![]() But Spotify has one big advantage: its app, already used by more than 250 million people a month, could serve to introduce podcasts to a whole new group of listeners. The company is not the first to try, and others, such as Stitcher and Luminary, have struggled to justify themselves to listeners. Until then, Spotify’s bigger problem is convincing podcast listeners to switch from their favourite app to the service’s own – which may not have access to all the shows available in the open ecosystem. The two companies, in direct competition over music streaming, could be going head-to-head in a second field. ![]() Apple – long the corporate leader in podcasting through its control of the Apple Podcast Directory and still the largest global platform for connecting listeners with broadcasters – has started acquiring original podcasts for itself for the first time, according to Bloomberg News. “Once Spotify has gatekeeping power over distribution and a large ad targeting business, it will also be able to control who can monetise podcasts, because advertisers will increasingly just want to hit specific audience members, as opposed to advertise on specific shows.”īut Spotify has competition. A new report from The Verge suggests Spotify got the better end of the deal. On paper, the deal looked like a win-win. Spotify’s market cap jumped by 4B within a day of the announcement. “Podcasting feels like the web prior to the roll-up of power by Google and Facebook, with a lot of new voices, some very successful and most marginal, but quite authentic,” said Matt Stoller, author of Goliath, a history of monopolies. In May 2020, Joe Rogan signed a 100m+ licensing deal with Spotify giving the streaming platform exclusive access to his podcast. The benefits are familiar web economics, and many see the transformation Spotify has in mind as mirroring the changes to the wider web that unfurled over the 2010s. Control of the player also allows Spotify to vary the advertising to the audience, again increasing revenue. The Joe Rogan Experience is the second significant acquisition by Spotify for its growing podcast business, after the company bought US sports broadcaster The Ringer outright for nearly $200m in February.īoth deals, as well as smaller forays into exclusive content around topics such as gaming, true crime, and relationship advice, lie at the heart of the Swedish streaming service’s attempts to transform podcasting from an industry built around a mishmash of open standards and traditional advertising into a platform economy – with Spotify at the centre.īy requiring Rogan’s listeners to use the Spotify app to tune in, the company gains far deeper data about who, when and where their audiences are that, in turn, can be fed through to advertisers, who are more likely to pay higher rates if they can be assured that the target audience is listening. Add a premium for exclusivity on top and, says podcaster John Gruber, “it seems likely that Joe Rogan is now the highest paid broadcaster in the world”. Terms were not disclosed, but one calculation from 2019 pegged Rogan’s revenue from podcast adverts alone between $50m (£41m) and $250m, with more coming from YouTube, where his shows get a million views in their first 24 hours. Rogan announced the deal on 19 May, revealing his show would debut on Spotify in September, and become exclusive to the platform some point after that. ![]() And that has made him a linchpin in Spotify’s plans to transform the world of podcasting. “We will still have clips up on YouTube but full versions of the show will only be on Spotify after the end of the year.But Rogan’s affably bro-ish demeanour, combined with his sponge-like interview style, has garnered him millions of fans over the thousand-plus episodes of his show, The Joe Rogan Experience. They want me to just continue doing it the way I’m doing it right now. ![]() It’s just a licensing deal, so Spotify won’t have any creative control over the show. “It will remain FREE, and it will be the exact same show. “Starting on September 1 the podcast will be available on Spotify as well as all platforms, and then at the end of the year it will move exclusively to Spotify, including the video version. “Announcement: the podcast is moving to Rogan posted on Instagram. ![]() Rogan assured his avid listeners the deal is only a licensing deal and the company won’t have any “creative control” over the layout of the show. Rogan has built a name for himself as the voice of the UFC with his podcast turning into a booming business as he interviews everyone from Elon Musk to Jamie Foxx. Spotify have opened the cheque book to secure Rogan’s entire podcast library with the deal worth a reported $AUD152 million for 11 years worth of content. Joe Rogan’s podcast is set to have a new home from September 1 and the deal has netted the voice of the UFC an eye-watering sum. ![]()
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