The National - News

Music streaming service’s CEO has expansion plans

Music service hopes to rival Anghami and Spotify as it plans expansion across the region

- SARAH TOWNSEND

Deezer, the music streaming service in which Saudi billionair­e Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has a minority stake, is eyeing partnershi­ps with telcos and technology companies to scale up in the Middle East after launching in the region this year.

It also plans to open a regional headquarte­rs in Dubai next year and other offices across the Middle East and North Africa in the future, its chief executive Hans-Holger Albrecht said.

The company, based in Paris, is primarily targeting telcos, such as Saudi Telecom Company and Vodafone. Through their data packages, customers can subscribe to the streaming service.

Deezer already has 45 telecom partnershi­ps worldwide.

“We have a strong partnershi­p DNA when it comes to distributi­on and infrastruc­ture, so we want to work closely with artists and producers in the region and other partners who can help us build our operations here,” Mr Albrecht told The National.

It is also talking to payment solutions providers, hardware companies and content producers that could support Deezer’s planned growth. “We talk to everyone,” Mr Albrecht said. No regional deal had been signed at the time of the interview.

Deezer was set up in France in 2007 and also has offices in London, Berlin, Moscow, Miami and Sao Paulo. Its platform is available in 180 countries and gives users access to a library of 52 million tracks and other content on a range of mobile devices.

It has more than 14 million monthly active users, according to the company.

In Mena, Deezer aims to grow its user base to rival that of home-grown streaming service Anghami (which has 55 million worldwide), Spotify and others, as one of the biggest providers of Arabic music and content.

In August, it secured investment of 1 billion Saudi riyals (Dh980.02 million) from Prince Alwaleed’s Kingdom Holding Company and Rotana Group, in a private placement that valued Deezer at about €1bn (Dh4.19bn), analysts said at the time. More than 100 Arabic artists are signed to Rotana, including Mohammed Abdo, Elissa and Asala.

Alongside the deal, Rotana and Deezer signed an exclusive long-term agreement to distribute the music company’s Arabic digital audio and video content across the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Turkey, Lebanon, Morocco and Algeria. “The partnershi­p should give us a very strong position in Mena,” Mr Albrecht said.

He expects the Middle East to become one of the biggest drivers of Deezer’s global revenues in the years to come, owing to the region’s active music scene, untapped potential for streaming services and huge appetite for digital content. Saudi Arabia, for example, has one of the highest YouTube penetratio­n rates in the world.

He declined to provide figures on regional revenues or its user base as it has only just launched. He expects both metrics to exceed the 25 per year year-on-year average growth rate for the global music streaming industry as the market gains momentum.

“The region is only just at the beginning so it will be very high double-digit growth per year and pickup should be quick because mobile penetratio­n rates are high,” he said. “All the ingredient­s are there.”

For the first 12 months in Mena, Deezer’s focus will be on building brand awareness, attracting new users and forging partnershi­ps to drive growth. The company is working to open a Dubai office next year and recruit staff, and it hopes to expand its physical presence across the region to serve customers and artists.

The regional music streaming industry is young but competitiv­e, with Spotify having launched in Mena this month and Anghami and Apple Music already establishe­d. The latter has a partnershi­p with UAE telco Etisalat to offer six months’ free access to Apple’s library of 40 million songs through prepaid mobile packages.

Mr Albrecht said Deezer’s global footprint, competitiv­e product technology and high engagement rate (the frequency of subscriber use) should help it fend off competitio­n and build a platform that also helps new and existing artists to profit from their work.

“Our philosophy is that there’s always room for two or three players, we’re used to competitio­n in every market we operate,” he said. “But you have to build scale to be able to compete.”

Our philosophy is there’s always room for two or three players, we’re used to competitio­n in every market we operate HANS-HOLGER ALBRECHT Deezer CEO

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 ?? The-Cool-Box ?? Elissa, left, is among the artists signed to Rotana, an investor in Deezer. Hans-Holger Albrecht, above
The-Cool-Box Elissa, left, is among the artists signed to Rotana, an investor in Deezer. Hans-Holger Albrecht, above

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