Spotify ads: which is right for your brand?
Audio ads
For free users, these radio-esque adverts play in between ten to twenty minutes worth of music for a time ranging from sixty seconds, to two minutes.
Replacing an album cover is a solitary image or GIF. The audio ad is limited to thirty seconds per brand/product, and a click of the GIF or image provides a hyperlink to the brand’s requested link that can lead to a home page, Twitter or Facebook.
28% of people said this is the ad format they would be most likely to act on.
Homepage takeover
Full home-page takeovers providing sponsored playlists, GIFS, hyperlinks to product pages. The most expensive option, homepage takeovers are not as prevalent or popular but they do get the highest amount of consumer interaction.
Audio is not allowed, though video is occasionally seen via an embedded YouTube clip. 10% said this format was most effective in their experience.
Branded playlist
This option is used heavily, due to the fact brands can create their own playlists with Facebook accounts for free.
Clothing stores such as H&M and Abercrombie often put up seasonal playlists featuring the same music as heard in store. Brands such as Channel 4 and TV Network ‘CW’ have launched playlists that feature music heard in recent television episodes in order from start of episode, to end of episode.
30% preferred this format to interact with.
Lightboxes
Spotify lightboxes are an overlay window that opens up within Spotify, containing anything from image galleries to flash videos, games to interactive competitions, live streaming and more.
The lightbox is a user-initiated format. It’s triggered when the user clicks on a display ad, audio ad or homepage takeover images.
However, long periods of inactivity on Spotify will result in a lightbox awaiting said user’s return.
No-one thought this style of ad to be most effective.
MPU ads
MPU (mid-page unit) ads are displayed on the Spotify homepage when the user activates Spotify, restarts Spotify, or returns to the homepages.
Commonly seen, and not blocking any important features of the site, its’ not aggravating or annoying the majority of users yet, with 32% of our respondents recommending it as the ad they are most likely to interact with.