The news: YouTube Music is celebrating its 10-year anniversary with a slate of new features, bringing it closer to serving as a full Spotify replacement.
The additions:
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Taste Match. It blends multiple users’ interests and favorite songs into a single, shared playlist, similar to Spotify’s Blend offering.
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Badges. Top fans can display labels like “first to watch” and “top listener” on their profile, encouraging engagement.
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Album and playlist comments. These add a social layer to listening. Podcasts comments may also be on the way, per Android Authority.
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Bandsintown partnership. The collaboration lets users find upcoming concerts while watching music videos and Shorts.
The purpose: Beyond the common trend of platforms borrowing each other’s features, these updates will make YouTube Music a more social, community-driven space. That could open up new paths for brand discovery and content promotion.
- This push toward social listening will create new touchpoints for fan engagement and influencer-led campaigns.
- Brands could find opportunities for ad placement inside features like Taste Match playlists or comment sections.
Competitive pressure on Spotify is growing: YouTube Music is working to catch up with Spotify, which is the leading audio digital platform for 34% of US listeners over 12, per Edison. By comparison, YouTube Music is preferred by 21%.
YouTube Music is getting closer to narrowing the feature gap with Spotify by leaning on YouTube’s broader assets.
- Spotify is primarily an audio platform and doesn’t have the same video infrastructure or creator ecosystem that YouTube has.
- YouTube isn’t just copying Spotify’s Blend feature—it’s playing to its unique strengths by including social video (Shorts) and event discovery all in one place.
Our take: If YouTube continues bundling music with social and live event discovery, it could chip away at Spotify’s dominance, especially among younger, socially-driven users.
As music platforms evolve into social ecosystems, brand strategies should adapt from passive ad placements to active participation. Testing new ad formats in Taste Match playlists and comments could provide organic brand presence, while partnering with artists who already bridge YouTube’s properties opens access to engaged, music-first communities.