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BodhiProtocol

Episode 08

Spotify Doesn't Sell Music

It monetizes discovery, not songs.

SSurya · 2026-07-16 · 2 min read
The Taste Graph
Day One
Generic recommendations. Same as everyone else.
Year Five
A taste graph no competitor can copy.
The moat compounds
More Listening
More Taste Data
Better Discovery

The Big Idea

Spotify doesn't sell music. It sells the feeling of always having the right song ready.

Most people think Spotify sells music. It doesn't, not really — almost any streaming app has the same catalog. The songs aren't the differentiator; they're table stakes.

Spotify's real product isn't a song. It's knowing, better than any competitor, exactly what you want to hear next. Everything else supports that objective.

The Invisible Business

Imagine opening a rival music app for the first time. The catalog is nearly identical to Spotify's. But the playlists feel generic, the recommendations feel off, and going back to Spotify feels like coming home.

That gap isn't accidental. Behind it sits one invisible question: how do we make our understanding of your taste something no competitor can copy? That's the business.

Discover Weekly. Daily Mixes. Release Radar. Every feature points toward a single outcome: a personalization advantage that only grows with time.

Why The Songs Aren't The Product

Spotify pays out the large majority of its revenue to labels and artists for the music itself. Most people assume the songs are the business.

The songs are actually a shared commodity — every competitor licenses roughly the same catalog. The real business is the layer on top: years of listening data turned into recommendations a rival platform simply can't replicate on day one.

Viewed that way, every Spotify decision suddenly makes sense: why it pushed so hard into podcasts and audiobooks, why the home screen is built around "made for you," why switching services always feels like starting over.

Key Takeaways

Every play refines what Spotify thinks you'll like next.

Personalized playlists are the product; songs are the raw material.

A competitor's blank slate feels worse the longer you've stayed.

Podcasts and audiobooks extend the same personalization engine beyond music.

Data compounds — day one Spotify and year five Spotify are different products.

Bodhi Reflection

People think Spotify competes by having the biggest music catalog. Perhaps it competes by knowing your taste better than you do. Once you see the invisible business, Discover Weekly starts to look less like a playlist and more like a lock.

See what companies really sell.

Next Episode

Disney Doesn't Sell Movies.

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