Month: September 2009

Is Spotify finding the Business on the Move?

Spotify was a breath of fresh air when it hit the markets. Finally, there was someone who combined the ease of iTunes with unsurpassed breadth in catalogue. Lots of songs. Always available. And even the ads weren’t all that bad (which is why few people upgraded to the ad-free premium version [more on this below], much to the dismay of label executives who – rightly – fail to see the greater good of dependable revenue streams from those few ads; although they are getting more, mind you).

Then, back in July, Spotify submitted its iPhone app to Apple. And the big wait began. After lots of back and forth and speculation if it would or would not, Apple finally approved the app. So now it’s live, and not only on the app store (where it ranked #1 on the UK store when I checked tonight) but also on Android Market. A Symbian version is in the works.

All reviews I have read are raving: from “very impressed” (and that’s the Daily Telegraph no less) to having “to pry it out of my cold, dead iPhone” (Wired), everyone waxes lyrical about the thing. It comes with a load of stuff, too: streaming all your favourites from over 6m tracks on the go sounds promising, and one can also sync up to 3,333 (what a number!) songs for offline use in the networks’ broadband doldrums.

The trouble (!?) is: you can only use it as a premium subscriber, which means forking out £10 per month. Which brings me conveniently to the key point, which is the business underlying model.

The labels are fairly happy, it seems. Because they got shares in Spotify itself. Some more equal than others though: the majors are said to have received a disproportionately high stake). The same report claims though that ad income is only £82,000 and, in the UK, only 17,000 users had signed up for the premium version. However, shareholders and all that, Spotify still has to pay the labels a fee per streamed track, irrespective of the user paying or not. Tricky model, that. Note though that this might be different in other countries: according to reports, the world’s largest major, Universal Music is making more money from Spotify in Sweden than from iTunes!

Anyhow, all this was before the mobile app, and mobile may well be the game-changer for them… The launch of the iPhone app, glorified niche audience or not, seems to have gone fairly well (#1 position on fhe app store within days of launch). Spotify reckons that mobile is where its future lies. And this had been echoed (and well ahead of the actual launch!!!) by others in the industry, and perhaps rightly so: if users are used to (and in love with) a service they are more likely to pay for it if that means they can also have it whilst on the road. For the marriage of music with the world’s leading MP3 player come mobile phone, the iPhone, this seems to be made in heaven: I can have the smallest model and still carry 6m+ tracks around with me? Wow! Here’s value-add!

The much-discussed freemium model it is then: get them hooked on the free desktop app and convert them to paying users on mobile. It has long been known that users are more likely to pay if stuff is portable (I can still recall the disbelief of music executives when they realized that people would pay more for a monophonic ringtone than for a full-blown music track). And whilst now the link between (free) basic service on the desktop and (premium) mobile service is new, the principle is old and proven: and it is simply added value (plus the little things like being used to paying on mobile and having convenient existing billing models in place). If the user perception is that they are getting value for money, they are willing to pay. And if it is for such a fairly special thing such as music (don’t we all love and nurture our very own musical mix tastes?), the step is even easier to make.

Spotify fully expects this to fly: they are upgrading their servers already. Labels are said to be still a little jumpy but I reckon their experiences over the last decade or so have shown that their is a need to re-think incumbent models…

Handmark powers Samsung’s App Store

Samsung’s new app store (no one can do without one these days!) will be operated by Handmark and is set to go live on 14 September (2009, that is), I read. The respective site is (sort of) live and appears to accept registrations of prospective vendors. Go here if you feel like it… Launch will be in the UK, France and Italy first. No word when the others follow.

According to the press release, the content available will consist of Windows Mobile and Symbian s60 titles and will be available on the Omnia, I8910HD, Omnia II and Omnia Lite (so a true omni-store then). Billing is available via both credit cards and operator billing, which is – on the face of it – good (i.e. plain and simple credit card-billing doesn’t often work; Apple’s app store is an exception, I’d say, because input is via iTunes with which people are already familiar).

I’ll spare you the rest of the lyrical odes to the various partners… But let’s try and break this down: how big will this thing then be? Samsung is a force in mobile and its Omnia phones have had some very significant success indeed: in some markets (Germany was one), the Omnia outsold the iPhone by some margin (in December 2008, the Omnia had a 14.9% share of the German smartphone market compared to the iPhone 3G with 7.6%). It also launches in India now. I could not get my hands on solid sales numbers though (in the top 10 list by accessory sales for June, the Omnia came in on #10)… However, anecdotally, it is behind Nokia, RIM and Apple in global smartphone market share. So if we say that, on a global basis, there will be about the same number of devices around, that would make the phones a good success for Samsung.

However, when it comes to usage, I am not sure if the Omnia can compete with the iPhone. If we take ad impressions as an indicator (and it really is just that), we’ve seen that the iPhone’s 8% market share translates into 40% ad impressions. And because a lot of apps (and web “apps”) use ads, I think it is probably safe to assume that usage is higher. And this is arguably the crux of app successes: they need to be available but they also need to be discoverable and usable, and all of this with a lot of ease. Will they succeed? I hope so as it would do a ton of good to the industry would there be more than the niche player Apple. Their new TouchWiz SDK (see here) should help ease development for better UI, and the features of the store they announced look decent so far, so let’s keep our fingers crossed!

Image credit: GSM Arena

Carnival of the Mobilists #185-189

I have missed a couple of turns of this fabulous collection of the weekly highlights in mobile-related blogging but that should not put you off as there has been lots of good stuff going on whilst I dragged my kids through Hannover, Berlin, Heidelberg, Paris as well as joined the masses that tried to invade Mont St Michel… So here’s a quick wrap-up on the carnivals that I missed:

#185 was hosted by Eric Chan on his Mobile Slate blog. Eric covered posts highlighting a few challenges: on (trying to) hosting posts on a mobile device, of LBS and mobile search. He also unearthed a post that is a little more upbeat, namely why this is a great time to invest into mobile!

#186 ran on AllAboutiPhone.net and was, well, NOT all about iPhone. Matt Radford covered posts on mobile advertising (and what brands want), an outlook on what Sprint might do with Virgin, Palm’s approach to the app world and why Steve Jobs hates the app store (yes, I blinked at that, too).

#187 appeared on the Mobile Stance blog hosted by Jamie Wells where we learn about Orange’s take on Blyk’s advertising ideas, get some ideas on what a mobile WebOS might look like and a couple of posts on how traditional publishers might look at mobile for their rescue (plus the 5 best revenue generators for iPhone).

#188 was hosted at the Golden Swamp by the Grande Dame of the Carnival of the Mobilists, Judy Breck, herself. Judy highlighted posts that query Nokia’s mass market iPhone strategy (and why Dave Stewart will not be any kind of messiah) as well as one on the sustainability of the mobile industry (which is very good indeed!).

Finally, and that brings us up to current, the 189th carnival was hosted by the formidable Peggy Anne Salz on her MSearchGroove blog. She points us to a great collection of mobile facts, another take on Nokia (including its “new” Maemo OS), a look on which mobile OS will prevail and on Apple’s control policies for the app store.

There is of course much more in the above, so make sure to spare an hour or so to read them. It’s well worth it. So now you know it…

Image credit: http://www.photos-voyages.com/paris/carnival09.html

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