Ticketmaster's crocodile tears
The
dominant ticketing agency cries foul at the secondary market, but the
case brings up interesting questions about laws that govern tickets.
April 23, 2007
PROMOTERS OF THE "Rowdy Frynds" tour featuring Lynyrd Skynyrd and Hank
Williams Jr. decided to try a new way to raise ticket revenue this
year. They acquired the seats closest to the stage — something
promoters often do for fan clubs and favored guests — then offered them
at a premium price through StubHub, a leading online ticket reseller.
The
maneuver drew howls from Ticketmaster, which has exclusive contracts
with 18 of the tour's concert halls. So the country's leading ticket
seller sued StubHub and eBay, its corporate parent, in Los Angeles
Superior Court this month, arguing that the companies and unnamed
allies interfered with its contracts and threatened its venue partners.
It's hard to be sympathetic to complaints by Ticketmaster, the
800-pound gorilla of advance ticketing, about being strong-armed by a
smaller competitor. But aside from the ironies, the case raises
interesting questions about whether and how tickets should be resold.
Ticketmaster's
aggressiveness and economies of scale give it a firm grip on the market
for ticket sales to most major events. Its system of applying hefty
service charges and fees on each ticket sold generates a large pool of
money that it splits with concert venues, giving them an incentive to
strike exclusive deals. Many venues also place restrictive conditions
on tickets in an attempt to stop ticket buyers from reselling their
seats. Some states (not California) and cities also prohibit selling
tickets for more than face value.
Nevertheless, a competitive
market has emerged to help ticket buyers unload their purchases —
whether they be season ticket holders, brokers, scalpers or just fans
stuck with seats they can't use. These tickets may sell for
significantly higher than face value, and that surplus typically
enriches the resellers, not the venue.
Ticketmaster is in the
resale business too — fans at selected venues who want to resell their
tickets can do so, provided they pay another service charge that
Ticketmaster splits with the venue. There's no reason Ticketmaster
can't compete in the secondary market with StubHub, Craigslist,
RazorGator and every other reseller out there, with no artificial
constraints on what people do with their tickets.
Ticket prices,
typically set by event promoters, tend to be inflexible. Plenty of
people are willing to pay far more, which is one reason the resale
market is thriving. Meanwhile, Ticketmaster has won no friends among
event-goers, who resent the company's ubiquity and multiple service
fees.
The thriving resale market for tickets reflects how hard
it is in the digital economy to constrain customers' choices, no matter
how dominant a company's position may be. And with so much extra money
in the resale market, is it any wonder the Rowdy Frynds wanted a piece
of the action?