Spotify rocks advertisers with measurement by Oracle
With over 200 million listeners on its ad-supported service, Spotify uses Oracle Moat to prove the value of video ads on the music and podcast platform.
Video ads on an audio platform
Spotify doesnât have users, it has true believersâfans who use the streaming music platform to soundtrack their lives, whether theyâre driving to work or mowing the lawn, and whether they groove to Dua Lipa or headbang to Metallica.
Thereâs a Spotify playlist for every moment, with names like âSongs to Sing in the Showerâ and âBeast Mode,â pulled from one of the worldâs largest music collections. Listeners can also tune into an exploding array of podcasts.
No wonder Spotify has more than 381 million monthly active users in 178 countries

With over 200 million listeners on the free, ad-supported service, Spotifyâs advertising is surging. And those impressions donât come from just audio ads but video as wellâsomething that might not be top of mind when you think about an audio platform.
âVideo is a tried-and-true format across digital advertising,â says Katie Oakes, Spotify senior product marketing manager. âWe knew that our advertising clients would appreciate the chance to share their visual messages with Spotify listeners in the moments they are looking at the screen.â
When Spotify introduced video ads in 2014, the company knew advertisers might be skeptical of video on a digital audio platform, so it needed proof that the ads reached the right audiences. Besides being expensive to create, video ads are easily missed on todayâs busy websites. To show that Spotify offered a better context for connecting with buyers, ad measurement would be critical.
âAdvertisers want high-impact opportunities to reach their target audiences,â says Rochelle Sanchirico, Spotify global director of SMB marketing. âAt Spotify, weâre always looking for new ways to connect them to very engaged consumers.â
Oracle Moat proves engagement
To expand measurement options, Spotify in 2016 rolled out Oracle Moat Analytics, a cloud-based suite that helps advertisers, publishers, and platform owners measure ad performance across digital and TV campaigns.
âSpotify chose Moat because it was a leader in the video measurement space,â Sanchirico says. âWe always want to provide a first-class experience for our listeners and advertisers. Moat was a great fit, and it still is.â

With Moat, advertisers know that Spotify outperforms. In viewabilityâvalid impressions that are viewed for at least a couple of secondsâSpotify scores 21.5% higher than the industry benchmark. And in completion quality, a metric showing if users see and hear completed ads, the platform ranks 130.1% higher.
On other platforms, people often view video ads with the sound off. Because Spotify is an audio platform, users keep the sound on. Whatâs more, Spotify serves video ads only when users are âin focusââmeaning looking at the app, such as when theyâre browsing the catalog for songs or podcasts.
All of this is music to advertisersâ ears. âHaving sound-on, in-focus ads is a key part of our value proposition,â says Sanchirico. Advertisers can tell a more nuanced story when they have the attention of their audiencesâ eyes and ears. âWe can prove the value of running video ads on Spotify,â she says.
And thatâs a good thing: the industryâs mega-players, advertising holding companies, wouldnât think of placing ads without measurement capability. âWith Moat we can say, âHey, not only do we have this super-viewable unit, but we can show you the numbers,â says Oakes.
âIn the momentâ ads
Spotify has continued evolving its video ad options. Its advertising platform Spotify Ad Studio, a self-serve option, offers access to small and medium businesses that take more of a DIY marketing approach.
Ad Studio provides simple tools for ad targeting, creation, and measurement so that thousands of SMBsâmost too small to hire an agencyâcan connect with audiences in the moment, Sanchirico says.
âWe strive to provide an experience thatâs immersive and feels authentic,â Sanchirico says. âWe really work with our advertisers to create messages that make sense in context,â whether itâs a music playlist or a true-crime podcast.
For example, if youâre listening to the âUltimate Baking Playlist,â odds are youâll be more receptive to an ad for a bakeware set, as you smell the snickerdoodles you just popped in the oven.
Spotify invests heavily in discovering artists and podcasters and in helping them find their audiences. Advertisers, of course, want to reach the right audiences at scale. To stay competitive, Spotify is always exploring new ways to help them do that.
Ads on Spotify podcasts illustrate the point. Historically, podcast buying was one-to-one, with advertisers purchasing ads on a specific podcast. Now Spotify lets them choose their audiencesâtelling them where those people are and what theyâre listening to, so brands can both target carefully and expand audience size.
âAs we move forward, weâll always seek opportunities for our advertisersâ messages to be seen and heard in context,â Sanchirico says. âAnd measurement will be important. Thatâs how we see Moat helping us in our journey.â