The CNET article on the subject has some added detail buried in it.
http://news.com.com/Roxio+sells+soft...l?tag=nefd.top
Seems the buck-a-song business has a profit margin of 10% and the music subscription business has a 40% profit margin.
So the Roxio execs are betting the firm, literally, that they can grow their Napster business faster and more profitably than the software side could, which is not a bad bet given that their software resides in a mature market with limited growth potential.
They seem to think that now that they have an in at a variety of universities, they can quickly expand their business. And its a fixed-overhead business for the most part, since starting up the service is the most expensive part and they've already done that...
Funny thing, though, Samsung *paid* for the Napster co-branding!
Can't see that continuing.
If anything, subscription services are likely to end up *paying* a bounty to hardware vendors that deliver customers, much as AOL and MSN do...
So now we know that Wal-mart is very likely taking a 10 cent loss on every song they sell and why Apple can't afford to have Real poach on their ranch.
Still 10% margins aren't bad; lots of vendors would kill for 10%.
But 40%?
Sounds like there's room for competition in the subscription business alright.
Somebody happy with 20% is going to make a killing...