Thomas Poell

Platforms and Cultural Production


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sponsorships and donations (Hou, 2019; Johnson & Woodcock, 2019). As they are not necessarily bound by the legacy of business models past, nor by the corporate complexities of multibillion-dollar media conglomerates, creators seem to enjoy a relatively high degree of institutional flexibility (i.e., the ability to work with or for other companies). We use the caveat “relatively” here because, in practice, only those creators who amass a sizeable following will be able to go off-platform when seeking out alternative sources of income. In Chapter 5, we discuss these and other forms of precarity by canvassing the way in which platform-based labor practices take shape.

      As the example of social media creators makes clear, platform markets vary widely, and relationships between platforms and complementors can change on a whim. The next section, then, examines platformization from a perspective that furnishes both a historical and a comparative context. We explore how platform companies compete in capitalist markets and how this competition, in turn, affects the ways in which they operate their own internal markets. The later sections of this chapter reflect on the challenges faced by cultural producers as they navigate the economic asymmetries, opportunities, and uneven power structures that are hallmarks of platform markets. To that end, we discuss a number of key economic concepts: network effects, pricing, and platform evolution.

      To illustrate the latter point, consider the transformation of the music industry. For much of the twentieth century, the consumption of music was tied to technological innovations in consumer electronics – from radio, to vinyl records, to audio cassettes, to CDs (Hesmondhalgh & Meier, 2018). Consumer electronics behemoths, such as Sony and Philips, together with record labels that were often subsidiaries of these larger conglomerates, pushed these new technologies in earnest – often through concerted efforts to render their precursors obsolete. More recently, telecom companies and streaming platforms, such as Spotify and Apple Music, have taken a more central role in the distribution and monetization of music (Morris, 2020; Prey, 2020). The impact of streaming platforms on the political economy of the music industry, however, should not be overestimated; legacy actors and industry practices have not altogether disappeared, and in fact they continue to exert influence on systems of revenue, labor, and, ultimately, power (Hesmondhalgh, 2020).

      All of this is to say that the transformation of the cultural industries has been markedly uneven. And, accordingly, one of the recurring arguments in this book is that continuities and changes in the cultural industries differ – at times, quite profoundly – across regions and industry segments (Hesmondhalgh, 2019; Havens & Lotz, 2017; Miège, 2011; Winseck, 2011). As well as each country being in a different state of economic development, changes in cultural production have shown stark regional variations in terms of “traditions, technological developments, regulations and industrial structure” (Bustamante, 2004: 805). How, then, do we make sense of these variations in institutional dependencies – be they historical, between companies (i.e., inter-industry relationships), or within markets (i.e., intra-industry relationships)? Drawing from (media) economics, critical political economy, and media industry studies, we argue that the consumer electronics industries, the telecommunications industries, platform companies, and legacy media companies are subject to and drivers of concentration and digitalization. Being attentive to these two processes allow us to draw out important political economic continuities by acknowledging that both processes easily predate the platform economy.

       Concentration versus digitalization

      On the surface, at least, platform Goliaths such as Google, Facebook, Tencent, Amazon, and ByteDance seem omnipotent, and their ever-increasing market capitalizations now total into the trillions. But despite platform companies’ ever-rising share prices and soaring profits, we should be careful not to overdetermine the impact of their financial prowess, nor should we consider the economic and financial position of platforms as either entrenched or unassailable. For instance, in most domestic markets, the revenue of telecom, internet, and media conglomerates is much higher than the revenue of, for instance, either Google or Facebook (Winseck, 2020).

      Because