
I’ve been using Songza recently, and I wanted to write down a few thoughts about the company and the music application space, in general.
First, I believe that 80% of music application listening is passive, and 20% is active. Passive music listening refers to the times in which you are listening to music while working out, doing homework, driving your car, or even walking down the street. You can think of active music listening as the times where you seek to discover new music or pick what you want to hear.
Songza very much fits into the category of passive music listening, which includes services like Slacker and Pandora. (The active category includes: Spotify, Rdio, HypeMachine, etc.). I’m unsure which of the two listening types is more profitable, but it’s obvious that you can create a big business by gaining market share in the passive space.
Particularly, Songza’s traction is very impressive. They’ve shown that the atomic unit of passive listening is the playlist, not the song or the artist. Furthermore, by organizing these units around moods and activities, Songza creates a taxonomy that reminds us why we listen to the things that we do.
With that being said, my biggest concern with Songza and other passive services is that I’m unsure how these services scale beyond their current size. Much of this growth is dependent upon agreements with labels (if they even have any) and how the audience behaves when the service introduces advertisements (assuming they will, but who knows).
As big as the passive listening market is, I’m also unsure if consumers will find loyalty and only stick with one of these services. If these services are economic substitutes and people often switch between them, do these businesses grow much larger? Or if there is a real network effect hidden somewhere, the next question becomes: how can they achieve it while monetizing their audience? Only time will tell.