Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Music Businesses

Spotify's Big Bet On Podcasts Is Failing, Citi Says (cnbc.com) 64

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC: Spotify's multimillion-dollar bet on podcasting may not be working out, Citi analysts wrote in a note to clients Friday. "The cadence of Premium gross additions (through 3Q20) and app download data (through 4Q20) do not show any material benefit from recent podcast investments (that began in 2019)," the analysts wrote. The firm downgraded the stock to sell from neutral.

Spotify kicked off its venture into podcasting in early 2019, after acquiring podcast companies Gimlet Media, Anchor and Parcast. Since then, the company has acquired sports and entertainment news company The Ringer, as well as Megaphone, which will bolster its ad tech business. It also spent what's likely millions gaining the exclusive rights to stream celebrity podcasts, including those from Joe Rogan, Kim Kardashian West, Michelle Obama and The Duke and Duchess of Sussex. The idea was that by bringing exclusive content to the app, the company could strengthen its advertising business as well as bring in Premium subscribers.
"To date, we have not seen a material positive inflection in app downloads or Premium subscriptions," the Citi analysts wrote.

"If we were to see a material positive inflection in app downloads or Premium subs (from higher gross adds or materially lower churn), we would alter our view," they added. "But, our fear is that if podcasting doesn't provide a way for Spotify to shift away from music label dependence, the Street may reassess the underlying value of the business. And, that would be bad for Spotify's multiple and equity value."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Spotify's Big Bet On Podcasts Is Failing, Citi Says

Comments Filter:
  • They only recently added video. They also need to add a commenting system. Half the value of the JRE pod casts was interacting with other viewers and reading the "Joe 'insert comments here' Rogan" posts.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Joe "I'm still keeping the $100 million dollars as per the contract" Rogan.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Commenting systems only work when everybody is allowed to express their opinions. If the moderators simply delete all the comments they don't agree with then it is rather pointless.
      • by Cylix ( 55374 )

        Don't forget videos.

        Spotify a terrible platform and not just the platform. I tried to stream the Rogan video using their app and it would just default to audio.

        I actually stopped paying them money after their employees threw numerous fits. No reason to pay good money to bad people.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Conversely commenting systems don't work when anyone is allowed to say whatever they like with zero moderation, it just devolves into a mixture of spam and trolling.

        There has to be a balance between the two or it's rather pointless.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by pacinpm ( 631330 )

          A bit off topic: my view of moderation is it's very good in small communities on small websites. When your website becomes main channel of communication for entire population it should be treated like public property (roads, police etc) and become heavily controlled by law. Including freedom of speech articles.

    • by Excelcia ( 906188 ) <slashdot@excelcia.ca> on Tuesday January 19, 2021 @10:22AM (#60963722) Homepage Journal

      They only recently added video. They also need to add a commenting system

      The issue, I think, is more basic than this. It is, very simply, that there is already great and vibrant podcast community and infrastructure build around the very open RSS model and existing podcast consumers simply don't want that to change. They are afraid, rightfully so, that downloading Spotify is just giving them the power to choke out independent producers.

      For podcast consumers, there is no value added at all for Spotify. Only the dubious pleasure of having, in addition to a podcast's own ads, more of their own inserted randomly. No one wants that. And no one wants another Bright Sessions debacle. For those that don't know, The Bright Sessions was a great sci-fi/supernatural fiction podast available through all the standard distributions and funded through Patreon. It was one of the more popular fiction podcasts, until they decided that they were going to move to Luminary. They didn't just move though, uh uh. You see they had a per-episode model on Patreon, so every time they released an episode it triggered a new donation. So they released nine tiny little mini-episodes, used the money that triggered to fund their next season, and then instead of releasing that season, they cancelled the show. But lo and behold you can sign up with Luminary and listen to their "wholly new" podcast, "The AM Archives". It was, of course, entirely the same show and they never got the subscriptions on Luminary they hoped.

      Nobody wants a Luminary or Spotify to become the Netflix of Podcasts. Nobody wants a Netflix of Podcasts period. We all see what happened with Netflix and where it is trending. From "watch any TV show or movie ever produced" to "watch a lot of great TV shows and a fair amount of movies and some great ones we make" to "watch us lose all our contracts for TV shows and movies, watch the occasional great show we make, and a lot of mediocre ones we also make, then watch us cancel great shows outright while fighting the film and film awards establishment, and increase our price on back-to-back-to-back years".

      Nobody wants that in podcasts, and podcast consumers are strongly resisting the push to move to that model.

  • Kim Kardashian (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Arthur, KBE ( 6444066 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @11:53PM (#60962602)
    The fact people would pay to this woman doesn't give me much hope for Western Civilization.
    • Why precisely is that? Can you name a society in any time or place that only paid attention to persons or messages that you would deem wise? It doesn't exist and if you think it does, it's only because so much of human history has been lost to time. The graffiti on the walls of Pompeii suggest humans haven't really changed a lot in the last several thousand years. We just have fancier technology.

      I'll probably agree with you that Kim Kardashian is not worth listening to on a great many topics, but she's n
      • I beleve you are missing the point. If people are so pathetic they would listen to KK, they are probably just as pathetic and capable of joining many other worthless followers, perhaps some like those of Parlor.
      • by nagora ( 177841 )

        Why precisely is that? Can you name a society in any time or place that only paid attention to persons or messages that you would deem wise? It doesn't exist and if you think it does, it's only because so much of human history has been lost to time. The graffiti on the walls of Pompeii suggest humans haven't really changed a lot in the last several thousand years.

        Well, isn't that why we shouldn't have much hope for civilization? Because we never learn?

      • What does Kim know to be a podcast star? Will she talk about makeup?
  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Tuesday January 19, 2021 @12:01AM (#60962622) Journal
    Some groups have been de-platformed and are looking for a way to gype their rubes. May be spotify let them raise funds by monetizing their speeches and rants packaged as podcasts??
  • by RyanFenton ( 230700 ) on Tuesday January 19, 2021 @12:03AM (#60962630)

    I totally wouldn't mind just going back to RSS feeds for auto-gathering the podcasts I care about.

    Apparently, it's just too much work for a company to do with automation and still run a company.

    Heck - seems like we might just be seeing a weird revival of the general web to a degree we haven't seen since 2010.

    While we're at it, can we lose the term 'app' for a program - just because they're on a walled garden platform, never make them that much different - they're just paywalled better. Which was hardly ever a term of anything better, in my eyes.

    The term app doesn't feel like the future anymore. It just feels like restriction.

    Ryan Fenton

  • by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Tuesday January 19, 2021 @12:23AM (#60962668)

    It also spent what's likely millions gaining the exclusive rights to stream celebrity podcasts, including those from Joe Rogan, Kim Kardashian West, Michelle Obama and The Duke and Duchess of Sussex. The idea was that by bringing exclusive content to the app, the company could strengthen its advertising business as well as bring in Premium subscribers.

    Can't say I'm surprised - I really doubt many people are really craving "premium" podcasts, not matter how popular the celebrity might be.

    Podcasts are cheap to make (way cheaper than video), and are plentiful - it's not like you can't find something else to your liking - there's no "must-have podcast" like there might be must-watch shows

    Frankly, I'm kinda glad it's not working out for Spotify (and hopeful it won't either for Apple's plans) - I prefer for podcasts to remain freely available just as they've been, because I'd hate to see podcasts go the way the free internet got lost with walled garden content controlled by a few media behemoths.

    • Certainly with audio podcasts, even calling it streaming is stretching it, as not only are the file sizes small by todays metrics, its also hard to find a device that cannot download these audio files thousands of times faster than their playback rate.

      The term streaming was invented for a reason and this scenario isnt it. There is no necessity for a "streaming service" to be fetching and sending bits of audio podcast data outside of live broadcasting.

      Downloading is the correct term and nobody needs a
      • by mattr ( 78516 )

        This. I tried an audiobook from a common library app that insisted on streaming. It was really annoying and pointless, the embedded player sucked and it turned me off from the experience. And they didn't have a big selection. The one selection I did play though was great. I would have paid $1 for it though the point was to find free ones.
        I'm not sure podcasts should be commercial but I might be willing to pay a small amount if there were actually ones I wanted to see and the experience was easy. Though I do

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The problem is most podcasts are crap. They tend to fall into one of two categories:

      - News, where you would be better off just reading an article, but can be nice for filling time like when commuting.

      - Interviews, and unfortunately most interviewers are quite poor.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Frankly, I'm kinda glad it's not working out for Spotify (and hopeful it won't either for Apple's plans) - I prefer for podcasts to remain freely available just as they've been, because I'd hate to see podcasts go the way the free internet got lost with walled garden content controlled by a few media behemoths.

      No reason you can't have a mixed model. Podcasters have always complained about the poor business model and the need to get ads and sponsors.

      There will always be a ton of free (sponsored) podcasts. Bu

      • by Sebby ( 238625 )

        There will always be a ton of free (sponsored) podcasts. But there are also going to be a few who want to create a "premium" podcast that requires a paid subscription. I personally feel it's their right to do so, and whether the market accepts that or not is for the market ot decide.

        Another aspect I didn't mention that I don't want to see happen: I don't want my privacy raped by said behemoths (Apple included).

        If "premium" or even just platform exclusive podcasts start happening (instead of being freely available/subscribable from anywhere without specific apps), we'll see the same degradation of available content as we did with the regular web - the 'better' podcasts will go to one of a few closed platforms, and the rest will essentially be hobbyist that do it for fun - we'd probably

  • Spotify is foolish and naive for trying. I already had it so switching for JRE wasn't a big deal. I heard an ad the other day mid video and I own premium lol first black flag.. also, the video function is so buggy. If you switch back to music, the podcast is stuck on the seek bar and your music controls wont appear. Swipe closing doesn't work; you have to open settings and force close the app. Been listening to Rogan since the ustream days and I like using Spotify but this has been an all round catastrophe
    • Ugh, advertising on premium services is wholly unacceptable.

      It's the reason I will never pay for Sirius/XM radio. One of my coworkers has a membership so we stream it. They play the same songs every day, and while they claim to be commercial-free, they are CHOCK FULL of commercials for their own content. It's still a commercial if it's for content on your own network, you fraudulent fucks! I don't want Bono coming in between good songs to advertise his channel. Bono can fuck off into the wind sideways.

      • The ads are basically this:
        "Tired of us only playing the 5 same songs in a loop all day on your premium subscription service? You have to change channels for that."

      • A service provider advertising its services on its service us particularly obnoxious. It's like damn, you already have my money. Comcast has always been particularly egregious about this, and it's not like they couldn't inject different ads over their own that are in national streams, because they inject local ads all the time, and advertise that service.
  • I just glanced at the Spotify player looking for the podcasts I like. It seems like it could probably do most of the things I want, but I suspect it would be a bit of a pain. Podcasts aren't music, I don't listen in the same way or in the same situations. I'm not sure a single player can effectively do both.

  • by kerubi ( 144146 ) on Tuesday January 19, 2021 @01:53AM (#60962786)

    I loathe the thought that as I pay for my Premium subscription, they give some of that money to some celebrity podcasters.

    At least Spotify make the podcasts a separate subscription. Then they would see who really sees value in them. I am about two months in on my 4 months for 2â Tidal Black Friday deal, and while the UI and recommendations suck, at least it is about the music, instead of talking.

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      How is this complaint different from complaining about genre of music you don't like being on spotify?

      The entire premise of spotify is that it probably has all audio you want. Podcasts are simply another addition to the library. Now whether video podcasts like JRE are a good fit for the platform is a whole different story.

      • Well, if I would know that they have unlimited resources on developing the music service, and none of the money I pay is spent to running the music service & paying artists, I would be ok.

        But I think it is highly likely they are diverting limited resources from the music part to the podcasts. Hence my claim that the service I pay for is diminished by podcasts is likely true.

        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          Just think of podcasters as a new type of music that you really don't like. Service here is just as diminished by said podcasts as it is by access to music genre that you don't like.

  • by cfalcon ( 779563 ) on Tuesday January 19, 2021 @02:21AM (#60962838)

    Lets compare briefly how Spotify has handled stuff, as opposed to say, Netflix.

    Netflix bought the rights to things that weren't being used much- streaming rights, which Netflix aimed to prove were undervalued. Knowing that these rights would be taken from them as soon as they proved them profitable, they also began funding their own products.

    Spotify aimed to BUY products that already existed for free, and make you have to listen to them on Spotify. This is how, for instance, they bought Joe Rogan; they simply paid him money to not list his podcast anywhere else. Around this time, Joe Rogan deleted old episodes that would not sit well with his new company's values, which bothered some folks, but not others. Regardless of your opinion of this, however, Spotify didn't pay to create or boost Joe Rogan. It's not "Spotify Original Programming".

    Some things are, of course- the Michelle Obama podcast seems to be (and not to be completely exclusive). But overall, Spotify hasn't exactly flooded the market with super amazing podcasts for every niche, or whatever strange multispectrum approach would perfectly fit podcasting. There seems to be an emphasis on celebrities and politics- things which are guaranteed to have a large but finite following. It's hard to sharke the feeling that for way less money, they could be all over a variety of smaller interests, which is normally what podcasts are all about.

    • Spotify didn't pay to create or boost Joe Rogan. It's not "Spotify Original Programming".

      How is Netflix buying Arrested Development and then producing new episodes different from Spotify buying JRE and then producing new episodes?

      • by Zagnar ( 722415 )

        OP already answered that, but I'll rephrase.

        JRE was widely available and free for download with any good podcast app, or via youtube. Presumably it would have kept going like this without Spotify's help. Instead they bought it out. now we have to use the (Closed source) spotify app, watch their ads, and pay their subscription fees, and the show is worse off with big corporate ads and censorship.

        Arrested Development on the other hand was never freely available. (Other than over broadcast TV.) it was out of p

      • At the time, Arrested Development wasn't really being watched anymore. Very underrated, but I didn't hear about it until long after it aired.

  • I downloaded spotify app especially for listening to podcasts.
    I was not suited for the task at all. I quickly dumped spotify for a dedicated podcast app.

    So I'm a bit surprised that they "pushed for podcasts" as this is completely contrary to my experience.

    • The Spotify app is terrible for podcasts. It doesn't support automated downloads. So every time I want to leave the house, I need to check a list of episodes and manually download them? That sucks!

      I'm a long-time paid subscriber to Spotify. I still love the music side of things, but the podcast side is awful, and it sucks that at least one podcast I followed previously moved to Spotify. I'm sure the podcast is losing listeners because of this, and for that, I feel sorry for the producers of the podcast

  • I can understand why it fails as I never gave gotten into it. I'm not going to waste my time listening to yammering for whatever reason/purpose. However, my wife and daughter have listened to some that are digging into unsolved crimes, but it's all just speculation, boring to me.
  • But found that the podcasts downloads still don't function without an initial wifi or cellular connection. Also, more importantly, it crashes regularly, freezes at random, marks my podcasts as "listened to" and won't play again even if I've only heard a few minutes, forces the video on me even though I only want audio, and drains my battery about 3 times faster. What Spotify is trying to sell me with "Premium" is beyond me. If their app could be as simple and seamless as Apple Podcasts, I'd subscribe. Howev
  • "...Joe Rogan, Kim Kardashian West, Michelle Obama and The Duke and Duchess of Sussex..."

    I would pay to AVOID listening to those. Well, maybe except for Rogan. His contrarian guests will soon be cancelled, anyway.

  • You can't even get to the options of adding PodCasts to the app without an account. Why bother?
  • If you don't have an RSS feed can it really even be called a PodCast?
  • Write more, thats all I have to say. Literally, it seems as though you relied on the video to make your point. You clearly know what youre talking about, why waste your intelligence on just posting videos to your weblog when you could be giving us something enlightening to read? epicwin [lnwbets.com]
  • There is no way to stop video when bandwidth is limited, most of the time I am not watching a podcast I am listening to it while working/walking/etc
    There is no way to "mark all played" on windows client (useful when subscribing to a podcast for the first time)
    Next podcast is not chronological but instead jump to the older one that was already played, so have to manually start them
    Resume playing fails most of the time and starts from beginning
    Very jittery during playback, RSS clients pre-download the files w

"May your future be limited only by your dreams." -- Christa McAuliffe

Working...