New MySpace Strategy: If You Can't Beat Them, Use Them

Fresh from buffing up its site and eager to redefine its identity, MySpace has a new mission: collaborate and make “friends” with other players — especially the “cool kids” in social media. An interesting strategy, but will it be enough to bring MySpace back into the “in crowd?”
As we noted in a previous post on MySpace, while the company has been losing supporters to Facebook, it still has a lead on videos and music. Unsurprisingly, MySpace recently refocused its efforts on these strengths, in a bid to differentiate itself from Facebook and to woo back users and advertisers.
Recent site improvements include: 1) launching MySpace Music Videos, which aggregated video content from major music labels and independent record companies; 2) purchasing and integrating iLike, a music-sharing app; and 3) offering artists and labels an interactive tool to analyze audience data, through the MySpace Artist Dashboard.
“Facebook is about core communications with your friendship network, whereas MySpace is about congregating around popular content with people who share your interests,” said MySpace CEO Owen Van Natta, in a Telegraph interview.
As proof of this new direction, MySpace is now in talks with Facebook to allow users to share MySpace music and videos on Facebook, via Facebook Connect. Indeed, MySpace is all about collaboration nowadays. “Partnerships are going to be a big part of our strategy moving forward as a lot of value can be derived from them,” Van Natta told the Telegraph.
Aside from the potential Facebook team-up, MySpace is now working with Apple to allow users to purchase songs via iTunes. It’s also one of the companies powering “music results” and enabling “music purchases” on Google’s new music discovery service, “Google Music.” AllThingsDigital’s Kara Swisher reports that MySpace is even exploring a partnership with Microsoft to offer MySpace Music on MSN.
So will this new entertainment-focused and “collaborative” MySpace finally get out of Facebook’s shadow and succeed in carving out its own niche online again? It’s possible. By emphasizing licensed content from professional and independent artists, and by catering to music fans, MySpace is “filling a gap in popular culture left by MTV's move years ago away from music programming and the diminishment of music publications,” notes Forbes. This, in turn, could lead to more ad dollars.
New friends or not, however, MySpace still has to face other tough competitors — such as YouTube, the top-ranking video portal owned by Google. A recent report by marketing research firm comScore notes, for example, that Google sites rank first in all online viewership — drawing in 26 million viewers, who watched 10.4 billion videos, as of September. Of that number, YouTube accounted for 99 percent.
And of course, when it comes to business and profit, how long can “online friendships” really last? The turbulent world of digital media is filled with tales of “partners-turned-competitors” (an example might be Apple and Google on online mapping). MySpace’s new “ties” could end up complicated. If its video-streaming service ends up threatening YouTube, for example, how would Google react? It would be interesting to see how MySpace would fight for audience and advertising support, and how it would balance collaboration with competition, as it continues its revamp.