Tag: Personalization

Spotify to Acquire Sonantic, an AI Voice Platform

Spotify and Sonantic logos

As a leader in all things audio, Spotify is always searching for new ways to create unique experiences that our users will love. So today we’re excited to share our intention to acquire Sonantic, a dynamic AI voice platform that creates compelling, nuanced, and stunningly realistic voices from text. 

Listeners come to Spotify for all of the best audio content in the world—and we believe that Sonantic’s technology will allow us to create high-quality experiences for our users by building on our existing technical capabilities. 

“We’re really excited about the potential to bring Sonantic’s AI voice technology onto the Spotify platform and create new experiences for our users,” says Ziad Sultan, Spotify’s Vice President of Personalization. “This integration will enable us to engage users in a new and even more personalized way.”

“We’re looking forward to joining Spotify and continuing to build exciting voice experiences,” said Sonantic co-founders Zeena Qureshi and John Flynn in a joint statement. “We believe in the power voice has and its ability to foster a deeper connection with listeners around the world, and we know we can be better than ever on the world’s largest audio platform.”

At Spotify, we’ve identified several potential opportunities for text-to-speech capabilities across our platform, and we believe that over the long term, high-quality voice will be important to growing our share of listening. For example, this voice technology could allow us to give context to users about upcoming recommendations when they aren’t looking at their screens. Using voice in these moments can reduce barriers to creating new audio experiences—and open up the doors to even more new opportunities.

Adding That Extra ‘You’ to Your Discovery: Oskar Stål, Spotify Vice President of Personalization, Explains How It Works

Mondays and Fridays are eagerly anticipated by music lovers on Spotify who are looking to uncover new artists. Each Monday, Discover Weekly, a playlist that serves listeners with tracks they might like based on their past listening histories, is updated. Friday is Release Radar day, when the playlist refreshes with brand-new songs from a user’s favorite artists. And there’s even more personalization happening daily on Spotify across playlists our editors curate and playlists users create. 

In fact, personalization begins right within the home page, shortly after a new user downloads and signs up for Spotify. New users are prompted to select a few of their favorite artists. From that moment on, the app begins to spin up creators a listener might love based on those they’re already familiar with. “But that only accounts for a small portion of how we personalize the Spotify listening experience,” said Spotify’s Vice President of Personalization, Oskar Stål, in an interview with For the Record.

How personalization came to life

Personalization is what it sounds like: It ensures that the content you receive on Spotify is tailored to you based on the audio you love. It’s now regarded as key to the Spotify experience—but Spotify did not always focus there. Spotify was originally created 15 years ago to function more like a library, where you could go and play the songs you were interested in that you already knew about. But over time, our engineers realized that “you enjoy Spotify more if you discover more, and most people don’t have time to discover on their own,” said Oskar.

“Perhaps you’re a 46-year-old dad with three kids and no time to discover music by yourself,” Oskar joked, gesturing to himself, “or a student looking for inspiration. It’s most helpful when you’re served something up and know it will be a mix of what you like and what you might like. Then you’ll stay for more.”

Personalization, he explains, was an empowering experience for listeners who didn’t have the time or knowledge to create endless unique playlists for every dinner party or road trip. It opened up discovery on a broader level, enabling hundreds of artist discoveries per person per year. And most important, personalization helps create a better app experience because it ensures that people want to be on the app—but not spend all their time there. Spotify’s approach is to ensure listeners have a “fulfilling content diet.”

“If we really wanted to make you stay on the app three more minutes, we would play your favorite song,” Oskar explained. “All we’d ever have to do is play your favorite 20 songs on a loop. But that would mean you’re not discovering anything, and you’d eventually get tired and bored of the audio experience.” 

Spotify operates several personalization features within the app for listeners to enjoy beyond the classics like Discover Weekly and Release Radar. Earlier this year, we debuted Spotify Mixes sorted into genres, artists, or decades with music a listener loves or will love. Just last month, we introduced Blend, which merges two listeners’ taste profiles, creates a playlist that combines both of their favorites, and allows them to share the results on social media. And most recently, we launched Enhanced playlists, a feature users can toggle on or off that allows Spotify to suggest new songs that might fit in well to a user’s custom-made playlist.  

All this is in addition to what we call our “algotorial” playlists: sets of songs our editors put together to evoke a certain mood or moment that are also tailored to the individual user. “Songs to Sing in the Car might not look personalized, but it is,” said Oskar. “Each person is seeing music that fits that categorization, but that is also in line with what they enjoy listening to. In fact, there isn’t just one Spotify experience. There’s more like 365 million different experiences—one for each user—that’s deeply personalized to their wants and needs.”

How does personalization actually work? 

The answer is machine learning, a complex code-based system with thousands of inputs, all laddering up to one song recommendation, done faster than the blink of an eye. But Oskar broke it down:

“Imagine you and another person have similar music tastes. You have four of the same top artists, but your fifth artists are different. We would take those two near-matches and think, ‘Hmm, maybe each person would like the other’s fifth artist’ and suggest it. Now imagine that process happening at scale—not just one-on-one, but thousands, millions of connections and preferences being considered instantaneously, and always updating. Every day, half a trillion events, whether they are searches, listens, or likes, take place on Spotify, powering and guiding our machine learning system.”

Machine learning technology has raced forward as Spotify has matured, with enhancements we only once only dreamed of now becoming reality. This reality, too, affects where we can go with personalization and what we can serve up to listeners. “Breakthroughs in machine learning have really allowed us to rethink how we can help users discover new audio content. While in many instances machine learning has remained focused on solving for the immediate click—‘You like this song. Let me offer you more of the same kind of music’—we’re now able to better understand content and the ways listeners and creators relate to it.” 

The future of Personalization at Spotify

Podcasts, in particular, pose a significant opportunity, in part because of user input: It takes a bit longer to determine whether you like a particular show or episode or not—much more so than the 20 seconds most people take to pass judgment on a song. But as Oskar points out, we already had a great head start helping you discover podcasts on Spotify: “We’re investing heavily in developing the world’s best-recommendation algorithms to power connections between podcasters and listeners. We already have a really good system in place thanks to over 10 years recommending music, and it turns out that we can even predict what kinds of podcasts a listener might enjoy based on their taste in music.”

The impact—and potential—of personalization spreads even further. As enjoyable and relevant as personalization can be for listeners, it’s vital for creators who are looking to grow a fan base. Spotify machine learning has been trained to identify potential matches across artists, genres, and even countries. 

“Personalization is really a two-way street,” said Oskar. “The insights we’ve gathered allow us to see that there might be a Finnish artist who has music that would be a hit in Latin America. And we have the opportunity to bring that music to those listeners in Latin America through our personalization channels. This then introduces the artist to a more global audience that might not have been able to discover them on their own.”

Just as Spotify didn’t begin with the personalization capabilities listeners come to expect now, the personalization story also doesn’t end here. “Personalization is essential to the listening experience,” Oskar reminds us. “What we’re really working towards is creating a more holistic understanding of listeners by optimising for long-term satisfaction rather than for short-term clicks, offering them a more fulfilling content diet. Listeners are on a journey of discovery, and we want to help them have the best experience as they discover the millions of audio content available on Spotify.”

What Type of Fan Are You? Celebrate the Arrival of Spotify’s Football Now Playlist in the U.K. and Germany

League preferences and team allegiances may differ, but one thing remains consistent in the world of football: the sport’s legion of passionate fans. For those wanting to stay on top of the latest and greatest, Spotify’s new Football Now playlist is the perfect companion.

Similar to Spotify’s Daily Sports and Daily Drive playlists, Football Now gives fans one destination for access to the sport’s best audio content. The playlist also includes music based on a user’s personalized preferences, making it a unique experience that’s tailored to every listener.

Updated daily, this football-specific playlist is currently accessible for fans in the U.K. and Germany. Whether you prefer to yell “goal!” or “gol!” Spotify has plenty of football podcasts to give you the game commentary, latest news, interviews, opinions, and more about your favorite leagues, players, and clubs.

Need help deciding which football podcast to explore first? We’ve rounded up suggestions of some of our favorite U.K. and German podcasts based on their topics. Check it out below:

For the fan who wants to hear stories from the professionals

Einfach mal Luppen (German): This podcast is cohosted by two professional footballers—and brothers—Real Madrid midfielder Toni Kroos and Eintracht Braunschweig midfielder Felix Kroos. In the episodes, which will be released three times a week, Felix calls up his brother to discuss the latest updates surrounding the German national team.

Welcome to ‘Wrighty’s House’ (U.K.): Former professional footballer and television and radio personality Ian Wright hosts this podcast, where he interviews a variety of guests about the sport, personal experiences, and more.

For the fan who wants real-time updates in a concise format

kicker News (German): This podcast releases regular football updates, summarizing the latest news in brief, 90-second episodes. The show is updated throughout the day so fans can easily stay up-to-date on what’s happening with their favorite sport.

Das EM-Update (German): This Spotify Original podcast, produced in collaboration with Deutsche Presse-Agentur, provides all the Euro tournament updates you want. Episodes will be released twice a day on match days and will offer insight into all 51 matches. In addition to sharing statistics and tactical analysis, episodes will also include reporter interviews from those on and off the field. 

For the fan who wants to hear about football history

GIANT (U.K.): This weekly Spotify Original podcast is hosted by Owen Blackhurst and features guests who share their personal football stories. From the great Arsenal and Manchester United rivalry to the most legendary on-the-field penalty stories, the podcast covers a variety of topics and stories for football fans.

Players (German): This podcast goes behind the scenes of the Euro tournament through short and concise episodes that will be released twice a day. On the show, listeners will learn more about the background and context of the tournament as the host explores questions like “Who actually came up with the idea of a pan-European European Championship?” In the morning edition, host Raphael Späth and European Championship reporter Matthias Friebe will talk about the topic of the day. In the evening, the podcast will dive deeper into another narrative topic.

For the fan who wants a good laugh

The Teamsheet (U.K.): On this Spotify Original podcast, celebrity football fans serve as guest hosts who share their top fantasy picks if they were in charge of building their own football team. Over the course of a week, episodes will be released daily, and in each one guests debate the merits of whom to add for their goalkeeper, defender, midfielder, striker, wildcard, and manager. On the final day, the hosts design their perfect kits. Listeners can expect laughs and legends as they hear from the likes of comedian Elis James, professional footballer Lianne Sanderson, and more.

Ready for more football fun? Germany and U.K.-based listeners can find your personalized Football Now playlist here

Listeners Can Explore Their Spotify Collections Faster and Easier With a New ‘Your Library’

Your collection of music and podcasts is a representation of you—and it’s something deeply personal. But with 50,000+ hours of content released globally every day on Spotify and hundreds of those saved in Your Library, we know it’s crucial to be able to quickly find what you’re looking for, jump back into your latest discovery, or rediscover a beloved track you saved years ago.

Starting today, we are rolling out a new version of Your Library to all Spotify mobile users. Now, you’ll have a more streamlined way to easily explore your collection and find your saved music and podcasts faster. Your Library’s updated design and added features will enable you to spend less time looking for content and organizing your collection, and more time rediscovering the music and podcasts you’ve loved over the years. And as always, keep adding even more content for a library that grows alongside you into the future.

The new Your Library is packed with a new layout and features that make browsing your music and podcast collection easier than ever. Get ready for:

  • A streamlined way to browse and search your entire collection—both music and podcasts—in one place.
  • New dynamic filters to help you browse that collection. Choose between album, artist, playlist, or podcast to see the audio you’ve saved that matches. Then, if you’re on the go, simply tap the Downloaded filter to view all your content available offline* at once.
  • Better sorting options. Choose between viewing your audio alphabetically, by recently played, or by creator name. Now that’s organized. 
  • More control and easier access to what you listen to most. Choose up to four playlists, albums, or podcast shows to keep pinned for instant access so you can quickly dive back into that work playlist or sleep podcast. Simply swipe right on these items to see the “pin” option.
  • Use the new Grid view to sort through your liked content in a more visual way with large-tiled album, playlist, and podcast cover art.

The new Your Library will be rolling out to all users on iOS and Android in the coming week.

*Music downloads are only available to Spotify Premium users.

Spotify’s On Repeat Playlist Marks 12 Billion Total Streams—Here are the Songs and Artists Listeners Can’t Get Out of Their Heads

Since On Repeat’s debut in 2019, Spotify fans around the world have spent over 750 million hours getting more (and more, and more) of the songs they can’t stop listening to. This popular playlist has been a fan favorite for listeners who just can’t get enough of certain songs—even inspiring a social media challenge last summer. The personalized mix is filled with the tracks each user has streamed the most over the past 30 days. And now, it’s reached 12 billion streams globally. 

To celebrate this milestone, we’re sharing the songs and artists On Repeat listeners couldn’t get enough of this past year. 

Top Tracks:

  1. Blinding Lights” by The Weeknd
  2. Dance Monkey” by Tones and I 
  3. Circles” by Post Malone 
  4. Don’t Start Now” by Dua Lipa
  5. Señorita” by Camila Cabello and Shawn Mendes

Top Artists:

  1. Bad Bunny
  2. The Weeknd
  3. Post Malone
  4. J Balvin
  5. Ariana Grande

In terms of listeners, 18-24 year-olds are the top audience streaming On Repeat most frequently, followed by 25-29 year-olds. Fans in the U.S. also come in at the top spot, followed by the UK, Mexico, Germany, and Brazil. And the decade most listeners want to relive? The 2010s. 

 

This streaming milestone also marks another repeatable moment: For the first time, On Repeat is available for advertising sponsorship across 30 markets in North America, Europe, Latin America, and APAC. (This is only the second personalized playlist available for sponsorship—Discover Weekly became the first in 2019.) That means that advertisers can own the moment end-to-end as they share their messages with Spotify Free users via display, audio, and video ads. TurboTax has signed on as the first U.S. sponsor of On Repeat. Check out more about this over on Ads.Spotify.com

Whether you contributed 12 or 12,000 of On Repeat’s streams to date, or have yet to press play, relive your favorite music moments with the On Repeat playlist, found under “Uniquely Yours” within the “Made For You” hub. 

Amplifying Artist Input in Your Personalized Recommendations

Listeners enjoy Spotify because we introduce them to music to fall in love with—including music they might not have found otherwise. In fact, Spotify drives 16 billion artist discoveries every month, meaning 16 billion times a month, fans listen to an artist they have never heard before on Spotify. We’re proud of that and are actively refining our algorithms to enable even more fan discoveries of new artists each month.

We’re able to make great personalized recommendations because of complex, dynamic systems that consider a wide variety of inputs about what you like—which we refer to as signals—and balance those signals in many possible different pathways to produce an output: the perfect song for the moment, just for you. 

This might sound complicated—and it is! Our personalized recommendations take into account thousands of types of signals: what you’re listening to and when, which songs you’re adding to your playlists, the listening habits of people who have similar tastes, and much more. In order to create algorithms that truly deliver the right song for the right time, we’re also taking into account less obvious factors: things like time of day, or the order in which you’re listening to songs or podcasts, or the release date of a song. 

Artists tell us they want more opportunities to connect with new listeners, and we believe our recommendations should also be informed by artists—their priorities and what they have to say about their music. And soon, we will roll out a test of a service that gives artists a say in how their music is discovered. 

In this new experiment, artists and labels can identify music that’s a priority for them, and our system will add that signal to the algorithm that determines personalized listening sessions. This allows our algorithms to account for what’s important to the artist—perhaps a song they’re particularly excited about, an album anniversary they’re celebrating, a viral cultural moment they’re experiencing, or other factors they care about. 

To ensure the tool is accessible to artists at any stage of their careers, it won’t require any upfront budget. Instead, labels or rights holders agree to be paid a promotional recording royalty rate for streams in personalized listening sessions where we provided this service. If the songs resonate with listeners, we’ll keep trying them in similar sessions. If the songs don’t perform well, they’ll quickly be pulled back. Listener satisfaction is our priority—we won’t guarantee placement to labels or artists, and we only ever recommend music we think listeners will want to hear. 

We’re testing this to make sure it’s a great experience for both listeners and artists. To start, we’ll focus on applying this service to our Radio and Autoplay formats, where we know listeners are looking to discover new music. As we learn from this experiment, we’ll carefully test expanding to other personalized areas of Spotify. 

We believe this new service will unlock more discoveries than ever before. Our recommendations rely on signals from you, so keep on listening to what you love!

6 Questions (and Answers) with Tony Jebara, VP of Machine Learning

Tony Jebara, Spotify’s new Vice President of Machine Learning, says he started studying the algorithm-based technology when he was in college, “before it was cool.” Now, machine learning is not only undeniably cool, but it’s also incredibly practical—it also enables fan-favorite playlists like Discover Weekly, and more recent creations like On Repeat and Repeat Rewind.

Tony and his team of engineers and research scientists, therefore, have a two-fold mission: To analyze data on what users search and stream, and use those learnings to run experiments that turn into some of your favorite personalized playlists and personalized homepages.

We recently sat down with Tony, and he explained why, after four years as the director of machine learning at Netflix, he was intrigued by Spotify, where machine learning is central to our company strategy.

As a guitarist and songwriter, it was a perfect—dare we say algorithmic—fit.

First, what is machine learning? How do you use it at Spotify?

Machine learning finds patterns in data in a statistically reliable way so that we are confident they were not flukes. Then, it studies that data to determine what actions to take for each context in order to maximize reward. We’re not just trying to find patterns in the data, but cause and effect relationships too.

At Spotify, machine learning helps us match millions of users to the content (e.g. tracks, podcasts) most relevant to them at an unparalleled speed. We’re aiming to facilitate the user journey and make it enjoyable so that it doesn’t involve as much hunting around on our app. It’s a way for us to say ‘you’re going to love these things, let me put them at the top of your page for you,’ and also accelerate that process based on what people with similar interests have discovered.

You came from Netflix, which is a really interesting player in the machine learning space. How does your work today leverage past experience?

There are lots of similarities. Both services have to algorithmically match users to the right content and both have to decide how to invest in content and creators. But one key difference is that the Spotify catalog is huge—there are over 50 million songs and hundreds of thousands of podcasts. On the flip side, the Netflix catalog only has to deal with thousands of movies and TV shows. So, machine learning and algorithms play a much more crucial role at Spotify.

What makes Spotify’s application of machine learning unique or special?

If you think about what Spotify does, we deliver really, truly personalized experiences on a global level and in localized markets. Creating one personalized playlist for one user in one market can be challenging, but it’s doable with a human curator.  We take cultural aspects into consideration, because in culture it’s about more than drawing a straight line from the past into the future. Cultural shifts are sometimes erratic or anything but linear. That’s why we increasingly invest in systems that combine human experts and algorithms. While humans are good at articulating the “new, interesting and unexpected twist”, algorithms are better at scaling that curation to a personal experience for millions of people.

If you have a catalog of millions of songs and a global market of, you know, 200 million plus, you need to be able to scale your efforts thoughtfully. Machine learning allows and enables us to do that at the speed and quality consistency that Spotify is known for.

Our algorithms allow us to scale out very personalized, hand-selected experiences that help members feel were made just for them. The goal is to deliver an amazing listening experience.

What will machine learning mean for our creators—artists and podcasters—on platform?

With machine learning, we can expand our audience analytics capabilities in a way that helps creators get new fans. It’s no longer just about knowing if your song has been downloaded or streamed 8 million times, it’s about creating a connection between artists, creators and their fans. With machine learning, we can actually start to inform them about what types of people are consuming their work, at what time, and what it gets consumed with. You know—like pairing wine with food. What songs are this podcast dining well with? Things like that help unclog creative potential because people can understand their audiences better. Then they get valuable feedback, something that so many creators crave.

Machine learning is a fast-moving field, to say the least. What do you think the future of machine learning will look like? Let’s say three years from now?  

Over the next three years, machine learning will become more causal and long-term. Right now, machine learning mostly uncovers superficial input-output relationships. For example, given what you played today, here’s what you’ll play tomorrow. This leads to short-term engagement but might not yield long-term satisfaction. My hope is that three years from now, machine learning becomes less myopic. It should figure out the best sequence of actions to lead you on a journey where you discover new great audio content, become more engaged, and stay satisfied as a listener for years to come.

Now before we go, are there any podcasts you’re especially into right now? When do you listen to them?

I’m kind of nerdy, so I like Stuff You Should Know. It’s not a story, it’s just interesting things around nutrition or technology or political facts. I like to listen to it and learn about some random new things popping up.

I usually listen to podcasts while I’m lying in bed, when I don’t want to hold my screen or have the blue light keep me up but still want to learn something new.

Brand New Music for You

We know it can be difficult to keep up on all of your favorite artists’ new music. We get it — you’re busy, and there’s a lot going on. Discovering new music should be simple, and now we’re making it even easier. 

You’ve probably noticed the occasional full-screen recommendation in your Spotify mobile app, letting you know that one of your favorite artists has a new album out. Based on interviews we’ve conducted with Premium users, as well as your shout outs on Twitter, listeners seem to like this feature.

We personalize these new album recommendations based on your listening taste, combined with human curation. With an upcoming test we’re running in the US, we’re giving artists and their teams the ability to directly tap into this process and connect with the fans that care most about their music.

In this test, we will let artist teams pay to sponsor these recommendations, giving them the power to tell their listeners on Spotify—across both our Free and Premium tiers—about their latest release. You’ll now hear from a wider range of artists, which means you’re less likely to miss out on new releases from your favorites.

One thing that won’t change is that these recommendations will continue to be powered by your music taste, so you will only hear from artists that you frequently listen to or follow. We hope you enjoy these recommendations  — but if you’re not into them, Premium subscribers can turn them off. 

We hope you enjoy these recommendations  — but if you’re not into them, Premium subscribers can turn them off.

Look out for this new feature the next time one of your favorite artists drops their next release.

5 Questions (and Answers) with Mounia Lalmas-Roelleke, Head of Tech Research for Personalization at Spotify

When it comes to creating a great product (say, an app that plays your favorite audio on demand), development requires patience, time, asking a lot of questions—and learning from failure. That’s where Tech Research at Spotify comes in. The team’s work allows us to develop core technologies and practices that ultimately enhance the user experience.

Mounia Lalmas-Roelleke is our Head of Tech Research for Personalization at Spotify. She has deep expertise leading interdisciplinary teams focused on user engagement in areas such as native advertising, digital media, social media, search, and now audio. We talked to Mounia about her team and its mission to incorporate and extend Spotify’s state-of-the-art technologies and products.

First off, why does Spotify need a Tech Research team in Personalization? What does it focus on?

I would take a step back and look at Spotify’s mission to unlock the potential of human creativity—by giving a million creative artists the opportunity to live off their art and billions of fans the opportunity to enjoy and be inspired by it. We believe this vision can be achieved by operating with state-of-the-art science and pushing beyond.

Within Personalization, we aim to match users with the content they want to hear at the right time, in the right place. This means getting the context right, in a way that is delightful. It’s about providing an experience that is special and fulfills user needs in the moment. But reading third-party books and papers is often not enough to solve everything we are tasked with, especially in the short timeline we are typically given. So we conduct our own research.

To do this, we focus on several areas—human-computer interaction, language technologies, machine learning, algorithmic bias, evaluation, search and recommendation, and user modeling, for example—that make personalization and discovery work for both our artists and listeners. 

What is the Personalization Tech Research team make-up? 

We are currently a team of around 20 research scientists, with more joining our ranks in the weeks and months ahead. Our team spans a diverse set of backgrounds, practices, and disciplines—we have and hire research scientists across areas ranging from computer science to social science. 

Our team is based across the Spotify R&D hubs in New York, Boston, London, and Stockholm. 

How does this team work with others at the company? How do you prioritize what needs to be accomplished? 

Our working model is known as “embedding,” where our research scientists spend approximately 50% of their time in product teams. This is so they can learn infrastructure, teach state-of-the-art processes, and contribute to a product directly and in the moment. There is an immediacy, both in terms of time and impact. 

In the other 50% of their time, research scientists investigate independent projects that serve as input for future product directions. This includes assessing the feasibility of new experiences, algorithms and methodologies, as well as deep dives into topics of interest that do not yet fit within existing work streams. These investigations can then lead to an embed to deploy that experimental work. We also use this time to contribute to the larger research community through publications and external presentations.

How does your function’s work help Spotify beyond R&D? 

We believe that a strong internal research community and culture at Spotify will enable us to learn faster and have a bigger impact in our tech leadership. Our weekly Tech Research meeting, which is open to all employees, aims to strengthen Spotify’s internal research community and culture through sharing and discussing recent research from both inside and outside of Spotify.

What’s the key to Tech Research’s success? 

It is important that as a team in Personalization, we adapt to the very rapid changes in the tech world, and are constantly learning and innovating. As long as we can do that, Tech Research will flourish. 

For me personally, research means getting up every morning and being excited about the work I am doing, from building a hypothesis to seeing how it matures, to full deployment—for myself and anybody in my team and the teams who work with us. 

Learn more about some of the Spotifiers working out of our London R&D Hub and follow us on @SpotifyJobs.

Five Ways to Make Your Discover Weekly Playlists Even More Personalized

Every Monday morning, Spotify listeners are greeted—some might say gifted—with a new Discover Weekly playlist to help set their soundtrack for the next seven days. The weekly dose of recommended songs started as a project from one of Spotify’s Hack Weeks, and quickly caught on. Now, every Monday, listeners get a new, curated playlist of 30 songs from a variety of artists to explore.

Ever logged in to find a seemingly perfect Discover Weekly? While it might seem like wizardry, Discover Weekly becomes more personalized the more you use and engage with it. Here are five ways to keep the curation “magic” going:

1. Heart This

Love a new track you just heard? Click the “heart” icon next to the song on mobile or desktop, and there will be more where that came from down the road.

2. Follow Along

Make sure to “follow” your favorite artists—the curation magic will pull in songs from similar artists that we have a hunch you’ll like. As for your “followed” artists, head over to your Release Radar playlist, which updates every Friday, to hear all their new music right after it drops.

3. You Really Really Like It

If you’re totally obsessed with a new-to-you track, add it to your own personally curated playlists. This lets us know the song is more than just a momentary obsession, and we’ll be sure to serve up songs in the same vein.

4. Don’t Overthink It

We all have that friend who shares a ton of tracks from their favorite new artist. But what if they’re not really your taste? Not to worry: Listening to a song once without replaying or “hearting” won’t affect your Discover Weekly selections.

5. Keep It Private

If you’re listening to music you may not want to show up in your Discover Weekly (for example, if your friend with questionable music taste is DJing a party from your phone), put your Spotify on Private Mode. If you’re streaming from desktop, simply click the down arrow shaped like a “V” in the top right corner of the app and select “Private Session.” For mobile and tablet, navigate to Settings, then Social, and turn on “Private Session.”

There you have it! All the information you need for future playlists. Now that you’re more in control of your Discover Weekly destiny, prepare for a whole new world of soon-to-be-favorite songs and artists at your fingertips every Monday.

Open your Discover Weekly and get listening!

5 Things Free Users Need to Be Taking Advantage of on Spotify

Since we launched a new version of our free app, many new and existing users on Android and iOS have gotten to experience the new, improved, ad-supported tier. With personalized music recommendations from day one and an easy-to-use interface, they can now enjoy unprecedented access to both the music they love and the favorites they’re yet to discover. Simply put, it’s the best way to get music for free.

Read on for our list of the five must-use features in the new Spotify free experience.

1. Let us get to know you with Taste Onboarding:

After you first download and sign in to the free app, you’ll be prompted to choose five or more artists you like. That means we’ll be able to learn more quickly about your favorite artists, songs, and genres. From there, we’ll make some great playlists for you—as well as tailor your home screen for easier music discovery. And the more you listen, the more we’ll learn, getting better with our recommendations and introducing you to artists you’re bound to love.

Let us get to know you with Taste Onboarding

2. Enjoy On-Demand Playlists:

We use the data from your taste onboarding to present you with 15 personalized and curated playlists that will be particular to you based on your music taste and how you stream on Spotify, meaning every user gets something different. From playlists such as Discover Weekly to Rap Caviar to Broken Heart and up to six Daily Mixes, these lists will update frequently based on how you interact with them and with the rest of the music you listen to. Within them, you can play songs in any order and skip as much as you like. Once we have enough information about what you like to listen to, we’ll update your Discover Weekly every Monday and Release Radar every Friday. The more you stream, the quicker these will become available. You can find these playlists from your home screen.

Enjoy On-Demand Playlists

3. Find new music with Assisted Playlisting:

Making your own playlist? It’s quick and easy. Just start with a title, and then choose a few tracks. In the meantime, we’ll start recommending songs for you to add with the tap of a button. We’ll show songs based on artists in the playlist, your taste profile, and even the title of your playlist—particularly songs with that theme or word in the lyrics—so make sure to choose a title that really describes the vibe you want.

Find new music with Assisted Playlisting

4. Personalize by ♡ing and Hiding:

There’s a new way to fine-tune your streaming experience: by using the new like and hide buttons. Using them can teach us about your tastes so you get recommendations tailored just for you. As you’re listening to songs, note which you “like” by tapping the heart icon . You can also do this with artists, albums, and playlists. This way, the app will get to know what you love and want to hear more of—helping with the personalization process even more. All your liked songs will appear in a new playlist called “Your Favorites,” and new tracks from artists you have listened to will appear in your Release Radar. On the other hand, tapping the “hide” icon will ensure you don’t have to hear that song, or others similar to it. You can’t win ’em all.

Personalize by ♡ing and HidingZara

5. Browse using Data Saver:

Many Spotify users around the world can’t enjoy music whenever they want because of how much mobile data streaming uses. That’s why we created Data Saver, a simple switch that optimizes the listening experience to use less mobile data. Data Saver streams at a lower bit rate so you can listen to more music with less guilt. Note that Data Saver isn’t a default setting, so make sure to switch it on in your settings tab.

Browse using Data Saver:

Between more personalization, enhanced playlists, easily creatable playlists, and a data-saving feature, what better way is there to listen to and discover music? Make sure you’re not missing out—listen now for free.

Personalized Discovery: Listen to Music You Love with All-New Free on Spotify

Music is the great connector. It unites us across markets, ages, backgrounds, languages, preferences, political leanings and income levels. At Spotify, we believe in music for everyone—and today, we are one step closer to making that a reality as we unveil a new, improved, and more personalized way to discover music and listen to what you love on Spotify, for free.

The new ad-supported Spotify is a natural next step as Spotify continues to innovate and evolve for the needs of our users, and will be rolling out globally to all users of Spotify on iOS and Android. With a new design on mobile, Free on Spotify includes a number of new features to make the listening experience more tailored to what you need to hear, now.

“Our customers always tell us that music discovery and listening is a personal experience, and we are enhancing the free experience with this in mind,” said Babar Zafar, VP of Product Development at Spotify. “This is the beginning of an evolution for Spotify and we will continue to make improvements that mirror our customers’ needs. This is not only about giving users a more customized free experience from the day they sign up, but giving them more control over their listening experience so they can easily find and stream their favorites anytime, from anywhere.”

On-demand playlists

We want all users to have more control over the listening experience so everyone can both discover new artists and return to old favorites. Fifteen new on-demand playlists offer the ability to pick and play any track within our curated lists—without skipping tracks or waiting on shuffle to bring up the music you love. These on-demand playlists will be unique to you, based on your musical tastes, and may include Spotify-curated playlists ranging from RapCaviar and Viva Latino to Ultimate Indie and Alternative R&B as well as personalized playlists like Discover Weekly, Release Radar, and Daily Mix.

More personalized

With Spotify for free, users gain easy access to favorite songs and discovering new music is made simpler—and it’s personalized for you. When you sign up, we’ll ask you about the artists you love, and we’ll deliver curated playlists that match your musical taste and personalized playlists, like Daily Mix. These new playlists are easily accessible on the new Home screen, which is always being updated based on your listening activity.

Make Spotify yours

Tell us which songs and artists you LIKE ♡ (or HIDE ) as you listen. Tap the  to quickly save songs to your Favorites playlist and tap the  icon to hide songs you don’t want to hear. Recommendations will improve the more you listen and denote preferences.

Create your own playlists

Playlists are the key to creating a mood, whether it’s morning workout or weekend dance party, and now it’s even easier to create and edit a playlist with Spotify. Just give your playlist a name, search and preview specific tracks, and add to your playlist. As you save songs, we’ll continue to suggest more songs that we think you will like.

Play music using less mobile data with Data Saver:

Music should be accessible to everyone, in every market—the love of a great song is what connects communities and cultures across the world. But many users of Spotify for free around the world aren’t able to enjoy music whenever they want, because of the volume of mobile data streaming typically uses. That’s why we created Data Saver, a simple toggle switch that optimizes the listening experience to use less mobile data when listening to music.

The new free experience will be available on iOS and Android and will be rolling out globally to all markets in the coming weeks.

Happy Streaming!