Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Spotify To Launch Podcasts Subscriptions Wednesday


Spotify on Tuesday launched its new paid podcast subscriptions feature, allowing podcast hosts to charge their listeners for exclusive content. The new feature is available just weeks before Apple, Spotify’s chief competition when it comes to music and podcasts, is set to rollout its own version of paid podcast subscriptions, The Wrap reports.

Spotify’s new feature will allow podcast creators to mark podcasts as subscriber-only and then directly publish them to the service. Most notably, the service will be free to podcast creators for the “next two years,” according to a release from Spotify, meaning podcasters get to keep 100% of their subscription revenue (minus payment transaction fees) until 2023. After two years, Spotify plans on introducing “a competitive 5% fee” to use its subscription podcast tools, which are available via Anchor, the podcast network it acquired in 2019.

The feature will start rolling out to users in the U.S. on Wednesday, and later, to international subscribers “in the coming months,” the company said.

Spotify’s decision to not take a cut of subscriptions stands in contrast to Apple, which just announced its own subscription podcast service last week. Apple, when its feature launches in May, will take a 30% cut of subscription revenue from podcasters in their first year, and 15% of revenue in the years after. The tech giant will also charge creators $19.99 per year for its Apple Podcasters Program, which “includes all of the tools needed to offer premium subscriptions,” Apple said.

CEO Daniel Ek has said he wants Spotify — which had 155 million paying users entering 2021 — to not only be the number one platform for music, but also for everything-audio. To get there, Spotify has invested heavily in its podcasting efforts over the last few years, including going on a buying spree in 2020 and bringing in top podcasters like Bill Simmons and Joe Rogan. Now, by not taking a slice of subscription revenue, Spotify is looking to give podcast creators and fans another reason to choose its app over Apple’s.

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