ilike.pngILike, a music discovery service, has launched a news feed that connects people and their music libraries with their favorite musicians across its web applications and desktop music players.

It has also expanded its offerings to help musicians reach fans on all of its services. ILike is targeting Myspace’s large network of musicians and fans, and is betting its news feed will prove a better way to reach music lovers.

This news comes as Facebook has begun launching its own music service, complete with specialized applications for musicians on Facebook.

The news feed shows a regularly updated list of your favorite artists’ new tunes and videos, their concert dates in your area, information on where you can buy tickets (Ticketmaster is an iLike investor), news articles and other information that keeps you connected to what they’re up to. The news feed shows a regularly updated list of your favorite artists’ new tunes and videos, their concert dates in your area, information on where you can buy tickets (Ticketmaster is an iLike investor), news articles and other information that keeps you connected to what they’re up to.

ILike is differentiating itself by connecting its many different properties. Its feed appears in its iTunes toolbar (and soon Windows Media Player) toolbars, in its Facebook application and will soon expand into social networks such as Bebo, Orkut and other sites that have joined Google’s OpenSocial developer platform.

A study by the company in September showed many popular bands had more iLike fans on Facebook than had friends on Myspace. ILike now has 709,437 daily active users on Facebook, seven percent of its over ten million total users, and now it claims that over 45 percent of artists can reach more fans on iLike than they can reach on Myspace.

Since May, iLike’s main application has offered musician profiles for over half a million artists. It lets you you to add clips from your favorite songs to your profile, play a music trivia game, and designate yourself a “fan” of musicians.

iLike has now pre-created 160,000 new advertising “Pages,” using the features that Facebook is launching today for brand advertisers, that include all of a musicians “fans” and other iLike information. These pages will also come pre-loaded with iLike’s musician applications, such as Concerts for posting about upcoming shows, Songs for putting full-length songs or clips on musicians’ pages, and iCast so musicians can send multimedia messages from a computer or phone to fans.

ILike is also offering a “Universal Artist Dashboard,” a place where musicians can control what information they send out in feeds. As iLike integrates with OpenSocial social networks like Bebo and Orkut, this dashboard’s reach will widen.
It uses information from users preferences on Facebook, iTunes and WMP and soon its OpenSocial social network partners to learn about which bands and songs fans like the most. Its toolbar not only recommends songs and other fans to you, it sees which songs you listen to the most — any song you listen to more than ten times gets counted as an iLike favorite.

ILike’s toolbars and applications already shows recommendations for related songs and users with similar tastes, but now it will show you a reverse-chronological feed of information about your favorite bands in your iLike feed — like Facebook’s news feed, but for information about music.

This is a big step up in what you can get out of the service. There’s already some cross-functionality between the sites. You can import your iTunes playlists to listen to within its Facebook application, for example. Ali Partovi, the company’s chief executive, sketched out main points of this plan when we interviewed him in late May.

The large music sites — Last.fm, Pandora, imeem and others — are taking the role of record labels by serving as the advertisers and distributors for musicians. ILike could break new ground in this market with its unique approach of stitching together a users’ listening habits and stated preferences on social networks.

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  1. Inside Facebook » What is Facebook's stance on third party pages? said:

    [...] a new way for businesses and brands to build a presence on Facebook. Shortly thereafter, Eric Eldon reported that iLike, makers of the popular iLike application on Facebook, had “pre-created 160,000 new [...]

  2. Facebook to Acquire iLike and Flixster? - The Unofficial Facebook Blog said:

    [...] Eric Eldon suggested that iLike could be sitting on a web music empire. The only problem is Facebook’s decision to eliminate the majority of the 170,000 artist pages automatically created by iLike. Their rationale? Only brand owners can create pages. From this standpoint, it would make a lot of sense for Facebook to acquire these two companies. Both entities hold a massive amount of data about bands and movies, both of which Facebook is looking to promote. Only time will tell how this all pans out. Do you think Facebook would acquire Flixster or iLike? Posted in Analysis Digg this article Save to del.icio.us Share on Facebook [...]

  3. What is Facebook’s stance on third party Pages? at Wild Bill Info said:

    [...] a new way for businesses and brands to build a presence on Facebook. Shortly thereafter, Eric Eldon reported that iLike, makers of the popular iLike application on Facebook, had “pre-created 160,000 new [...]

  4. VentureBeat » Universal adds catalog to imeem said:

    [...] handful of sites are shaping up to be the leaders. Pandora has done well with radio, while iLike is locking in the social networking crowd. Any other sites that you think are likely to succeed? Let us [...]

  5. VentureBeat » ILike and Qloud’s Hi5 applications, maybe the start of something bigger said:

    [...] and the rest — then let musicians communicate with their fans across all of these networks (our coverage). Open Social is the Google-led effort to let applications work on multiple social networks without [...]

  6. FredCavazza.net » Mes 10 prédictions pour l’année 2008 said:

    [...] expérimentations d’applications multi-plateformes semblent concluantes (voir à ce sujet ILike connects across OpenSocial, Facebook, iTunes), on en vient à se demander si cette bataille de formats n’est pas anachronique. Car au [...]

  7. Widgets are great for musicians, and not so bad for businesses, either » VentureBeat said:

    [...] properties into a service for musicians that it calls a “universal artist dashboard” (our coverage). This dashboard is proving useful for major acts, like R.E.M., because they can publish a new [...]

3 Comments

  1. starcraft 2 said:

    ILike is just great, can’t wait to get to grips with this new tool.

  2. Sherm said:

    ILike is great, but Additune is better from a purely music recommendation perspective (but I think it’s only for a Mac right now).

  3. Wael Jassar said:

    Hey!…Man i just love your blog, keep the cool posts comin..holy Saturday

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