Source: www.insideaudiomarketing.com, August 2023
Based on Edison Research’s “Share of Ear” survey results for second-quarter 2023, Cumulus Media/Westwood One’s Audio Active Group has created two ad-supported audio clocks, showing each major platform’s share of a typical hour of listening in the U.S. Each clock is based on multiplying Edison’s share of time spent with ad-supported audio among persons 18+ by 60 minutes.
The resulting clocks, as shown in Westwood One’s blog, shows that for all ad-supported listening, podcasts accounts for 11.4 minutes, second only to AM/FM radio which leads with 41.4 minutes.They are followed by ad-supported SiriusXM, Spotify and Pandora with 2.4 minutes each. Shown as share of time spent, AM/FM claims a 69% share of all U.S. ad-supported audio, with podcasts at 19%, and ad-supported SiriusXM, Spotify and Pandora with 4% each.
Using the same formula for persons 18+, the U.S. ad-supported audio clock for in-car listening gives AM/FM radio greater dominance, with 51 minutes of the hour. Podcasts represent 4.2 minutes, with ad-supported SiriusXM at 2.4 minutes and ad-supported Spotify and Pandora with 1.2 minutes each.
The Edison shares these numbers are based on show AM/FM with an 85% share of ad-supported audio in the car, with podcasts at 7%, ad-supported SiriusXM at 4% and ad-supported Pandora and Spotify at 2% each.
The analysis notes the explosive growth of podcasts in the past six years, according to Edison, with persons 18+ share of ad-supported audio time spent up from 5.4% in 2017 to 19.2% in 2023, including a leap from 11.2% in 2022. Also noted are podcasts’ daily reach of persons 25-54 over the same period, from 7.0% six years ago to 31.8% this year, again with a jump from 2022 when it stood at 22.0%. Reach is higher for 18-34s and 18-49s in 2023, 39% for the former and 34% for the latter.
“Initially, marketers criticized podcasting for lacking scale,” Cumulus Media/Westwood One’s Audio Active Group Chief Insights Officer Pierre Bouvard says. “No longer. Podcasting is [now] reaching one out of every three Americans daily. The weekly reach is in the high 30s/low 40s, and the monthly reach is starting to approach 50%.”
As for ad-supported Spotify, the blog points out that while “Share of Ear” shows the streaming service’s ad-free subscription audience share up 133% among 18+ since 2017, its ad-supported audience share has gained just 18%. “The growth in Spotify’s average monthly users does not translate to an advertiser benefit,” Bouvard says. “In fact, 71% of the tuning minutes to Spotify are to its advertising-free subscription service.”
“Time spent with music streaming comes at the expense of owned music, not AM/FM radio,” Bouvard notes. “AM/FM radio has lost share to the digital version of its broadcast (AM/FM radio streaming) and podcasts, [so] streaming really has not impacted AM/FM at all. Interestingly, the AM/FM streaming share of a 12 is actually bigger than the combined 9 share of [ad-supported] Pandora and Spotify combined. From a streaming audio standpoint, AM/FM streaming all by itself is bigger than the combination of Pandora and Spotify.”