Sirius XM is interested in Pandora’s large audience for online radio, which is a natural complement to its own large customer base for satellite radio. The sale of Ticketfly, for a fraction of the $335 million Pandora paid just a couple years ago, suggests Sirius is less enthusiastic about Pandora’s expansion into other businesses.

Pandora will use the money to invest in its radio business, the companies said. The press release made no mention of Pandora Premium, the on-demand service the company has spent the past few years developing. Pandora co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Tim Westergren listed the on-demand service as the company’s top strategic priority for 2017.
Meanwhile, Billboard reports Sirius covets Pandora for several reason: its advertising structure, which is now showing it can generate both national and local advertising revenues; its 81 million active users, versus the Sirius listening base of 31 million subscribers; the diversity of the Pandora's listener demographics, which also includes younger demos in which Sirius is weak; and the possibility of experimenting with more functionality for Sirius' existing programmed model -- learning from Pandora's experiences -- without going into more expensive, on-demand licensing.
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