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  1. 3 lip 2024 · How could they sell products for next to nothing and still make a profit? With a business model that’s downright Kafka-esque, music clubs managed to make money hand over fist by maintaining a low overhead, a high markup, and an ever-changing set of confusing rules.

  2. 21 cze 2021 · CD clubs offered ever-shifting traps for all ages and tastes, the deadliest of which involved ordering and receiving free albums, not paying a thing, never canceling the subscription, then ...

  3. 2 sty 2019 · Columbia House and BMG Music used to sell 12 CDs for a dollar or even a penny, and somehow brought in $1.5 billion in revenue at their peak.

  4. 2 sty 2019 · In the mid-90s, Columbia House and the BMG Music Service offered unbelievable deals on CDs. People joined these clubs for a penny and got a bunch of music almost for free as long as they...

  5. 11 sie 2015 · Columbia House once set the bar for the music-club subscription business model, becoming a household — or at least high school — name through its famous deal: piles of CDs and tapes for a...

  6. 13 kwi 2024 · I've been buying used CDs lately and it seems that a lot of them are music club CDs. I'd say 90% of the club ones are from BMG. Very few are from Columbia House.

  7. 11 cze 2015 · In the 1980s and 1990s, Columbia House could do no wrong—as a way to get music, the mail-order service was cheap and easy at first. Then, the bills came. By Ernie Smith Jun 11, 2015. Filed under: cassette tapes, cassettes, cd, columbia house, commerce, compact discs, mail, mail order, music, music industry, retail.

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