A screenshot of a sponsored Spotify playlist. The streaming startup
announced Thursday that brands will now be able to sponsor the hundreds
of playlists it's curated.
Photo: Spotify
Your favorite Spotify playlist just got sponsored. On
Thursday, the streaming music service announced that it’s allowing
brands to sponsor the hundreds of context-, mood- and genre-specific
playlists it has assembled over the years, giving them the chance to
associate with times and places when people fire them up.
“Our playlists span every genre, mood and moment, soundtracking the
day for millions of people around the world,” a company blog post read.
As Spotify has grown from a small startup in Sweden into a multibillion-dollar private company that collects money from nearly half of
the world’s paying music subscribers, it’s amassed a ton of information
about when, how and why people listen to music with it. During
presentations made to advertisers last summer, executives pointed out
that its users have crafted more than 2 billion playlists on its service, many of them explicitly created for specific times in their day. Its users have made more than 39,000 shower playlists, for example, and countless more playlists for activities like working out, cooking, drinking coffee and even going to sleep.
That vast store of intelligence has allowed Spotify to create its own
playlists, and now a number of them, including Morning Coffee, are
followed by millions of its listeners.
Spotify has also had a lot of success with its
genre-specific and curated playlists. Rap Caviar, one of the first
playlists it began touting, boasts 3 million followers; New Music
Fridays, a selection of songs from all the albums and singles released
at the end of every work week, counts more than 8 million followers.
All told, there are now more than 400 of these playlists,
and they are now available to marketers in the United States; a similar
program is in beta in the U.K. Sponsorships last one week, and during
that time, the chosen playlist is adorned with the brand’s logo, and the
brand gets total control over the display ads served on that playlist.
The brand also gets to choose what to play during the playlist’s first
commercial break. The spots, to be clear, only interrupt Spotify's free
users; its subscribers can still listen without the ads.
Sponsoring playlists is an inevitable step for Spotify, not
only because a majority of its listeners use its free, ad-supported
tier, but because of how streaming services have changed the way people
consume music. A full 45 percent
of all ad-supported streaming music consumers listen to music primarily
in playlist form, according to MIDiA Research, while just 31 percent
say they still listen primarily to albums.
Being able to command a premium price for its advertising
doesn’t hurt, either; Spotify still earns nearly 90 percent of its
revenues from subscription fees, a balance it would probably like to
revise.
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