Users can type prompts such as requests for explainers, daily briefings, or topic summaries. Spotify’s system then generates a narrated audio episode that appears in the user’s Spotify library alongside regular podcasts and music, making it playable across devices like any other show.
Key capabilities include:
The feature is designed primarily for Spotify Premium subscribers and is initially rolling out to U.S. users, with early access tied to the new Studio by Spotify Labs environment.
Spotify also introduced an in‑episode AI Q&A feature that lets listeners ask questions about the podcast they’re currently playing. Instead of searching elsewhere, users can request clarification or extra context directly inside the Spotify app.
For example, a listener might ask about a concept mentioned in the episode, request more details about a guest, or look for related content recommendations. The system responds in real time based on the episode’s content.
Spotify says this feature is rolling out immediately to Premium mobile users in the U.S., Sweden, and Ireland.
The goal is to make podcasts more interactive and conversational, allowing listeners to dig deeper without leaving the listening experience.
Alongside these features, Spotify announced Studio by Spotify Labs, a standalone desktop application designed to create personalized audio experiences.
The app acts as an AI production environment capable of generating podcasts, briefings, or playlists tailored to a user’s interests and digital context. With user permission, it can connect to sources such as:
Using that context, Studio can research topics, organize information, and transform it into listenable audio, similar to emerging AI briefing tools that turn documents or research into podcast‑style narration.
Spotify says the app will launch in beta for U.S. users, with availability beginning the month after the Investor Day announcement.
These tools fit into a broader strategy presented during Investor Day: moving from algorithmic recommendations toward AI‑driven creation and personalization.
Spotify executives emphasized that the company’s advantage lies in combining general AI models with its massive dataset of listening behavior. Spotify’s systems analyze trillions of taste signals daily to understand how users interact with music, podcasts, and audiobooks.
This data foundation enables experiences where users can directly instruct the platform to generate audio tailored to their interests, rather than simply browsing existing content.
Podcasts remain central to that strategy. Spotify reported that more than 500 million users have streamed a video podcast on the platform, highlighting strong engagement with the format.
At the same time, leadership positioned the company’s long‑term ambition as dramatically expanding its global reach, with growth trends putting Spotify on a path toward one billion users over time.
Taken together, the new features suggest a fundamental shift in Spotify’s product vision.
Instead of being only a streaming service that distributes creator‑made shows, Spotify is experimenting with becoming a platform where:
If widely adopted, that model would turn podcasts into a personalized information layer, blending streaming media with AI assistants and automated content creation.
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