4 Things Spotify Can Teach You About Data Sharing
4 Things Spotify Can Teach You About Data Sharing

At media companies, 2018 might be remembered as the year that someone finally got data sharing right.
To be sure, there were some missteps. Facebookâs series of data scandals cost the social network around a quarter of its value. But Twitter, Google, Reddit, Snapchat, and even Facebook each tweaked their privacy policies to better balance advertisersâ interests with those of their users.
None, however, hit the mark quite like Spotify. Not only did Spotify proactively protect its users when third-party companies exposed their data, but the music-streaming service was widely praised for sharing user insights in interesting, safe ways.
What Spotify Gets Right
Spotify may not be a social media company, but its data strategy includes four tactics social media networks would do well to follow:
1. Give users a reason to share.
Every time a user fires off a tweet, uploads a photo, or even logs in, he gives Twitter more data. According to Twitterâs privacy policy, it uses that data to detect fraud and serve more relevant ads. But for the average Twitter user, the benefits of that data collection can be difficult to discern.
The problem isnât that Twitter lets advertisers target its users via their own data (Spotify does that, too); the problem is that users have little reason to share that data. Spotify, by contrast, leverages user data to deliver multiple personalized features. Using machine learning, it creates Discover Weekly playlists customized to each userâs tastes. Spotifyâs bottomless Daily Mixes suggest songs by genre, and its Release Radar keeps users up to speed on new releases by artists they follow.
2. Provide serious privacy controls.
After Facebookâs Cambridge Analytica scandal broke this past May, the social network announced it would roll out a suite of new privacy tools. But while Facebook did debut a feature that allows users to access and download their data, itâs months behind on a âClear Historyâ tool. âThat was not very simple, actually, in practice, for us to build,â David Baser, head of Facebookâs product privacy team, admitted to Recode.
Spotify, too, lets users download their data. But unlike Facebook, Spotify gives its users the ability to restrict or stop it from processing their personal data for advertising purposes. Whatâs more, Spotify allows private use, meaning that nothing the user does or listens to during the session will be shared publicly.
3. Share insights, not raw data.
The reason Facebookâs Cambridge Analytica scandal attracted so much heat is because the breached information wasnât meta-data; it was the private information of more than 50 million Facebook users. Usersâ identities, friend networks, and even âlikesâ were exposed.
âAlthough Facebook didnât intend for Cambridge Analytica to abuse access to user data, the social network is still very much on the hook for the actions of its partner,â Thomas Noyes, CEO of marketing data platform Commerce Signals wrote in Innovation Enterprise. âFortunately, there is a safer alternative to sharing data: Sharing the insights that the data contains.â
Spotify, for its part, shares data only as Noyes suggests. Although the music service does allow advertisers to target listeners based on their psychographic and demographic traits, it doesnât let them see the profile data of specific users. When Spotify does share user statistics, such as part of its popular âWrappedâ campaign, itâs in the form of insights rather than raw data points.
4. Be playful.
Seldom, if ever, does YouTube offer fun insights about its viewers. It certainly could: Which area of the country watches the most cat videos? Are men or women more likely to be watching during work hours? Do Millennials watch more music videos, or do Baby Boomers?
Again, Spotifyâs âWrappedâ campaign shows how itâs done. In its third year, Spotifyâs initiative both provides users with low-key takeaways from their listening history and informs its real-world advertisements. One of its recent billboard ads, for instance, jokes about Godâs gender according to fanmade playlists: âGod is a manâ appeared on nine playlists, the music service calculated, while Ariana Grandeâs âGod Is a Womanâ song appeared on 28,802.
Dutch media studies professor Robert Prey argues that granularity is the key to Spotifyâs campaign. âWe find that thereâs incredible detail in the data,â Prey told Haley Weiss, editorial fellow at The Atlantic. âThereâs all this information: everything from what brand of headphones youâre listening to music on, to if the volume was changed within songs, whether or not you resize the appâs windows.â Given that YouTube offers a similar service, serves 1.3 billion users, and streams 5 billion videos per day, it could almost certainly follow Spotifyâs lead.
Despite being a smaller firm than media giants Facebook and Google, Spotify took the lead this year in data management. The streaming service won, however, not because it collects the most data or has the most advertising partners, but because it puts its users first. That doesnât mean kicking advertisers to the curb, as Spotify has shown; it means realizing that, without users, there wouldnât be data to share at all.
The post 4 Things Spotify Can Teach You About Data Sharing appeared first on ReadWrite.
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