When it comes to podcasts, are all subscription tools created equal?
When it comes to podcasts, are all subscription tools created equal?
Future. Spotify and Apple are locked in a heated battle for the podcast-subscription throne, offering creators competing visions of access, reach, and take-home pay. It’s possible that no clear winner will be decided, but the rise of subscriptions could allow for the success of podcasts that won’t need to depend on a “serve the largest audience possible” ethos of advertising.
More money, less problemsPodcast ad-revenue is already a billion dollar industry, and now top podcast platforms are racing to control the next money-making frontier: subscriptions.
Through Spotify’s Anchor platform, creators (in the U.S. only) can set a price of $2.99, $4.99, or $7.99 per month… and keep 100% of the revenue up until 2023.
After that, Spotify will take a 5% cut.
Apple opened up its subscriber tools to creators in over 170 countries and allows them to set a monthly price as low as $0.49.
But… Apple takes a 30% cut in the first year, and then 15% every year after that.
And, unlike Apple, Spotify also gives creators detailed subscriber data — such as emails and contact information.
Listen to the revenueWill subscription revenue ever hit the $2 billion mark that podcast advertising is expected to hit in 2023? Many top creators think so… but with caveats.
Simon Sutton, CEO of podcast network Luminary, believes that revenue split will eventually be 50-50… but not for a while because the industry has “many years to go before it gets to maturity.”
QCODE chief strategy officer Steve Wilson believes subscription revenue for individual podcasts will be dependent on the demographics of the podcast, saying that “publishers who have a ravenous fan base, and maybe that’s very niche content, [will be able] to charge a premium and have a smaller audience but actually be financially sustainable.”
On advertising, Wilson says it “necessitate[s] having a really large audience, so for some small publishers, [subscriptions] could be a vast majority of the money that they make.”
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