Back in September of 2021, Google said YouTube Music hit 50 million subscribers faster than it expected. A new market analysis report this week notes that YouTube Music grew 50% in a 12 month period with high interest from Gen Z.
According to Midia Research (via Variety), YouTube grew more than 50% from Q2 2020 to 2021. In fact, Google was the only Western streaming service to increase its global market share during the 12-month period under review.
There is a difference between revenue and subscribers – with ARPU deflators, such as the rise of multi-user plans and the growth of lower-spending emerging markets – but growth in monetised users represents the foundation stone of the digital service provider (DSP) streaming market.
The report said YouTube Music “particularly resonates” among younger Millennials and Gen Z (mid-to-late 1990s to early 2010s).
Of the 523.9 million (up 26.4% YoY) music subscribers at the end of Q2 2021, 8% use YouTube Music. The highest share unsurprisingly belongs to Spotify at 31% – though that number has been steadily decreasing from 34% in Q2 2019. Apple Music follows at 15%, and Amazon and Tencent are at 13%.
9to5Google’s Take
YouTube Music’s core audience is interesting. Gen Z grew up listening to songs as videos on YouTube.com. There’s an element of familiarity with YouTube and its Autoplay algorithm, and those who have been satisfied with video-quality tunes might be less discerning in what they’re looking for in a streaming service.
Meanwhile, Google is moving to revamp YouTube Music’s free tier by offering background listening and making the app audio only for free users. Videos become a premium perk, and this is underway in Canada.
More on YouTube Music:
- YouTube Premium & Music get annual subscription plans, discounted pricing ends this week
- YouTube Music prepares Wear OS Tile showing recently played music
- YouTube Music widely rolls out extensive in-app ‘2021 Recap’ on Android, iOS
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