Joe Kennedy |
According to Bloomberg Businessweek, Pandora streamed 1.31
billion hours of songs in April, the first full month with the cap in place, a
5.1 percent drop from February’s 1.38 billion, the Oakland, California-based
company said yesterday in an e-mailed statement. Adjusting for February’s fewer
days, listeners streamed 10 percent less, Chief Executive Officer Joe Kennedy
said in an interview.
“The decline in hours will be very closely mirrored in
content acquisition costs,” Kennedy said, declining to provide specifics. The
company reports fiscal 2014 first-quarter results on May 23.
Pandora’s results since implementing the cap suggest the
company is starting to contain content costs, its biggest expense, without
alienating listeners. The company in March began targeting the 4 percent of
mobile users who were streaming more than 40 hours monthly, to stanch royalty
payments that had ballooned as the service gained popularity.
Those who reach the cap can pay 99 cents to continue using
the Pandora, switch to a desktop computer or enroll in Pandora One, a
$36-a-year commercial-free option that gives more control over song selection.
Of the users who hit the limit in March, 86 percent returned
in April, Kennedy said. Some coped by switching to Pandora’s unlimited desktop
version, while others chose to pay, Kennedy said. He declined to provide
specifics.
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