Analytics

Spotify for Podcasters Hits the Open Road

Spotify on Tuesday launched Spotify for Podcasters following a year-long beta involving more than 100,000 podcasts from 167 countries.

Spotify for Podcasters is a discovery and analytics dashboard designed to let podcasters track performance through data such as episode retention charts, aggregate demographics about listeners, and details on follower growth. Podcast data is updated daily.


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Podcasters can use timestamps in their episode description so listeners can start playing the podcasts from precise moments. Timestamps cannot be longer than the episode they point to. They currently are clickable only on mobile devices. Podcasters also can add links to their episode descriptions.

Spotify for Podcasters users can download a .CSV file with their data.

“Data allows a podcaster to better hone their content and attract both advertisers and more listeners,” noted Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group.

“It is critical to building a podcasting business if you know how to use it,” he told the E-Commerce Times. “You can get a better sense of your audience and use that to attract advertisers and refine your content.”

The dashboard is available globally but currently is rendered only in English.

Spotify’s Definitions

There is no industry standard definition for podcast metrics. Here’s how Spotify defines key metrics:

  • Starts measure any listener who clicks on a podcast episode. There is no minimum time limit;
  • Streams encompass podcasts streamed for more than 60 seconds;
  • Listeners are unique listeners who started an episode in a podcaster’s catalog;
  • Followers are listeners who hit “Follow” on their podcast or on Spotify;
  • Average Listen shows how long people listen to a podcast episode. It’s based on the data of at least 50 percent of listeners.

The most comprehensive data on listeners comes from podcast hosts like Simplecast, suggested James Cridland, editor of podcast industry newsletter Podnews.

That’s because Spotify and Apple provide data only on their own app’s users, he told the E-Commerce Times.

Gunning for Top Position

Apple dominates the podcast business, with 63 percent of the market, according to Andreessen Horowitz. Spotify comes in second place with nearly 10 percent.

Spotify claims more than 200 million listeners across more than 75 countries worldwide, and says its podcasts’ reach has nearly doubled since the beginning of this year.

Spotify earlier this year announced the acquisitions of Anchor, which offers a podcast creation app, and podcast content creator Gimlet Media.

Those buys will enable it to “become the leading platform for podcast creators around the world and the leading producer of podcasts, said CEO Daniel Ek.

Over time, more than 20 percent of content on Spotify will be non-music content, he predicted, and Spotify’s goal is to become the world’s No. 1 audio platform.

Spotify, which is available for both iOS and Android, has “beaten Apple in a number of different countries as a way of listening to podcasts,” Podnews’ Cridland noted.

Show Me the Money

Video is roughly a trillion-dollar market, while the music and radio industry is worth about US$100 billion, Spotify’s Ek observed. “Are our eyes really worth 10 times more than our ears? I firmly believe this is not the case.”

Podcasting will lead the way for growth in the audio sector, he said.

Ads on podcasts totaled $479 million last year — 53 percent higher than the $314 million spent in 2017, IAB found. They are expected to top $1 billion in 2021.

Podcast listening, which drove that growth, increased 7 percent in one year, the firm said. More than half of Americans aged 12 and over have listened to podcasts. Further, podcast listeners continue to respond well to ads.

Spotify wants “to ride this wave to revenue,” Enderle remarked.

Podcasting ad revenue lags behind attention, and podcast monetization is in the very early stages and remains disjointed, according to Andreessen Horowitz. Still, it has doubled each year for the past few years, and investments in podcasting companies have shot up. Last year, a record number of venture capitalists put money into such firms.

With more than 450,000 shows in its catalog, Spotify may have a content advantage, which is at the core of listeners’ engagement.

All About Ads

“Spotify can already serve ads to listeners based on what genre of podcasts they listen to, and you can suspect they may do more of that,” Cridland said, “but crucially, Spotify is trying to increase app usage time without increasing their costs — which is why podcasting is so attractive. Spotify has to pay to use music. Podcasts, however, come free.”

That low-cost aspect of podcasting also might appeal to the corporate world.

“The decision maker who may not have time to read your report might want to listen to you talk, or watch, if you have a video,” suggested Michael Jude, program manager at Stratecast/Frost & Sullivan.

In fact, Frost may disseminate its analysts’ reports as podcasts in the future.

Podcasts “apply to any company that wants to communicate with an audience of customers or prospects, or anyone else,” Jude told the E-Commerce Times. “If all you want is the essential information, that’s a good option.”

Companies can “do centralized curation and archive, and send podcasts to people on their smartphone,” Jude said. “You can even do video podcasts this way.”

Richard Adhikari

Richard Adhikari has been an ECT News Network reporter since 2008. His areas of focus include cybersecurity, mobile technologies, CRM, databases, software development, mainframe and mid-range computing, and application development. He has written and edited for numerous publications, including Information Week and Computerworld. He is the author of two books on client/server technology. Email Richard.

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