
Apple has long had its eye i, if you will on Shazam.
The Cupertino-based company sought to purchase Shazam outright in 2017 to the tune of $400 million but was caught up in red tape until earlier today, when the acquisition officially went through.Apple hyped up its experience with the popular music identification app company in a press release, making vague promises about provid[ing] users even more great ways to discover, experience and enjoy music.
In the same breath, it announced that the Shazam service you know and love will go ad-free in the near future.If this sounds like old news, you might be confusing it for when Apple originally announced its intent to buy the platform, or when Apple integrated Shazam into Siri, allowing users to ask Hey Siri, what song is this which, admittedly, was a big deal.But a partnership is different than the full-out acquisition: Clearly Apple has bigger plans for Shazam as its $400 million dollar buyout might suggest.What tangible benefits can a complete Shazam acquisition bring They're a bit more mysterious.Without more information from Apple or Shazam to go off of, here are five reasons we think Apple opened up its checkbook for the worlds most well-known audio identification service.1.
Its not just about music recognitionShazam, if you missed out on downloading the app in the last decade since it appeared on the App Store, allows you to record a sample of any audio and ask for it to be identified.
This is great for songs that you hear in a store or while traveling that you cant see the source, but it also has some other purposes like recognizing advertisements on TV.While the ability for Shazam to figure out which song is playing is neat, well go out on a limb and say its actually Shazams ability to recognize any audio that Apple is so interested in.Not only can Apple use Shazam-compatible audio in its own advertisements, but it can also sink its teeth into the advertising dollars of any other company that wants to do the same.2.
Apple Music might develop a memoryOne of Shazams most useful skills is that it can remember songs youve asked it about, keeping them stored in a neat list that you can go back to later.Once Apple and Shazam become one and the same, this list could integrate with Apple Music, and the service could create a playlist of songs youve asked about.3.
Shazam creates a funnel to Apple MusicAs far as we know, Apple has no plans to take down the Shazam app that has 120 million active users and who use the app 20 million times each day.That wouldnt make a whole lot of business sense.What it will do, likely, is use the service to funnel users exclusively to Apple Music.
That might scare off some Shazam users who enjoy the egalitarian-ness of the platform, but it could also drum up even more Apple Music users while reducing traffic to the competition.4.
Apple wants to own the music pipelineBarring Apple purchasing a record label, Apple is closer than its ever been to owning the music pipeline.
Think about it.
Youll hear a song somewhere that you like.
Youll pull out your iPhone to identify it using Apple-owned Shazam, before opening it in Apple Music.Heck, you might even use a pair of Beats headphones to listen to the song after youve found it on Apple Music creating an end-to-end experience thats entirely owned by Apple.5.
The data Apple collects will be immenseThe thing about acquisitions is that a company isnt just buying intellectual property its buying all the data theyve ever collected, too.To a company like Apple, that data could be incredibly useful, potentially helping them identify which songs have the least recognition but immense popularity.
This data could help Apple decide which music to put in front of your face when you check Apple Music, and it could give Apple the information it needs to help them sell you more music in the future.Apply this process to all of Shazams 120 million active users and youd have a massive data pool thats only going to get deeper as Shazam gets deeper integrated into Apple Music.21987f49274b9c1a64fe9f1ea3cb3b2e.jpg#