It may not be enough for the electric car company Tesla to take on the giants of Detroit, like General Motors and Ford. The Palo Alto-based automaker is said to be exploring its very own music streaming service too, a move that would pit the company against market leader Spotify,
Tesla wants to develop its own music service
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Tech entrepreneur Elon Musk is looking to create something different. Photo / Getty Images
As Tesla considers a dive into the battle royale already playing out in the streaming market, it confronts the loyalties and habits of music subscribers, whose time and effort spent curating playlists and radio stations might make them harder to convert.
"Not only will Tesla need to focus on what a great in-car experience looks like, it will have to build a multi platform user experience that competes with the best-in-class mobile experiences like Spotify's," Mulligan said. "Tesla users will have little interest in having to use one streaming service in the car and one everywhere else, having to build two sets of playlists and cloud libraries etc."
Compounding this challenge is the question of Tesla's limited scale and the viability of building a new streaming product from scratch. Tesla counts about 100,000 customers compared to Spotify's 50 million subscribers. About 27 million users have used car systems integrated with the music service Pandora, for instance. And more than 200 car models allow drivers to control Pandora right from the dashboard, a company spokesperson said.
Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but a spokesperson told Recode, "We believe it's important to have an exceptional in-car experience so our customers can listen to the music they want from whatever source they choose."
As challenging as Tesla's move might appear, Jessica Caldwell, the director of industry analysis with the auto-research website Edmunds.com said it could play into Tesla's allure as a top-tier, innovative brand. "Tesla has a certain amount of cache they have built up over time, they have this cool factor that no other car company has," she said. A personalised music service also bolsters Tesla's mission of controlling the customer experience, and could further differentiate the company as competition for high-end electric cars intensifies.
But ultimately, even for Tesla, Caldwell is skeptical, given the level of difficulty of breaking into the music market. "For someone who is trying to do so many things, this seems like a bit of a stretch."