The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Spotify buys Gimlet, Anchor to ramp up its podcast game

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NEW YORK >> Music streaming service Spotify is buying podcast companies Gimlet and Anchor as it looks to take on Apple’s popular iTunes’ podcasting platform.

The acquisitio­ns are an aggressive move to expand into the small but burgeoning podcast industry.

Gimlet Media has a podcast studio with dedicated intellectu­al-property developmen­t, production and advertisin­g capabiliti­es. Gimlet is known for producing the podcast “Homecoming,” a fictional thriller made into an Amazon series starring Julia Roberts.

Anchor has a platform of tools for podcast creators as well as an establishe­d and rapidly growing creator base.

Nick Quah of Hot Pod, a newsletter that covers the podcast industry, said in an email to subscriber­s that the deals help Spotify branch out from music and differenti­ate its product. Quah also anticipate­s Spotify may try to make money from podcasts in the same way that it has struck deal with musical acts to upload their music directly and automatica­lly receive royalty payouts.

In a recent earnings announceme­nt, Spotify said it plans to spend $400 million to $500 million on acquisitio­ns in 2019.

The acquisitio­ns are about “expanding our mission from just being about music to being about all of audio,” CEO Daniel Ek said in an interview on CNBC. “We want to be the world’s leading audio platform.”

Ek said people who listen to podcasts through Spotify spend twice as much time on the service than other users.

U.S. podcast ad revenue jumped 86 percent in 2017 to $314 million, according to research from the Interactiv­e Ad Bureau and PriceWater­houseCoope­rs. That’s dwarfed by digital video ad spending, which totaled $11.9 billion in 2017.

In a blog post, Ek said Spotify has become the second-biggest podcasting platform in less than two years.

“The format is really evolving and while podcasting is still a relatively small business today, I see incredible growth potential for the space and for Spotify in particular,” he wrote.

Financial terms of the transactio­ns were not disclosed.

Stockholm-based Spotify, which went public in April, also reported a surprise fourth quarter profit but forecast a loss for the year as it invests in more original content.

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