WebProNews

Tag: internet radio

  • Apple Is Censoring Dr. Dre (and Everything Else) on Beats 1 Radio

    Today, Apple launched Apple Music to the world. And Apple’s always on, “progressive” radio station Beats 1 is currently censoring the music it plays worldwide.

    Apple, who gave Dr. Dre a “senior role” in the company when it acquired his Beats company last year, is bleeping out curse words in songs from The Chronic.

    “Beats 1 is a place for progressive radio programming. Alongside new music programs from our anchor DJs, we’ve invited some of the biggest artists in the world to make brilliant radio shows — from exclusive weekly DJ mixes to interviews with iconic musicians about albums that changed their lives. Beats 1 plays everything from old-school hip-hop to futuristic pop, and it’s all handpicked by people who live and breathe music,” says Apple.

    And edited tracks, like if someone gave Walmart a deck and its own radio station.

    Apple confirmed to BuzzFeed that “it is censoring explicit content on Beats 1, and it’s doing it worldwide. The company declined to provide any further comment.”

    Other popular internet radio destinations like Pandora do not censor content, instead providing an “explicit filter” if listeners choose to block explicit content.

    It looks like Apple wants to keep Beats 1 family friendly. This really shouldn’t surprise anyone, considering Apple’s draconian regulation of App Store apps.

  • Google Play Music Now Has a Free, Ad-Supported Radio Tier

    To some people Google Play Music, Google’s subscription music streaming service, may have gotten lost in a sea of other offerings. But now, just a week before Apple launches its new music streaming platform, Google is reminding you about its own service and sweetening things a bit.

    Starting today on the web and soon on iOS and Android, Google is offering a free, ad-supported tier to Play Music.

    No, you won’t be able to call up songs on-demand. Much like Pandora or Spotify’s free tier, Google Play Music’s free tier is based around “radio” stations – curated playlists based on specific songs, artists, or moods.

    “At any moment in your day, Google Play Music has whatever you need music for—from working, to working out, to working it on the dance floor—and gives you curated radio stations to make whatever you’re doing better. Our team of music experts, including the folks who created Songza, crafts each station song by song so you don’t have to. If you’re looking for something specific, you can browse our curated stations by genre, mood, decade or activity, or you can search for your favorite artist, album or song to instantly create a station of similar music,” says Google Play Music product manager Elias Roman.

    Of course, the goal for Google is to get people in the door and hope they decide to upgrade to the paid tier. The company isn’t shy about this.

    “We hope you’ll enjoy it so much that you’ll consider subscribing to Google Play Music to play without ads, take your music offline, create your own playlists, and listen to any of the 30 million songs in our library on any device and as much as you’d like,” says Roman.

    Another day, another free, ad-supported internet radio. Google is banking on the fact that people will be interested in its “expertly” crafted playlists.

    And of course, there’s still this in the pipeline.

  • Pandora Lands On Google Chromecast

    Pandora Lands On Google Chromecast

    Google Chromecast has thus far only been used as a video streaming device for services like Netflix, Hulu and YouTube. That’s not to say that the Chromecast can only do video, however, as a major player in the online music streaming business has now announced support for the device.

    Pandora announced today that its Android and iOS mobile apps have now been updated with the Cast button to allow users to push content from their mobile devices to the TV through Chromecast. When playing on a TV, all the basic Pandora features, like Play, Pause, Thumb and Skip, are available to users.

    “Our mission is to provide the best personalized radio experience to our listeners, anytime, anywhere,” said Tom Conrad, Pandora CTO and EVP of Product. “More than one-third of radio listening takes place in the home and we are continually innovating and investing in new platforms that help us seamlessly deliver access to Pandora across a broad range of connected devices. By integrating Google Cast technology into our mobile apps, users now have another easy access point to a better listening experience from the biggest screen in their living room.”

    Pandora says that the updated iOS and Android apps are now available from their respective stores. The Android app supports streaming from both smartphones and tablets whereas the iOS app only supports streaming from iPhones at this time. It’s noted that iPad support is “coming soon.”

    [Image: Pandora/Google Play]

  • Pandora Lifts 40-Hour Per Month Streaming Cap

    Pandora Lifts 40-Hour Per Month Streaming Cap

    Starting September 1st, Pandora users will be able to listen to as much free music as they want. The streaming radio company has just announced that they are planning on lifting the 40-hour per month cap on free mobile listening that they instituted earlier this year.

    That move was something that Pandora called very unusual, and something contrary to their mission.

    “We’re pleased to once again maximize free listening for everyone on Pandora,” said Tim Westergren, Pandora’s founder. “The more than 70 million listeners that tune in every month will now have more time to hear the music they love, and thousands of working artists will reach more fans.”

    When Pandora instituted the 40-hour per month cap back in February, they cited rising per-track royalty rates, which were up 25% over the last 3 years. This time, they are citing “rapid progress in mobile advertising” as the reason they are able to lift the limit.

    It’s unlikely that the listening cap, and now this uncap, will affect that many Pandora users. The company claims that less than 4% of their users even hit this 40-hour limit. The average Pandora user streams about 20 hours of music per month.

    Pandora just posted its Q2 earnings, announcing record revenues of $162 million – up 58% year-over-year. During the quarter, users streamed over 3.88 billion hours of music.

    [Image via Facebook]

  • iTunes Radio Will Reportedly Be Available Next Month

    Apple finally unveiled iTunes Radio back at its Worldwide Developers Conference in June after months (if not years) of rumors that the company would launch such a service. At the time, Apple did not give a release date, but said it would be generally available this fall.

    We’re getting closer. We still don’t have an official date, but a report out from AdAge says it’s coming in September, citing people familiar with advertiser negotiations. Launch partners, the report says, will include McDonald’s, Nissan, Pepsi, Procter & Gamble and possibly a couple others. The deals range from “the high single-digit millions of dollars to tens of millions of dollars, and include a 12 month ad campaign,” it says.

    Apple will hold an event on September 10th, when the next iPhone (or iPhones) is expected to be revealed. It’s likely that iTunes Radio’s launch will also be announced.

    iTunes Radio will debut with over 200 stations and a catalog of music drawing from the iTunes Store. People can listen to stations, then download the songs if they like them. It can be used from an iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, Mac, PC or Apple TV. It will include stations inspired by music users have already listened to, as well as stations curated by Apple and personalized genre-focused stations. Users will be able to create new stations based on specific songs.

    The service will also provide exclusive premieres from top-selling artists, and will host special events like live streams from the iTunes Festival and other exclusive iTunes sessions.

    It will also be integrated with Siri. You’ll be able to give it commands like “play more like this” or “play jazz radio” or ask who plays a particular song.

    The service is free, hence the ads. iTunes Match users will get the service with them.

  • Apple Unveils iTunes Radio, Which Comes Out This Fall

    At the Worldwide Developers Conference today, Apple finally announced the rumored iTunes Radio. It will be generally available this fall.

    It’s a free radio service with over 200 stations, and a catalog of music drawing from the iTunes Store. People can listen to stations, then download songs if they they like them.

    You will be able to use iTunes Radio from an iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, Mac, PC or Apple TV. It will include stations inspired by stuff you’ve already listened to, as well as stations curated by Apple and personalized genre-focused stations. You will also be able to create stations based on specific songs.

    “The more you use iTunes Radio and iTunes, the more it knows what you like to listen to and the more personalized your experience becomes,” the company explains.

    “iTunes Radio is an incredible way to listen to personalized radio stations which have been created just for you,” said Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of Internet Software and Services. “It’s the music you love most and the music you’re going to love, and you can easily buy it from the iTunes Store with just one click.”

    As an added bonus, it will give you exclusive premieres from top-selling artists. It will also host special events like live streams from the iTunes Festival and other exclusive iTunes sessions.

    And of course, it includes Siri integration (Siri has some new features of its own).

    Apple explains, “Let Siri make your listening experience even more fun. Ask Siri ‘Who plays that song?’ or ‘Play more like this’ and Siri will make it happen. Say something like ‘Play Jazz Radio’ or ask for any of your existing favorite stations and genres. Shape your stations by telling Siri what you like and don’t like, or tell Siri to pause, stop or skip. You can also have Siri add songs to your Wish List to download later.”

    iTunes Radio is ad-supported and free. If you’re an iTunes Match user, you’ll get it for free without the ads.

  • Pandora Unveils New Television Experience

    Pandora Unveils New Television Experience

    Pandora says it has already had ten million people using Pandora on Internet-connected televisions, and now they’re launching a new browser-based television experience at tv.pandora.com. The product is a complete overhaul of the TV version of Pandora people are used to.

    “This is an entirely new experience designed from the ground up for your television and remote control,” says Tom Conrad, CTO and EVP of Product at Pandora. “This new initiative is standards-based and embraces next generation TV, game console, and set top box architectures that support open web standards.”

    The experience currently runs from the browser on Xbox 360 and Playstation 3, and it will spread to other platforms in the coming months.

    “It’s also a completely new approach which will allow us to evolve the ’10 foot’ experience of Pandora with greater flexibility and speed than ever before,” says Conrad. “We’re still in the early stages of a transition to a world where all of the devices we interact with throughout the day – our TV’s, our stereos, our refrigerators, our cars, our watches, our eyeglasses — are all connected to the internet. This then begs the questions: how will developers create applications for this incredibly diverse set of devices? We think the answer can be web standards. The world doesn’t need more proprietary platforms fragmenting the innovative efforts of developers everywhere.”

    A few months ago, Pandora surpassed 200 million users, and has since been adding features to make its service more appealing in the increasingly competitive online music space. Last month, Pandora premiered a feature that lets you listen to music on demand before it’s actually released. The company also launched new Facebook integration to help Facebook users populate the Music section of their profiles.

  • SiriusXM’s MySXM Lets You Personalize Channels

    SiriusXM’s MySXM Lets You Personalize Channels

    SiriusXM announced the launch of a new personalization feature called MySXM, which enables users to personalize over 50 its channels by creating up to over 100 variations of each.

    Channels that take advantage of the MySXM feature let users adjust sliders to impact library depth, familiarity, music style, tempo, region, and over attributes. Eventually, more channels will get the feature.

    SiriusXM President and Chief Content Officer, Scott Greenstein, says, “MySXM is a personalization feature built to enhance our already well-loved curated commercial-free music and comedy channels and make an already amazing listening experience even more personal. Our experts set the stage giving you the tools to make the channel your own. You decide how involved you want to get and where you want to take your channel.”

    The idea is that you will hear more of the stuff you like and less of the stuff you don’t.

    MySXM is a free feature for subscribers, and is included on the iOS and Android apps.

  • Pandora Hits 200M Users, 1.5B Hours Streamed in March

    Pandora Hits 200M Users, 1.5B Hours Streamed in March

    Internet radio service Pandora has just announced a pretty significant milestone: 200 million registered users in the U.S. Pandora signed up its first user in 2005, and had hit 100 million users six years later in 2011. It only took them less than two years to add on the next 100 million.

    67 million are considered “monthly active listeners.”

    “We started this company to help people discover and enjoy music they love, and to help artists reach and grow their audiences. Only in our wildest dreams did we imagine what it would become. It is now clear that radio is changing, and that’s great news for music fans and for the tens of thousands of working artists who now have a home on the air,” said Founder TIm Westergren.

    In celebration of the milestone, Pandora has released some interesting stats about the service:

    • 200+ million songs streamed before 10 am every day, which totals out to about 8,000 songs streaming per second.
    • 1.49 billion hours of music streaming in March (170,510 years worth).
    • 400+ curated genre stations

    Pandora last released some user stats back in January to celebrate the new year. In 2012, users streamed a total of 13 billion hours of music. If March, 2013’s numbers are to be repeated, we can expect Pandora to break this mark this year. They also saw a million+ songs froms over 100,000 artists and 1.6 billion total stations created in 2012.

    Just a little over a month ago, Pandora was forced to do something “contrary to their mission” and put a 40-hour per month cap of free mobile listening – citing rising costs.

    Here’s an infographic with some more figures from Pandora:

  • Pandora Is Now Available On Windows Phone 8, Will Be Ad-Free For The Rest Of 2013

    Pandora Is Now Available On Windows Phone 8, Will Be Ad-Free For The Rest Of 2013

    Slowly but surely, Windows Phone 8 is starting to build out its app ecosystem to include some of the heavy hitters in the mobile scene. Just last month, Windows Phone 8 users got Spotify, and now Internet radio fans can enjoy Pandora from the comfort of a Windows Phone.

    So what sets Pandora on Windows Phone 8 apart from the same app on iOS or Android? For one, Pandora for Windows Phone is integrated into live tiles to provide a quick look at what’s currently playing right from the home screen. Users can also pin individual radio stations to the home screen for easy access to specific stations.

    Another Windows Phone exclusive feature is integration with Kid’s Corner. Pandora will automatically filter explicit song content when its switched over to the kid friendly portion of the OS.

    To give the Windows Phone app a leg up on the competition, Microsoft will be providing Pandora ad-free throughout the rest of the year. It’s definitely a major advantage over the other versions, but it’s hard to see how a free year of Pandora will convince people to switch to Windows Phone.

    Those will already own a Windows Phone, however, are in for a treat. You can grab the new Pandora app here.

  • Pandora Puts 40-Hour/Month Cap on Free Mobile Listening, Says It’ll Only Affect 4% of Users

    Pandora Puts 40-Hour/Month Cap on Free Mobile Listening, Says It’ll Only Affect 4% of Users

    Streaming music radio service Pandora has just announced that it will be ending free unlimited streaming for mobile users. Before you grab your pitchforks, Pandora is assuring users that this will only affect a very small portion of its mobile listeners.

    Starting this week, free mobile listening will be limited to 40 hours per month. According to Pandora, most users won’t have to worry about this change because the average listener only streams about 20 hours worth of music per month. They say that less than 4% of the company’s total monthly active listeners will even be affected by this.

    It appears to be all about costs. Apparently, Pandora’s per-track royalty rates have gone up over 25% in the last 3 years, and are only going to go up over the next few years.

    Pandora knows that this isn’t something users want to hear, but the costs must be mitigated.

    “Limiting listening is a very unusual thing to do, and very contrary to our mission,” says the company in a blog post.

    Pandora promises that they will alert anyone who is fast approaching the 40-hour limit. If you’re about to cross the barrier, you have three options. You can simply stop listening, or you can pay $0.99 for unlimited access for the remainder of the month. There’s also the option to purchase Pandora’s premium subscription, Pandora One, which will keep your listening unlimited and knock out all advertising.

    It’s important to note that this limit only affects mobile listeners. You can still stream as many hours per month as you want at home.

    Last month, Pandora announced that users had listened to over 13 billion hours of music and created over 1.6 billion stations in 2012.

  • Google Subscription Music Service Coming In Third Quarter [Report]

    Google Subscription Music Service Coming In Third Quarter [Report]

    Rumors persisted throughout this past weekend that Google is working on a subscription music service that would take on Spotify, Pandora and the like.

    Bloomberg has since put out a report, citing two people with knowledge of the situation, that Google does indeed plan to do so, that negotiations are under way with major record labels, that the service will work with both Android and non-Android devices, and that the “worldwide service” is targeted for the third quarter. The report also says Google is discussing the renewal of deals for the use of songs in consumer-made YouTube videos.

    Obviously Google doesn’t comment on “rumor and speculation”.

    Such a service from Google would complement Google Play Music and YouTube quite nicely, basically eliminating the need for users to use Spotify or Pandora, provided that they prefer the Google experience. Of course, that will not necessarily be the case. People seem to be liking these services just fine, and Spotify’s heavy integration with Facebook seems to be a hit on the social level. Google still can’t really compete there (unless of course, they do tap into Facebook’s Open Graph).

    Either way, such an offering will give people more reason to turn to Google for their music needs, and it will be interesting to see how the competition shakes out. Those deals with labels will obviously be of vital importance.

    Meanwhile, it has been said that Spotify will try to negotiate with labels to make its free streaming service available on mobile devices, which would make the service all the more attractive of an option for users who aren’t willing to pay.

    Google’s Google Music offering recently got music matching capabilities.

  • Pandora Users Listened To 13 Billion Hours Of Music In 2012

    Pandora Users Listened To 13 Billion Hours Of Music In 2012

    Here we are over halfway through January already. Hard to believe. Pandora is still celebrating the New Year, however. In a blog post, the company released a few stats about its users.

    For one, users listened to over a million different songs by over 100,000 different artists during the year. For two, over 10,000 artists had over 250,000 unique listeners.

    “When we created the Music Genome Project thirteen years ago, we had a dual purpose: connect people with music they love and help talented artists find their audiences,” writes founder Tim Westergren. “We knew if we could get the first part right, the second would naturally follow.”

    “Well, it looks like that second part is actually beginning to happen,” he adds. “The Pandora audience is large enough now to begin making a real difference in the lives of thousands of working artists.”

    Users listened to over 13 billion hours of music in 2012, and created over 1.6 billion stations.

    Not bad numbers considering the success of rivals like Spotify. Pandora might be getting even more competition soon, however. Apple is expected to launch a similar offering this year.

  • CES 2013: Chrysler Brings Internet Radio to Its Dashboards

    Chrysler announced today at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas that apps for some of the most popular internet radio services will be added to its Uconnect software in the near future. The car manufacturer is calling the feature “Uconnect Access Via Mobile,” and it allows streaming radio from Pandora Internet Radio, Slacker Radio, iHeart Radio, and Aha.

    “The Uconnect team at Chrysler Group is committed to delivering connectivity solutions that enable drivers to further enjoy the in-vehicle experience without compromising the task at hand, which is driving,” said Marios Zenios, vice president of Uconnect Systems and Services. “Our introduction of Uconnect Access Via Mobile is consistent with this goal.”

    There was no set date announced for the feature’s launch, only a vague promise that it will arrive “this year.” The apps themselves should be similar to ones seen on other mobile platforms. Chrysler promises that Pandora users will be able to thumbs up or down their music, and that Slacker fans can “heart” music or ban it. In addition, the apps will be updatable, and there was also mention of steering-wheel controls to enable song-skipping.

    The music streaming will not be paid for by Chrysler. Instead, the data usage will be “through the customer’s existing smartphone data plan.”

  • Spotify Axes Downloads In Europe

    Spotify Axes Downloads In Europe

    Spotify has become quite popular in the U.S. since it finally launched in 2011 after already achieving such popularity in Europe. One feature we might not get here in the States, however, is the ability to download songs, as the company has put a stop to the feature in Europe.

    Those who have already downloaded music, can of course still listen to their downloads, and those who have unused credits may still use them. They’re just not allowing new ones.

    On an FAQ page, Spotify says, “We’re currently not offering new download purchases on Spotify. You can still use downloads you’ve already purchased.”

    You can still re-download a track you’ve already bought.

    TechCrunch shares a statement from the company, saying, “We recently updated Spotify to further simplify the service and pave the way for new features announced at the end of last year. In-app purchases aren’t part of this update but we’re not ruling out their return. Credits/gift cards already purchased are still redeemable.”

    Rumor has it that Apple may release a “Pandora competitor” this month, and really, that means a Spotify competitor as well. With Apple’s iTunes having such a presence in the music downloads space, it seems like this is something Spotify would want to offer. Apparently for now, it’s not in the cards, however.

    Spotify currently has over 20 million subscribers, and gained 2 million paid subscriptions in 2012. In November, the company got a $100 million round of funding.

  • iHeartRadio Surpasses 135 Million Downloads

    Clear Channel announced today that its iHeartRadio service has surpassed 135 million downloads and 20 million registered users. On top of that, the iHeartRadio network is now seeing 239 million monthly listeners and over 48 million monthly digital uniques.

    “Registered users only represent a portion of iHeartRadio’s total listener base, since registration is only required for the Custom Station feature which launched in September 2011,” a spokesperson for Clear Channel tells WebProNews.

    According to Clear Channel, iHeartRadio’s registered users are growing faster than Facebook, Twitter, Pandora, Spotify and Instagram.

    “iHeartRadio has experienced unprecedented growth as it continues to resonate with our listeners and super-serve our partners,” said Brian Lakamp, President of Digital, Clear Channel Media and Entertainment. “The reach of our broadcast radio properties, combined with our digital platforms truly creates unmatched promotional power that is unique to Clear Channel and allows us to be wherever our listeners are with the products and services they expect.”

    “iHeartRadio has reinvented the digital radio experience and is a key element of how Clear Channel continues to reshape the media and entertainment industry,” said CEO John Hogan. “iHeartRadio’s rapid growth and success is a testament to Clear Channel’s ability to engage audiences with our variety of assets, including live events such as the iHeartRadio Music Festival, world-class talent and premier partnerships.”

    iHeartRadio provides users with access to not only custom radio stations (Pandora-style), but access to live broadcasts from over 1,500 radio stations in 150 cities. It includes all the Clear Channel radio stations, as well as stations from other groups, like Univision, Cumulus, Greater Media stations, WNYC, EMF’s Contemporary Christian Air1 and K Love stations, college radio, Cox, Emmis, etc.

    The app is available on numerous devices ranging from web, mobile and tablets to automotive, TV and gaming devices.

  • Last.fm Gets Some Changes, With More On The Way

    After testing them for a couple weeks, Last.fm is pushing out some new design changes, and says that there will be more in the coming weeks and months.

    The secondary navigation menu has been moved from the left side to the upper-right side on most pages on the site. Here’s a look at the before and after:

    Before

    Last.fm navigation before

    After

    Last.fm navigation after

    “This gives you a wider page, with more space for what matters: the content,” says Simon Moran on the Last.fm blog. “On pages where there are a lot of items in the navigation menu, we’ve grouped the less frequently-used items into a small dropdown menu on the right.”

    Artist, Album and Track pages have been totally redesigned from scratch.

    Artist Page

    New artist pages

    Album Page

    New album pages

    Track Page

    New track pages

    Moran says the design changes reflect three main aspects: a tidier, more rational layout, a fresher visual design and new page templates. Do you agree? Some early commenters on the blog post don’t. One says, “Last.fm is the only site I know that gets uglier/messier at every redesign.”

    Another says, “I agree, this was an unnecessary change. All elements are too big now and it looks very chaotic.”

    Of course all redesigns of popular sites will face criticism. It happens every time.

    Either way, it’s going to change even more, so it will be interesting to see what other tweaks they come up with, and how users respond. Now is not a good time to be alienating users, that’s for sure. Competition in the online music discovery space is greater that it ever has been, and Spotify is making a huge impression on the market these days.

  • Could Songza Kill Pandora and Even Spotify?

    Although Songza has been around since 2007, the Internet radio service is gaining a lot of attention of late for the tremendous growth it has been receiving. It recently became the #1 free app on iTunes for the iPad and the #2 free app for the iPhone.

    What’s more, Songza integrated its mobile and Web apps with Facebook’s Open Graph last September and has witnessed remarkable growth there as well. Just recently, the Songza iPhone app has gone from 7,000 to 112,000 daily active users, which is a record high for Songza. Also, in terms of Facebook, each active Facebook-connected user generated more than 1 referral visit last month.

    Elias Roman, CEO and Co-founder of Songza So, what is it that is about this music service that is garnering all this interest? Elias Roman, the company’s CEO and Co-founder, credits Songza’s success to the unique offering it provides. When he spoke to WebProNews recently, he described Songza as having “expertly curated playlists for anything you can imagine.”

    The big distinction with Songza though is its “concierge” service. Through this feature, Songza is able to learn its users and, therefore, return the appropriate playlist for whatever they are doing. For example, if you are getting ready to go running and tell Songza, it will serve up an already prepared playlist specifically for that activity without any recommendations or involvement from you.

    “Instead of you having to think of what music makes sense, all you have to do is tell us the activity you need a soundtrack for,” explained Roman.

    “There are very few companies, at the end of the day,” he continued, “that know when you sleep and wake up and when you hang out with your family and when you’re exercising or entertaining. You tell these things to Songza, so we can make them better.”

    “That allows us to offer a really valuable, really differentiated experience,” he added.

    Music Platform Songza

    Songza is able to do this through 2 types of curation. The first is through a team of 25 music experts ranging from critics, DJs, musicians, and more. Secondly, Songza thinks through what activities people do that they can make better with soundtracks and proceed to make playlists based on these actions.

    Another unique element with Songza that also sits very well with its users is the fact that it doesn’t have audio ads.

    “We always describe having audio ads in music as selling a parachute with holes in it,” said Roman.

    The company does have display ads that provide a B2B platform for brands to build on and offer their own “concierge” experience, which is how Songza currently makes money. Although Roman said he couldn’t reveal the details of the company’s longer-term revenue plan, he did say that it would be the “sort of thing that makes sense when you package music as a lifestyle product [and] not just as media that you search for by artist or album or song.”

    While Roman admits that it will be challenging to build a business in the midst of the high royalty rates for artists, he believes that Songza’s different revenue stream will help it handle the rates more effectively.

    “That’s not to say that that’s not a huge hurdle to clear, but it’s what we knew we were getting into from day 1 of building Songza,” said Roman, “and it is something we believe we can address.”

    Another barrier that Songza faces is the already crowded music space with players such as Pandora, Spotify, and iHeartRadio. Still, Roman is confident in Songza’s product. He admits that they are all competing for the same audience but is confident that their service addresses what users really want.

    “We’re really trying to get to the heart of what people do every day and ways we can make it better… fitting much more into the lifestyle and lifestyle enhancement category instead of just the music category per say,” he said.

    At this point, Songza is available on all iOS and Android devices and has a Web application as well. Although the “concierge” feature is not yet available for Android, Roman told us it would be very soon.

    Going forward, Roman said users should expect a deeper integration with Facebook in addition to Songza being ubiquitous on “platforms that matter most,” such as Sonos and Roku devices, which opens up even more doors for the emerging music service.

  • Pandora Lobbies to Equalize Broadcast Royalties in the Radio Industry

    Pandora Lobbies to Equalize Broadcast Royalties in the Radio Industry

    As it stands right now, newer radio broadcast stations like pandora and other internet-based services, pay more in broadcast royalties than more conventional FM broadcasters, who actually pay nothing. This year alone, Pandora has spent over $50,000 addressing this issue and lobbying congress.

    The company has maintained their focus on congress as they will be meeting with the Copyright Royalty Board in the near future, to determine royalty policy for the period between 2016 and 2020. Pandora co-founder, Tim Westergren will testify before congress to plead his case today.

    Tim Westergren, Pandora’s co-founder, comments on broadcast royalties in his written testimony prepared for a congressional hearing today:

    “Now I am fully supportive of fair compensation for artists,”

    “But this lack of a level playing field is fundamentally unfair and indefensible.”

    “It is time for Congress to level the playing field and to approach radio royalties in a technology neutral manner,”

    Just for reference, Pandora paid 50% of its revenues last year to recording artists, Sirius/XM paid a total of 7.5%, and traditional AM/FM broadcast paid nothing! I would say that’s a huge discrepancy. No wonder the recording industry is hurting, nobody’s paying them any royalties. This issue needs to be addressed.

    We will keep you updated on what the United States Congress and the Copyright Royalty Board decides about future royalty payments from broadcast radio. Hopefully they will agree on a fee more reflective of the times we live in and more just to recording artists and broadcasters alike.

  • Pandora Q1 2013 Results Show How Mobile Platforms Make the Monies

    Pandora Q1 2013 Results Show How Mobile Platforms Make the Monies

    Pandora’s financial results for the first quarter of the 2013 fiscal year are out and all signs point to ‘yes’ for the internet radio service. The company’s total revenue of $80.8 million is up 58% from last year with ad revenue making up $70.6 million, a 62% increase over the same time period. Pandora raked in the other $10.2 million from subscriptions and other sources.

    Pandora also achieved a record 51.9 million active users, a 53% boost from this time last year when it boasted 34.0 million. The company recently celebrated its crossing of 150 registered users, 70% of whom are steadily enjoying Pandora through some kind of mobile device. Unsurprisingly, the future of Pandora’s continued success is targeted toward its mobile platform although its looking to monetize its other platforms, too (really, why wouldn’t they?), and with the 3.09 billion hours listeners spent streaming Pandora in the past year, that’s a rich opportunity for advertisers.

    And if those listening hours are happening on mobile devices, that’s likely where advertisers will pursue them. “Advertisers want to be everywhere their consumers are,” said Joe Kennedy, Chairman and CEO of Pandora, in a statement. “They are moving quickly to speak with their target customers across the Pandora platform, with the majority of the top 50 digital advertisers in the U.S. already having bought multiplatform advertising on Pandora.”

    With much of Pandora’s success flowing in from its ability to monetize the mobile experience of users, some who keep a studied eye on the industry are speculating on how this business model could be advantageous to Facebook. The social networking colossus has acknowledged problems with making money off its mobile platform, which could be problematic for the company given the majority of users are accessing Facebook via mobile devices these days.

    The ability for Pandora to parlay its mobile platform into a strong source of financial revenue doesn’t necessarily mean that Facebook’s going to be able to ape the internet radio service’s model, namely because there’s a huge design difference between the two sites. As Rocco Pendola of The Street points out, people are going to Pandora to listen, not to watch or read. The lack of visual content leaves a nice, neat canvas for displaying ads.

    Contrast that design with Facebook, which is a service built on providing visual content. When you’ve got an already-crowded news feed crammed with social readers, photos, status updates, and whatever else people are posting to Facebook, there’s relatively little room to squeeze in an ad when you’re viewing the site on the four-inch screen of a smartphone.

    The design of Facebook is simply at an inherent disadvantage when it comes to mobile advertising. Even with the consideration of sponsored stories that are inserted into users’ news feeds, there’s not really a feasible way to display ads in Facebook’s current mobile platform. Short of creating news feeds that are narrated by some weird voice recording – lord, can you imagine how awful that would be? – that would open up some space for advertising, there’s not much else Facebook is going to be able to do.

    However, if Facebook does manage to re-invent its mobile wheel and find a way to make its mobile platform profitable, expect much of the company’s inspiration to be gleaned from what Pandora has managed to achieve with its marketing strategy.

  • iHeartRadio Nets 10 Million Users in 8 Months

    Clear Channel announced today that its popular free digital radio app, iHeartRadio, has amassed 10 million registered users in a mere 8 months since it started inviting people to sign up for accounts. While that sounds like a meteoric gain all by itself, let’s put that into perspective: iHeartRadio reached that milestone quicker than Facebook, Pandora, Spotify, and Instagram attained that number.

    While 10 million users is impressive, that’s likely a low estimate of the total amount of people who’re using the app since registration isn’t mandatory to use kick out the jams on iHeartRadio. People only need register if they want access to the Custom Station feature. Even without enabling the Custom Station feature, though, users can still access any one of the 850 radio stations in the United States that stream commercial-free over the service.

    Brian Lakamp, Clear Channel’s Digital Media President, described the iHeartRadio’s registration growth as “mind-blowing” in a statement. “We’ve been able to drive this adoption like no other company could,” he said.

    iHeartRadio’s off to a stampeding start but it’s still got a ways to go to catch up with some of its competitors. Pandora, for instance, celebrated 150 million users last week with some convincing evidence that the internet radio service will likely continue to expand over the year.

    Then again, iHeartRadio’s offering a different service than Pandora so there’s not really much keeping both radio providers from sharing listeners. The internet radio market is swelling as of late and that’s largely without the help of social media to promote it.

    Clear Channel Chairman and CEO John Hogan concurs that iHeartRadio’s success reinforces the trend that audiences are turning up that sweet internet sound. “This is a reflection on how consumers are embracing digital as one more way to use our broadcast brands,” he said. He added that Clear Channel plans to continue developing the iHeartRadio platform so as to expand its fan base.

    Currently, anybody who can’t stand the silence can tune in to iHeartRadio via the website or download the mobile app for iPhone, iPad, Android, Windows 7, and Blackberry.

    “We take being a multiplatform company seriously,” Hogan concluded.