 000 people queuing for 150,000 tickets.
To save you wasting your time, they could have an auction open for a week or two. You bid what you are prepared to pay and they allocate the tickets that way. That might work quite well. But I would be annoyed if I paid €200 a ticket to find myself sitting beside Mr Earl who paid only €50...
Brendan
Belief is one thing, evidence is another.Both Ticketmaster and Live Nation have the same ownership.
I believe that they are working togeather to keep rival ticket sellers from securing opportunity to sell tickets
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