San Francisco Chronicle

SoundCloud gets $170 million

- By Adam Satariano and Lucas Shaw Adam Satariano and Lucas Shaw are Bloomberg writers. Email: asatariano­1@ bloomberg.net, lshaw31@ bloomberg.net

SoundCloud, the popular but financiall­y strapped digital music service, is getting a lifeline from new investors who have agreed to pump $170 million into the company.

The new investment keeps the Berlin company alive but comes with strings attached. CEO Alex Ljung is being replaced by Kerry Trainor, the former head of online video service Vimeo. The company is also shifting its business strategy, to focus on selling more tools for artists, podcasters and other content creators to share material online.

Trainor said the company will compete less directly with larger rivals Spotify and Apple Music, an acknowledg­ment that the company’s costly years-long effort to build a rival subscripti­on service wasn’t successful.

Raine Group and Singapore’s Temasek Holdings have agreed to inject the new money, however SoundCloud had to accept a steep drop in its valuation. The new funding round valued the music streaming company at $150 million, compared with the $700 million valuation it was said to have received last year. SoundCloud’s earlier backers had to accept a markdown on those earlier investment­s as part of the deal.

“We see an incredible opportunit­y for growth in this business,” said Fred Davis, a partner at Raine who is joining SoundCloud’s board of directors. Raine, a boutique investment bank, has also backed Vice Media, DraftKings and Imagine Entertainm­ent.

SoundCloud will refocus its business around selling tools for content creators. The company already has a service called SoundCloud Pro that allows people to pay to upload content to the site, while offering analytics tools and data about who’s listening. It’s a similar business model that Trainor built at Vimeo.

“That’s a great business,” said Trainor, a former executive at Yahoo and AOL, who said the company is on track to have $100 million in revenue in 2017. “SoundCloud can do more.”

SoundCloud spent years negotiatin­g with record labels to build a $9.99-per-month subscripti­on service to match Spotify and Apple, but the resulting product has struggled. It introduced another $4.99 subscripti­on more recently that has fewer tracks from major artists. Trainor said SoundCloud will continue to offer the suscriptio­ns, but that they won’t be the central focus of the company.

“The core of our company is the creators,” said Ljung, who is becoming chairman of SoundCloud. Co-founder Eric Wahlforss will be chief product officer. Michael Weissman, the former chief operating officer at Vimeo, will join SoundCloud in the same role.

The service has more than 175 million users and is home to more than 160 million tracks, making it a favorite destinatio­n for discoverin­g up-and-coming artists and listening to podcasts. But the company has never been able to turn its popularity into a strong business.

Most of the content available on SoundCloud is free and efforts to introduce paid tiers didn’t take off with customers. Past negotiatio­ns to sell the company were never completed, and the company took on debt earlier this year to keep its doors open. The company last month cut 40 percent of its staff and closed offices in San Francisco and London.

“They made the changes that needed to be made to get the cost and operations in line to take the business forward,” said Trainor.

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