
If you want to give more revenue to the creators that should come out of YOUR bottom line and not have the consumers wear the costs. 'Spotify is a terrible experience': Joe Rogan fans want him back on YouTube after Spotify is plagued with ads By Titas 'TeeKay' Khan Modified 19:24 GMT Follow Us 2 Comments. The deal was a gamble, but one based on the numbers.

Before this, podcasts were everywhere, and their platform agnostic status was central to their appeal for creators and audiences. If ads become a norm on Premium, then I'd happily move my subscription over to Apple Music or any other alternative. When Spotify signed a US100 million (A140 million) deal with Rogan in 2020 for the exclusive rights to his podcast the industry took notice. I would definitely advise the Product and Strategy team to rethink this point. We've seen this type of move by cable networks in the US and media companies around the world. Well it was your choice to give the podcast partner that functionality to include ad share as part of their contract? Why am I receiving ads whilst I'm on Premium? There was a response in the linked thread above where it states that this is a choice by the podcast partner and 'there is nothing we can do about it'.
#JOE ROGAN SPOTIFY ADS FREE#
The major reason that I opted to pay for Spotify for years and not stay on the free option was so that I could avoid ads. and I can say that its definitely worth it to get premium for no ads.
#JOE ROGAN SPOTIFY ADS DOWNLOAD#

Marketers can target interests with greater precision. They know what the listener has listened to in the past. These granular details offer even better geo-targeting than Facebook Spotify can track the user’s location, as well as their billing address, and other places where they spend their time. Now marketers can pay based on a more accurate number of ads heard, rather than total downloads. Plus, Spotify could track if the ad was heard (or skipped). They know when the listener played the podcast. Now marketers can target based on demographics. Spotify reportedly paid Joe Rogan at least 200 million to commit to podcasting on the platform exclusively for three and a half years, according to a New York Times report. And if Netflix’s audience continues to increase, they can afford to licence or create even more content, which makes their product better, which attracts more subscribers ad infinitum (or at least until they run out of humans who want to watch premium long-form video). Regardless of their margins today, they can “grow into profitability” just by acquiring more customers. As Netflix grows their subscriber base, the cost to produce a given amount of content remains unchanged. They have very high fixed costs - paying licence fees for content from other studios as well as producing their own original content - but very low variable costs. Aside from a 30-day free trial, there are no (legitimate…) ways to enjoy Netflix for free. The Netflix model is straightforward: the company hosts a platform of video content and they charge customers a monthly fee to access that content.

Netflix and Spotify both stream media, but with two very different business models.
