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Spotify Users Jump 3.4 Million to 5.3 Million In 1 Week Thanks To Facebook

This guest post comes from Eliot Van Buskirk of Evolver.fm. What’s cooler than three million monthly active users? Five million monthly active users. Spotify, which launched in America after a few. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2011/09/spotify-users-jump-34-million-to-53-million-

image from evolver.presscdn.com

This guest post comes from Eliot Van Buskirk of Evolver.fm.

What’s cooler than three million monthly active users? Five million monthly active users.

Spotify, which launched in America after a few modifications on July 14, saw monthly usage increase over 50 percent following the  September 22 Facebook F8 conference, where Spotify CEO and co-founder  Daniel Ek took the stage to talk about Spotify’s new integration with  Facebook.

click on charts to enlarge

On the day of the F8 announcement, approximately 3.4 million people had used Spotify so far that month according to AppData.  As of today, it lists Spotify as having about 5.3 million monthly  active users — an approximate 56 percent increase. That said, daily  usage has dipped since the announcement, possibly in part due to the  phenomenon we’re calling “Dissed Connections“:

image from evolver.presscdn.com

Obviously, this chart shows a big spike right after the announcement,  but more importantly, its new baseline appears higher than it was  before.

Like other music services including MOG, Rdio, and  Slacker, Spotify now adds your listening activity to your friends’  Facebook feeds, so they can listen to and comment on your songs (unless you don’t want it to). In retrospect, this came as no surprise, because the first time I met Daniel Ek, for breakfast in New York in July 2009, he told me he didn’t envision Spotify as a music social  network — instead, he said, he’d rather let someone else build the  social network. That someone turned out to be Facebook’s Mark  Zuckerberg.

Facebook integration seems to be working well for  Spotify based on its September numbers. Whether it can keep that up next  month is another story — and from where we’re sitting, largely depends  on whether Spotify can convince people to use its upcoming Private Listening feature when they don’t want to share, rather than disconnecting Spotify from Facebook permanently.

(Charts courtesy of AppData; thanks, Nate.)