Technology
Apple reportedly buys Asaii to collect music data and take on Spotify
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- Apple has bought music analytics firm Asaii for under $100 million, Axios reports.
- Apple declined to comment or confirm the Axios report.
- Asaii’s website says it can “find the next Justin Bieber, before anyone else.”
- Apple is investing in companies with unique music data to improve its Apple Music product, which has fewer subscribers than Spotify.
Apple has bought a music analytics firm, Asaii, for under $100 million, Axios reported on Sunday.
Axios notes that the company’s co-founders now list Apple Music as their current employment on their LinkedIn profiles as of October 2018.
Apple declined to comment or confirm the Axios report. But even if it’s not a full purchase or there’s another caveat to the deal, the fact that Apple has hired the Asaii co-founders underscores the company’s plan for its music subscription service to overtake Spotify.
In short: Apple wants to have the power to predict popular songs and match them to its users through better data collection and analysis.
Last year, Apple bought Shazam, the music-identifying app. But it was unlikely that Apple wanted the company’s burgeoning advertising business — in fact, Apple shut down its ads last month. Instead, investors told Business Insider that it was likely that Apple wanted the company’s data, which could often serve as an early warning system for what songs are breaking out in a region.
People at record labels loved to use a Shazam dashboard to find trending songs and doing analytics. Now, that data is Apple’s.
The Asaii news underscores the fact that Apple is willing to pay for data and software that makes its predictive playlists better. Asaii’s website said that its goal was “to find the next Justin Bieber, before anyone else.”
Apple currently has 50 million subscribers, behind Spotify’s global 83 million paying users. One of Apple’s core philosophies centers around human curation: Apple Music has thousands of human-created playlists, as well as a radio station crewed by live DJs, including BBC veterans.
But Spotify’s buffet of computer-generated Daily Mix and Discover Weekly playlists are one of the service’s strongest features, and subscribers love them. Apple currently publishes three kinds of individually customized playlists, but it’s likely to want to create more, and that can help explain why it’s spending hundreds of millions on music data companies.
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