Vinyl is no longer nostalgia, it is a profitable and strategic growth driver for independent labels.
At a time when streaming dominates listening habits but remains structurally low-margin for artists, vinyl continues to establish itself as a high-value economic lever, combining margin control, brand positioning, and direct monetisation.
Market validation is clear: vinyl is no longer a niche market, but a structurally established segment supported by long-term growth dynamics.
🇫🇷 France
•
5.4 million vinyl records sold in 2023
•
+12% sales growth in 2024
•
+9.4% in the first half of 2025
🌍 Worldwide
•
18th consecutive year of growth
•
+4.6% in 2024
A Format with Strong Perceived Value
Why vinyl creates economic value:
Clear pricing,
controlled volumes, and
premium positioning create
predictable revenue and stronger
margin visibility. Unlike
streaming, vinyl concentrates value around a
concrete act of purchase, reinforcing
price integrity and limiting value dilution. It becomes a strategic tool for
direct-to-consumer monetisation, capable of generating
meaningful ROI while strengthening
brand equity on limited and curated releases.
A Structuring Role in Release Strategies
Why vinyl structures operational discipline:
Vinyl imposes
fixed timelines,
editorial arbitration, and
quantity forecasting, aligning
production,
communication, and
distribution around a unified roadmap.
This framework improves
resource allocation, reduces
inventory risk, and strengthens
project coherence by limiting reactive or short-term driven decisions.
A More Engaged Relationship with the Audience
Why vinyl strengthens audience value:
Purchasing a
physical record reflects a high level of
commitment and
active support toward both the
artist and the
label.
It generates
actionable demand signals, supports
direct audience qualification, and reinforces
long-term loyalty.
In a
saturated content environment, vinyl remains a powerful
differentiation lever, particularly for
niche and identity-driven genres.
Conclusion
Vinyl should not be considered a secondary product, but a
core strategic pillar in an independent label’s growth model — combining
economic resilience,
brand differentiation, and
audience lifetime value, while remaining fully
complementary to digital distribution.