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Podcast Producers: Apple and Spotify Launch Paid Subscriptions

Now you can ask your loyal fans to support your podcast by charging monthly fees through Spotify and Apple. And you can even receive 100% of the subscriber revenue for the first two years.

Here are three ways you might use this:

Of course, you could also do a paid-only podcast without a free version. If you already have a name and reputation online, this might be a good choice. But if people don’t know you, then you might want to offer a free version to introduce your show to people.

Here’s how these paid-subscription programs for podcast creators work:

Spotify is shaping up to be (almost) a podcasters dream: For the first two years you will pay no creator fees on your paid subscribers. This means you get to keep 100% of the subscriber revenue minus the payment-transaction fees. In 2023, Spotify plans on taking a modest 5% cut of subscription revenue.

There’s also no exclusivity, meaning you’re not locked into terms. Spotify offers three subscription price tiers: $2.99, $4.99 and $7.99 per month.

Imagine if you have 1000 subscribers at just the first tier… it’s like publishing a paid newsletter or membership site without the hassle of creating a newsletter or membership site. Jump on your podcast, talk to your listeners and interview your guests… for many marketers, this is light years easier than most residual income models.

Now here’s what Apple is offering: Just like other App Store subscription purchases, Apple is keeping 30% of podcast subscription fees in the first year. Year two and beyond sees a drop to 15%.

And Apple also charges a $20 annual fee to use its podcast-subscription tools.

And unlike Spotify, Apple Podcast Subscriptions will be available only on Apple’s own podcast-listening apps.

 

More Stuff You Need to Know about…

…Spotify’s Paid Subscription Program

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

…Apple’s Paid Subscription Program

 

 

 

 

Both Spotify and Apple could be seen as competition for Patreon, although since Patreon charges up to 12% of subscription revenue, it’s unlikely Patreon users will switch over to Apple Podcasts exclusively.

For years Apple Podcasts was the king of podcast apps, mainly because it came preinstalled on iPhones. Then in 2019 Spotify set their sight on Apple’s market share and now they are neck and neck, with 28.2 million people in the US listening to podcasts on Spotify compared to Apple Podcasts’ 28 million.

If these new offerings are any indication, I suspect the 0-5% fee on paid content will win out over the 30/15% + $20 a year, but we’ll see what happens.

If you already have a podcast, I encourage you to explore the possibility of offering a paid version through either Spotify or Apple. Treat it as an experiment, and in six months evaluate if it’s working for you.

Then again, if the main purpose of your podcast is to promote products and services, a paid version may not be what you need to reach as wide of an audience as possible.

One last thought: 10,000 paid subscribers times $2.99 each, or even just 1000 subscribers times $4.99 or $7.99 is the kind of math I love.

How about you?

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