Unlocking Concert Experiences: Mobile Economy Maximiaztion Bundles Transforming Ticketing Dynamics

Table of contents

1. I. Introduction

n the recent few years, the popularity of live music performances skyrocketed amidst a return to postpandemic living. The concerts have returned in full force, and this time, seemingly bigger than they previously were. One such highly talked about event was The Taylor Swift Era's Tour, a 3-hour per show extravaganza of the Grammy-winner's entire catalog, which made huge headlines throughout 2023, grossing an estimated $4.6 billion in consumer spending between ticket sales & concert merchandise to local stores, restaurants & hotels in cities it played in [3] dethroning Elton John's Farewell Tour record of $949 million and becoming the highest-grossing stadium tour ever put on. The Era's Tour created a buzz across many topics, but none more interesting than its effect on the local economies of the cities it was stopping in during its 52date 2023 schedule, generating thousands of additional revenue dollars for businesses within the vicinities of the venues and hotels out-of-town concertgoers were traveling too for the shows. From concert tickets to hotel rooms, outfits, merchandise, food and drinks, out-oftowners (OOT) have a hefty bill to front sometimes for traveling to see a concert, especially one where the average concert-goer spent an average of $1300, per person, to attend in all these costs summed; resale tickets soared much higher, with an average of $3800 [3].

One of the largest surges to cost for concertgoer's over the past year was the resale/scalper issue, caused by a "fundamental lack of supply, [with] U.S. President Biden proposing legislation targeting ticketing companies [14]. The "Junk Fee Protection Act" would require an all-in-pricing model, requiring brokers to fully disclose all fees upfront [15]. The solution proposed in this paper does not require legislation but aims to further break-up the monopoly of resale tickets, and fully embraces the spirit of all-in-pricing through a community-based all-inclusive model.

The prices of the Era's Tour did not strictly come from external costs such as hotel stay and food, but from the costs of resale tickets on the open market system in place today. With some shows having over 70,000 tickets, the resale values for Taylor Swift's Era's Tour were mind-blowing, and showed no signs of slowing down, the lowest price ticket for the worst quality section is up 2655.1% from their MSRP price for her end of 2024 dates already on sale [8] [9] [10]. The high resale value left thousands of people unable to afford tickets, another example of the unequal balance of wealth tipping the scales in favor of a single party. Taylor Swift wasn't the only tour affected by surging resale prices, in fact, the typical price of tickets has more than doubled since 2019, from "$125 to $252 in 2023 [with] sold-out acts like Beyonce, Bruce Springsteen, John Mayer, Bad Bunny and more" [13].

2. I

The solution to this, or at least in part, would be through the creation of entertainment consumption bundles, aimed specifically at the out-of-towner (OOT) concertgoer. The idea is to create levels of all-inclusive packages, available through patches to current hotel booking applications/websites, that employ different combinations of common commodities such as hotel room and tickets, hotel room, tickets and buffet food, and then more premium options which would include vouchers to local restaurants.

In the study of mathematical optimatization, Langrangian multipliers are effective in showing the maxima and minima of a function subjected to conditions, particularly with equality and inequality contraints. This makes showing the most beneficial choice to the consumer amongst a set group of choices subject to the same constraints, easier for the reader. Using Lagrangian multipliers to maximize utility with wealth constraints, we will show these all-inclusive options come at a better deal to the OOT consumer, which would lead to a higher embrace of this system by consumers, as the resale of concert tickets would not be possible when tied together through this all-inclusive package.

A new domestic LLC, the Mobile Economy Bundle Commission -MEBC, would need to be established to implement agreements between ticket providers such as Viagogo (StubHub) or LiveNation, hotel providers and local businesses within each municipality served, creating not only new permanent jobs but hundreds to thousands of regular unskilled temp work across the nation to cover new necessary labor. A small percentage of tickets available would be held from public sale for the purposes of selling as part of these packages, named Mobile Economy Bundles (MEB), and will be defined further in the methodology section. Over the next few pages, we will show models based on lagrangian multipliers for all-inclusive entertainment bundles and compare these models to the current spending structure and averages for out-oftown concert-goers, showing first that bundling benefits the consumer and secondly, that local municipalities can also benefit from a bundle structure, by being able to better meet demand rather than unprecedented demand. We then introduce a dynamic pricing model based on the lagrangian outcomes.

3. II. Background

The OOT has to always contend with the costs of traveling and with the resurgence of live music, traveling for concerts is expected to rise over the next decade. In a 2023 report by Business Research Insights, "the global live music market size was USD 11490 million in 2022, as per our research, the market is expected to reach USD 18,348.54 million in 2031, exhibiting a CAGR of 5.3% during the forecast period" [1]. The below bar graph is sampled from the summary of this report.

4. Source: Business Research Insights

Factors such as "an upsurge in disposable income, development and a modification from outdated entertainment concerning live music shows, the growing number of social events & festivals and the rising abilty of fans to become prominent players in the improving growth market" contribute to the growth rate found by Business Research Insights [1]. The cost of traveling in general has risen over the years, as most industries do. In the post-pandemic marketplace, consumers have decided it is once again time to explore and spend, but do so now in a much more inflated and cost-heavy world.

For concert travelers, the costs can be even higher. In a 2023 Wall Street Journal article, one couple traveling to a Phoenix, AZ Taylor Swift show flew halfway to Las Vegas and renting a car for the rest of the trip, costing over $1000 one-way [13]. For the average family to travel for a concert, or even a group of friends, transportation, lodging and food are the highest costs outside of tickets to the actual event. As reported on a 2023 analysis by BudgetyoutTrip.com, with data provided by the travel booking website Kayak.com, a one-night stay in the United States is ?$171, a 3-night stay is ? $513, a week-stay is ? $1,197 and two-week will cost you ? $2,393 [7]; we used data from this analysis to construct the below cost tables. Kayak.com is a global meta search engine owned by Booking Holdings used for the comparison of rates of hotels and travel options in operation since 2005.Concerts like the Era's Tour, Bruce Springsteen and Bad Bunny had

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thousands of consumers traveling hundreds and even thousands of miles to see the shows. We will break down the average costs of traveling over the next two pages for a typical group or family of four to travel. Once travelers arrive in their destination city, they must then contend with the next two variables of travel, lodging, and food/drink. Table C shows these averages on a per-night basis, please note that average room rates vary greatly based on a number of external factors not controlled for in these averages. Finally, the cost of food and drink is a large and often overlooked variable. Table D shows the average perperson meal costs while traveling. Costs for an average family of four traveling within the United States to attend a live concert experience, excluding the cost of event tickets and assuming no alcoholic beverages are purchased, can be in table E. OOT also generates quite a substantial additional revenue for the local municipalities they travel to for the concert itself, often at an unprecedented rate for the local businesses. During the stop in Chicago, travelers for the Era's concert occupied 44,000 hotel rooms in the city, a 97% booking rate, nearly half the direct spending coming from consumers that came into town just for the show, spending an average of $575 more than local fans did [4]. As Time reports, "typically every $100 spent by [music] artists &management to put on a show, generates ? $300 in local ancillary spending, but consumers on the Era's Tour spent ? $1300-1500" [11].

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With our common traveling commodities now defined and shown by averages, we can now review the cost of the tickets. While general sale tickets of the typical U.S. concert have not risen dramatically, they have certainly changed. As reported by CNBC, data from music trade publication firm Pollstar shows that "overall, concert ticket prices are up an estimated 17.8% compared with 2019; halfway through this year, the average ticket price hit $108, compared to about $92 in 2019" [5]. For the Taylor Swift Era's show, tickets were much higher, falling victim to the resale structure of the free-market ticket system.

In this system, resale users who make it out of the holding queues and into the general sale rooms will often buy as many tickets at MSRP value as possible, only to resell them later through the same ticketing system at markups sometimes thousands of percentage points higher.

Table F below shows some of these figures, gathered from StubHub.com, and focuses on three late-2024 U.S. shows that the Era's Tour will stop in: Indianapolis, New Orleans & Miami. The last piece of background information we should review is the rising popularity of the "all-inclusive" package. The idea behind this type of consumer bundle stems from the original Club Med design, the idea that travelers pay one fee and have all their basic essential needs taken care of including lodging, food, and in some cases transportation. In December 2022, hospitality analytics firm STR reported that travelers booked an estimated 9.2 million all-inclusive rooms, an 80,000 unit increase from December 2019 [6]. Some of these chains offer packages which also include vouchers for local dining outside of the resorts, allowing consumers to choose whether they eat their meals for free at the resort or eat more premium meals offered by

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local restaurants at a discount to the consumer through the vouchers. The Washington Post also reported that in 2021, major hotel chains like Hyatt, Wyndham, and Hilton have all expanded their all-inclusive options, both domestically and abroad, by nearly 75% since 2021 [6].

Based on our background review, an average family of four will spend around $3000 traveling to a Taylor Swift Era's Tour show and another $4000-4600 on tickets for the show at resale rates, an average cost of $7000-7600. Though the average rate of a sellout for concert tickets is approximately 20 minutes [12], because of the demand for shows such as these, tickets sell out typically within minutes, leaving the average consumer to contend with the resale price. Over the next few pages, we will show how an all-inclusive domestic bundle within our Mobile Economy Bundles (MEB) structure would have saved the family of four some money while increasing the potential local spending within the municipality of the concert venue. The idea is to reduce the impact of the resale market for in-demand shows on the consumer's budget while spreading revenue at a greater distribution to the surrounding local economies.

11. III. Methodology

An economic bundle is microeconomic tool used to sell two or more commodities together as a package, with the aim of reducing either cost or complexity to the consumer. Typical examples of these range from the Microsoft Office bundle (Word, Excel, PowerPoint together) to Black Friday deals, where a consumer might be able to purchase a TV, speaker system, and entertainment console for a fraction of the cost if purchased separately.

In this empirical approach, we will build three all-inclusive bundles tailored around the out-of-town (OOT) traveler's needs when they are coming to a particular municipality for a concert or similar entertainment show. First, a small LLC (Mobile Economy Bundle Commission -MEBC) dedicated to facilitating Mobile Economy Bundle (MEB) structuring would be instituted, focusing on working with ticketing providers and hotel chains ,as well as brokering partnerships between hotel providers, ticket agents, increased food supply, labor coordination and system implementation. The MEBC provides a "middleman" to the entire structure of the bundles, as well as a technological hubspot. The initial construction of this commission would also be responsible for creating a central database and assimililating it into the existing booking applications used by hotel providers today. This central database would entail the demand rate function (explained further below) and be responsible mainly for purchasing the tickets used in the MEB structure, ensuring an autonomous source from the hotel providers and providing an equal share of tickets for events amongst the hotel providers participating in MEB in any given city. The hotels benefit from this by not needing to be a part of the ticketing process and the guests benefit from one hotel provider raising or lowering ticket prices in tandum with local competitors. MEBC is essentially responsible for creating and maintaining this interactable database and continue to provide booking applications with current MEB pricing.

We would structure pricing tiers through new "Reason for Stay" gathering functionality built into booking applications/websites, mandated by new useragreement regulation requiring booking providers to collect "Reason for Stay" from guests during the checkout process. Users would be informed of the existence of this through marketing campaigns as hotel providers roll out their various MEB upgrades to their individual apps. The coordination of this setup would also fall to the responsibility of the MEBC, ensuring the functionality follows a framework uniformity to MEB's overall intention, which is namely making the OOT experience easier on the guests. Though each provider can approach it in their own way, generally each redesign would need to ensure that guests booking stays for Entertainment are sorted into rooms allocated for MEB guests, while those coming for non-Entertainment are not affected. Built into all booking apps (required now by hotel providers) options customers may choose:

1. Business 2. Entertainment (Seeing a concert or play) 3. Other (please specify)

We then allocate confirmed guests based on their responses to these questions, where "Business" and "Other" responses do not have access to the allinclusive entertainment bundle structure and are not charged as an MEB customer. Hotel booking apps would be refitted with a MEBC integration, which focues mainly on the MEB customer. If a user selects one of the other options, they will be passed into the current-day booking application, whereas choosing "Entertainment" will now pass users to the redesigned version of the booking application, now fitted with MEBC framework to handle the new setup, all designed and implemented through the MEBC.

Those who choose "Entertainment" will then be able to search for entertainment bundles based around the date of the show and the availability of packages left for the specific entertainer, all updated in hotel booking apps through integration to the MEBC databases. These packages would be non-transferrable, and returns are authorized only to the original purchaser, which then places the returned package back into the general queue. Customers would all be able to return purchased packages for their original payment amount, and the packages themselves would be cycled back into the available rooms through the MEBC database. The MEBC would operate the ticketing sales through their

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central database, preventing any customers from reselling their own packages to others, as the tickets are ultimately held by the MEBC framework until day of show. Checking into one's room would grant access to the tickets, but only after check-in has occurred, further preventing resale of the tickets themselves.

We will construct three bundles to demonstrate different levels of all available options to consumers under the MEB structure, applying lagrangian multipliers to maximize the utility with wealth constraints of varying consumer spending budgets. Because langragian multipliers work well for showing achieved utility at varying price and budget points, we will construct functions to show the benefit to the customer through the MEBC system using three different MEB package options.

First, the MEBC would buy a fixed percentage (relative to maximum availability) of available show tickets prior to the general sale, one that allows them to buy a specific number of tickets in specific sections at MSRP prices, which can later be fixed into the function for the three bundles at three different price points of a particular bundle shown as [(?? 1 ?? 1 ), (?? 2 ?? 2 ), (?? 3 ?? 3 )] . The percentage of general tickets purchased by the MEBC should never be higher than 9% of the total availability in general sales. From section types categorized in The pricing for rooms and basic food package (buffet/on-demand style) will be semi-fixed costs variable only to local inflation& taxes, with the bundle price being primarily determined by the demand for the show; all packages include a room and basic buffet mealplan. Sales for MEB packages to shows will go on sale the day immediately following the general sale, allowing demand for the current show to be more accurately gauged for sales in the entertainment bundles. The sales of each section in the general ticket sale will then be converted to a demand rate ?? which can be inserted into our later overall bundle price function. The equation for demand rate can be shown as:

?? = ð??"ð??"?Î?"(?? * ????) -(?? * ????)? ð??"ð??"(?)????

Where ð??"ð??"(?(qa) and (qs) are variables representing the change in quantity sold and quantity available in each section and ? represents the value of the derivative of the tickets sold over the passage of time since the tickets went on sale in the general sale.

The application of the demand rate will allow the MEBC to price packages according to the demand of both the show in general, and to the specific seating section the consumer is seeking. The demand rate also replaces the string of booking fees, mobile fees, and otherwise "surprise" or "hidden" fees consumers typically face in both the resale market and the separate (non-packaged) buying experience in general. We then can price bundles by:

? = ??(?? * ????) + ???????? + ?? + (?? * ??)

where bt represents the base price of the MSRP ticket cost, R represents the quality of room desire, M shows the meal plan cost and x represents the number of guests in a package, all in summation of a customers total cost ?. If consumers choose local dining voucher options (based on local availability), a cost equal to some fixed percentage of the value of said voucher would be added to this above summation function.

14. IV. Results

We will continue to use the Taylor Swift Era's show to work through our example. Per CNN Business and Question Pro Data, the "average attendance per show was 72,459, accounting for closed-off areas and floor seats" [4]. To make the math easier to show, we will round this off at 70,000. Our example is an extremely in-demand show, so we will have the MEBC buy the maximum number of allowed tickets prior to the general sale (9%) so the MEBC purchases 6,300 tickets, divided up amongst the five seating section types deemed by the MEBC.

Our customer is booking a one-night stay and is in need of two tickets for the best seating available, which would be the pit section. Demand for this section was incredibly high, selling all available seats in the 200seat pit area and accounting for 55 of those available tickets to be sold prior to general sale, to either preholders or the MEBC. We can first find our demand rate:

?? = ð??"ð??"?Î?"(200 * 200) -(200 * 155)? ð??"ð??"(?)(155) = 58.06%

Per Table F above, we see that the best possible tickets in the pit section are priced at $499. Let's also suppose the consumer chooses a standard room ($130/night) and no local dining voucher, just the standard buffet plan ($30/day). These average prices are obtained from our earlier analysis of the Kayak.com data. A limitation here is that buffet plans would need to be priced based on supplier pricing, so we can only use assumed averages, the actual cost of the buffet plan may be higher in cities with less infrastructure or higher taxes on food. We can show a bundle price as: In our background review on page 6, we showed the average family of four would spend around $7000-7600 reserving and purchasing concert tickets separately, then securing travel, lodging, and food, or between $3500 and $3800 for two people, and with pit seats reselling for ? $3000, that $7600 would likely not get you seats even near the section you are wishing for. With the MEB structure in place, table G shows the same consumer would've been able to get pit seats, as well as their whole trip, at a fraction of the cost to consumers doing it themselves. We can further show the impact of the MEBC's maximization through a lagrangian utility function, subject to a consumer's personal wealth restraint. Showing the total, fixed value as (?? 1 ?? 1 ) + (?? 2 ?? 2 ), +(?? 3 ?? 3 ) = ð??"ð??" 0 , ? ð??"ð??" 0 > 0 is a positive fixed constant, assume the utility is given by?? = ?? 1 ?? 2 ?? 3 . The maximum of U on the commodity bundles given by the wealth constraints satisfies the following:

?? 2 ?? 3 = ???? 1 ?? 1 ?? 3 = ???? 2 ?? 1 ?? 2 = ???? 3 ð??"ð??" 0 = ?? 1 ?? 1 + ?? 2 ?? 2 + ?? 3 ?? 3

Showing they are all equal:

?? 1 ?? 2 ?? 3 . = ???? 1 ?? 1 = ???? 2 ?? 2 = ???? 3 ?? 3

When ?? = 0,this forces one variable to be equal to zero, making the utility zero. Because ?? ? 0 in our case, we show:

?? 1 ?? 1 = ?? 2 ?? 2 = ?? 3 ?? 3 ð??"ð??" 0 = 3?? 1 ?? 1 ð??"ð??" 0 3 = ?? 1 ?? 1 = ?? 2 ?? 2 = ?? 3 ?? 3

The three commodities in our case are tickets, hotel, and food. Assuming you were unable to buy a ticket at the general price, you are left with two options, either find one for a hopefully good deal on the resale market or buy an MEB package, where your ticket price is determined by a preset demand rate. At resale rates of $3300 and $2500, we compare the MEBC price of $1827. The MEB structure is still the best price for the consumer who was not able to get the concert tickets during the general sale. The idea of bundling lodging and experience together also fosters the idea of these bundles being exclusively for out-of-town travelers, as domestic guests and consumers local to the area would not rent lodging for the event, which may create unforeseen burdens on local concert-goers, such as a smaller availability of tickets. This structure would benefit the average consumer, but not all, as some are better "bargain-shoppers" and through loyalty programs, discounts and other heterogeneous factors. This structure also does not take into account special needs of some consumers, such as dietary restrictions or customizations, which would result in additional spending on behalf of the consumer, which is absent from the calculations and should be considered in a real-world application. There is also no inclusion of alcohol or merchandise sales allocated in this structure, which may make it more appealing to larger mass if offered.

15. V. Conclusion

Consumers are always on the prowl for better, more beneficial deals, and municipality cities are always going to want new and innovative ways to bring out-oftown consumers to their cities. Consumers getting a deal such as the mobile economy bundles will save more on the overall cost of travel, reducing their personal spending barriers into a more relaxed approach once they are actually in the city for the event. Without the financial anxiety and decision fatigue of where their meals will come from, whether or not they will have a decently priced place to sleep, or even whether or not they even have tickets to the event at reasonable prices, can all be reduced through the implementation of a system such as MEBC.

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This will also reduce the amount of resale tickets being scalped from the general sales as it reduces the availability of tickets scalpers can buy initially and resell for profit down the line, closer to the actual show date and while the initial reduction in general sales tickets may cause a temporary surge in the pricing of resold tickets, the demand should meet closer to equilibrium as the MEBC system becomes more ingratiated and experienced. The MEBC would expect to grow its availability in multiple hotel providers, both national and local, over time as the market reacts to its existence, which will lead to a balancing in pricing of tickets, as now people have more ways of buying them past general and pre sales. The reactionary demand rate introduced by the MEBC also allows it to fluctuate with future market changes, such as the introduction of more ticketing providers, performing spaces and hotel providers, as it calculates bundle prices in real time and based on demand of tickets. This would realiscally make the MEBC both scalable and secure in longevity, due to the adaptiveness of its composition. The improvements in technology like A.I., data retrival and manipulation and anti-laundering would continue to aid the system as well, giving it more resources to utilize in its mission, while creating both skilled labor jobs in the MEBC itself down to the surge of skilled & unskilled labor required to implement and maintain it.

The success of a system like the MEBC would not only bring more tourists into participating municipalities resulting in more traffic through local businesses, but could also create more permement jobs in the restaraunts and hotels, which incentivizes local businesses like these to adapt and promote the system itself. MEBC is structured very much as a "communitymodel", meaning that the more collaborative the communitites are in promoting and harnessing their MEB structures, the more returns they will see from it. The concert-goer benefits as well, not only do they already have lodging and food in place (and paid for), they are also able to get generally better seating than they would've in the resale market, which comes with far less anxieties than buying through a scalper.

Going out of town to see a show should not cost the price of a college semester, and making memories does not need to be a credit card bill for years to come. Through coming together, we can all experience more.

Figure 1. Unlocking
Concert Experiences: Mobile Economy Maximiaztion Bundles Transforming Ticketing Dynamics Global Journal of Management and Business Research ( B ) XXIII Issue VI Version I Year 2023 ? = ??(. 5806 * 499) + 499? * 2? + 130 + (30 * 4) = $1,827.44
Figure 2. Table A
A
shows some basic transportation needs
for a traveling family:
Table A
Transportation Type Average Cost (Family of Four)
Domestic Plane Tickets $ 1,320.00
Airport Parking $ 130.00
Rental Car $ 292.00
Gas $ 228.00
Total $ 1,970.00
Table B
Transportation Type Average Cost (Per Person)
Domestic Round-Trip Flight $ 330.00
International Round-Trip Flight $ 810.00
Rental Car (Daily) $ 73.00
Gas (Daily) $ 57.00
Airport Parking (Average, Daily) $ (42.50)
Public Transit/Rideshare (Daily) $ 36.00
Figure 3. Table D
D
Meal Type Average Cost (Per Day, Per Person)
3 Meals (one person) $ 46.00
Average Restaurant Meal $ 18.00
Alcohol (one person) $ 21.00
Figure 4. Table F Table F :
FF
Section Standard Ticket Price (Average) Resale Ticket Value (Average)
Farthest Section (Bad View) $ 49.00 $ 1,350.00
Farthest Section (Good View) $ 98.00 $ 2,025.00
Third Up (Bad View) $ 147.00 $ 1,710.00
Third Up (Good View) $ 196.00 $ 3,319.00
Second Up (Bad View) $ 245.00 $ 1,630.00
Second Up (Good View) $ 294.00 $ 3,150.00
Immediate Section (Bad View) $ 343.00 $ 2,032.00
Immediate Section (Good View) $ 395.00 $ 3,148.00
Pit Section (Far View) $ 435.00 $ 2,790.00
Pit Section (Best View) $ 499.00 $ 3,395.00
Figure 5. Table F :
F
? Basic packages would include tickets in the farthest
sections (both views)
? Standard packages would include tickets in the
Second Up sections (both views) and Third Up
sections (both views)
? Premium packages would include tickets in the
Immediate Sections (both views) and Pit Sections
(all views)
1

Appendix A

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  3. Live Music Market Size By 2031| Share, Growth, and Industry Analysis. B R Authors . https://www.businessresearchinsights.com/market-reports/live-music-market-103348 Www.businessresearchinsights.com 2023, February. (text=The%20global%20live%20music% 20market)
  4. Ticket Scalping and Housing Vouchers: A Tale of Limited Supply, D Fairweather . 2023. October 24.
  5. How Do Tickets Sell Out in Seconds? Debunking the Myth. https://queue-it.com/blog/tickets-sold-out-debunking-instant-sellout-myth/#:~:text=Debunking%20the% Queue-it, 2023. May 22.
  6. First on CNN: Taylor Swift's Eras tour could become the highest grossing tour of all time | CNN Business. K H Mena . https://www.cnn.com/2023/08/17/business/taylor-swift-eras-tour-two-billion/index CNN 2023. August 17. (html#:~:text=The % 20average% 20attendance%20per%20show)
  7. How much it costs to see Spotify's top artists live. K Mcnair , Taylor Swift , Drake , Bad Bunny . https://www.cnbc.com/2022/12/01/taylor-swift-drake-bad-bunny-how-much-it-costs-to-see-artists-live.html CNBC 2022, December 1.
  8. Understanding the Economic Impact of Taylor Swift's Eras Tour. Camoinassociates, M Klaunig , A Hallowell . https://camoin-associates.com/resources/understanding-the-economic-impact-of-the-eras-tour/ 2023, July 10.
  9. Mobile Economy Maximiaztion Bundles Transforming Ticketing Dynamics Global Journal of Management and Business Research ( B ) XXIII Issue VI Version I Year 2023 20%E2%80%9Cinstant%20sellout%E2%80%9D%20 myth 13,
  10. The Biggest Tour in the History of the World (Taylor's Version). Orleans . https://time.com/6307420/taylor-swift-eras-tour-money-economy/ Stubhub.com, J Kopstein , M Espada (eds.) October 2024 Show 10. November 18, 2023. 2023. August 23. (Taylor Swift Tickets) (Miami October 2024 Show 11)
  11. The Year of the $1,000 Concert Ticket. R Wolfe . https://www.wsj.com/articles/concert-tickets-prices-expensive-cafb8dd1 Wall Street Journal 2023. April 20.
  12. Biden announces Live Nation and Ticketmaster will allow consumers to see all fees up front|CNN Business. S Fossum . https://www.cnn.com/2023/06/15/business/live-nation-ticket-master-fees-biden/index.html CNN 2023. June 15.
  13. How Much Do Hotels Cost in the USA? Hotel Prices for the USA. Staff . https://www.budgetyourtrip.com/hotels/united-states-of-america-US Budget Your Trip 2023.
  14. , Taylor Swift , Tickets . https://www.stubhub.com/taylor-swift-indianapolis-tickets-11-1-2024/event/152129111 Stubhub.com. Retrieved November 17, 2023. (quantity=2&sections=575 240&ticketClasses=17201&rows=&seatTypes=&lis tingQty=&listingId=Indianapolis November 2024 Show)
  15. Taylor Swift , Tickets . https://www.stubhub.com/taylor-swift-new-orleans-tickets-10-25-2024/event/152129103/?quantity=2New Stubhub.com, November 18, 2023.
  16. Average resale price for Taylor Swift Eras Tour ticket was $3,801. W Gendron . https://www.businessinsider.com/resale-price-taylor-swift-eras-tour-reputation-ticket-pitchfork-report-2023-8?amp Business Insider, 2023. August 23.
Notes
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Date: 1970-01-01