Spotify is expanding into yet another facet of music business: concert ticket sales.
The audio streaming company silently launched a new website, tickets.spotify.com, where users can purchase tickets for live music events. The website currently only shows a handful of events for artists including Limbeck, Annie DiRusso, Crows, Osees, and TOKiMONSTA.
Spotify told TechCrunch it's just testing the waters with the new service, and it couldn't provide much information besides the usual quote about routinely trying out new products and ideas.
According to its Terms of Purchase legal documents, Spotify sells "tickets on behalf of third parties which can include venues, event promoters, fan clubs and artists (...) as their disclosed ticketing agent." The company points out that it doesn't control ticket availability or inventory stock. Update: Spotify told us that these are only pre-sale tickets, which will come from select artists' pre-sale allocations for upcoming concerts.
In June, The Information broke the news that Spotify is considering entering the events business, though the report noted that Spotify isn't expecting a short-term revenue boost from ticket sales; instead, the new service would reportedly be a way to establish better partnerships with artists.
Spotify already has a (recently revamped) Live Events Feed, highlighting popular events in the vicinity, where it points users to find tickets on third-party websites. This feed does not appear to be connected with the new Spotify Tickets site.
While Spotify Tickets in its current state likely cannot make a significant dent in the market, the timing of the launch is notable, as it comes a week after Ticketmaster teamed up with TikTok to sell concert tickets directly on the social media service.
Spotify has recently been looking into all sorts of ways to expand its business. Besides betting big on podcasts, the company has also acquired audiobook platform Findaway and indicated that it has big plans in the space.
UPDATE: Aug. 10, 2022, 6:10 p.m. EDT “At Spotify, we routinely test new products and ideas to improve our user experience. Some of those end up paving the path for our broader user experience and others serve only as important learnings. Tickets.spotify.com is our latest test. We have no further news to share on future plans at this time," a Spotify spokesperson told Mashable.
文章
16681
浏览
5
获赞
4333
Cloudflare goes down, and takes the internet's security blanket with it
When Cloudflare has problems, the rest of the internet can't be that far behind. The company whose eSnap's layoffs are just the latest in Big Tech's belt
Snap recently laid off about 20 percent of its employees and made the decision to cancel its originaEverything Microsoft announced at the 2022 Surface event
It’s that beautiful time of year when every big tech company launches a new lineup of productsRunner seeks help to adopt dog who ran a marathon with him
After following runner Dion Leonard for 125 kilometers across the desert, Gobi the dog is finally onStephen King live
Trump's trip to the UK has been fairly eventful so far -- and it's only one day in.Over the past 24Adele kissed a dog wearing an Adele shirt while onstage
Adele has brought young fans onto the stages of her tour, folks to sing along with her and even AdelSurveillance footage after alleged Ryan Lochte robbery released
By now we've all heard of Lochte Gate -- the nickname of the alleged robbery of Ryan Lochte and threClassic jokes, rewritten by Donald Trump
In case you haven't noticed, Donald Trump's got jokes. Lots of jokes.When he called on Russia to finSamsung, stop trying to make the Galaxy Buds Live happen
Samsung has basically confirmed its new earbuds will be called the Galaxy Buds Live — not, sadCNN and Donald Trump are on the brink of all
Donald Trump has sparred with the media, and CNN in particular, since the very start of his campaignNo, FTX didn't funnel Ukraine aid to Democratic candidates
The dramatic and sudden collapse of FTX, one of the world's biggest cryptocurrency exchanges, was maTrump's economic advisers are no longer all named Steve
The Steve:not Steve ratio on Trump's economic team just got a little smaller. Almost a week after anHow to fix missing data and battery drain in Apple's iOS 14, WatchOS 7
If you've been struggling with a fresh set of technical issues since the mid-September launch of iOSNo, FTX didn't funnel Ukraine aid to Democratic candidates
The dramatic and sudden collapse of FTX, one of the world's biggest cryptocurrency exchanges, was maClassic jokes, rewritten by Donald Trump
In case you haven't noticed, Donald Trump's got jokes. Lots of jokes.When he called on Russia to fin