Customer stories

Spotify: Turning up the volume with Adyen

How payments helped to fuel the growth of one of the world's most popular music streaming services.

March 7th, 2017
 ·  4 minutes
Group of young adults gathered on a city street at night.
Spotify video case study

How does a fast-growing subscription-based business such as Spotify approach payments?

"At Spotify we see payments as enabling us to sell the right product for the right duration at the right price point. To help us achieve this, the payments team sits in the business team and is focused on growth and optimisation.

"That means we are involved in and connected to the product team for the payment experience, the finance team for operation and costs, and the customer service team to ensure that people are delighted by our payment experience.

"This is different from some companies in which payments sits in the finance function because they’re heavily focused on costs, and in other businesses in which payments sits in the product organisation because they’re heavily focused on the user experience and how you go through the checkout.

"Seeing payments as a driver and enabler of growth has really helped us reach the fifty million plus paying subscribers that we have today."

How do you see the role of customer experience in relation to payments?

"Customer experience is key. When somebody comes to your website to buy a product from you, you need to ensure it is super clear and delivers a great experience – as well as being able to convert through the checkout.

"Optimising the checkout flow with Adyen has been a big focus for us – for example, we went from a two-page checkout to a one-page checkout because we were able to leverage some of the technologies Adyen has while still outsourcing most requirements related to PCI compliance. In fact, we solved quite a few things around the customer experience with the Adyen integration.

"Another interesting example of improving the customer experience is when we recently launched in Indonesia with cash-based, ATM, and bank transferpayment methods. This was really important since the market is still primarily cash-based, card penetration is low, and people aren’t used to recurring subscriptions. This was the first time where the payment experience was actually a key part of the launch story for much of the local media."

What kind of fraud do you see with Spotify, and how do you manage it?

"As a digital goods merchant we see a whole range of different types of fraud, with a significant amount around card testing and scripting on our web property, but also genuine card fraud. Regardless of the type of fraud, a key challenge to solve is around optimising false positives – the balance between approving genuine transactions that look suspicious and blocking fraud.

"We rely heavily on Adyen RevenueProtect to solve fraud for us. But going forward we want to combine what Adyen gives us with a lot more of our own internal information on who our customers are and who our potential customers might be. If we combine those two things we can really optimise to minimise false positives.

What is a key difference between subscription payments and one-off transactions?

"It’s super important for us as a subscription business to make sure that recurring payments are successful. So we need to minimise involuntary churn – that is to say, churn that happens due to payment failure.

"We do this in a couple of different ways – one is by having rules in place to retry transactions that fail and then retry specific transaction failure reasons, and the other is by relying quite heavily on Adyen’s internal retry logic to maximise our retry success rates. We’ve seen significant improvements in our overall authorisation rates on recurring subscriptions through that combined approach."

What are some of the ways you have used data to drive conversion?

"A good example of how we are using data to drive growth is in Mexico. Previously, we were processing payments cross-border, which resulted in relatively low authorisation rates. But by having local acquiring and processing with Adyen, we’ve been able to significantly increase those authorisation rates.

"This means that check out conversion is higher and ultimately we grow faster in the market. Currently, we use Adyen for domestic acquiring in markets including the US, Spain, France, and Australia."

Fresh insights, straight to your inbox

Subscribe to email alerts

By submitting your information you confirm that you have read Adyen's Privacy Policy and agree to the use of your data in all Adyen communications.