Home Digital Audio and Radio Spotify Acquires MightyTV To Double Down On Programmatic And Personalization

Spotify Acquires MightyTV To Double Down On Programmatic And Personalization

SHARE:

Spotify revealed Monday it had acquired content recommendation engine MightyTV to further personalize its ad delivery capabilities. Read the release.

MightyTV founder and CEO Brian Adams will join Spotify as VP of technology. His eight employees will also join, and MightyTV will cease to exist as its own brand.

Spotify declined to share the terms of the deal.

Adams’ role is newly created, but it’s been open for some time, said Jason Richman, VP of product at Spotify. Spotify acqui-hired MightyTV’s team because of its technology as well as Adams’ history as founder and CTO of Admeld and as a product chief at Google.

“We’ve just been looking for a unicorn to fill [the role],” Richman said. “When it comes to attracting ad tech talent, there are few that have Brian’s pedigree.”

Adams launched MightyTV last April to help consumers consolidate movies and TV shows available on subscription video platforms like Netflix, HBO, Amazon and Hulu. The app offered a Tinder-like experience for users, who could swipe right (yay) or left (nay) until they found the movie or show they wanted to watch.

At Spotify, MightyTV’s technology will be applied to help the music streaming platform serve more relevant ads to users.

“It’s general-purpose tech,” Richman said. “Recommending traffic to the right user at the right time is the same technological problem as recommending the right marketing message.”

Spotify will integrate MightyTV’s recommendation engine with its proprietary data management platform, allowing Spotify’s ad products team to leverage listener data and other third-party assets to serve personalized ads to users programmatically.

Spotify has touted its personalization capabilities in the past, such as its ability to tailor ads to consumers based on the moments they experience on the platform in real time. But companies have to constantly innovate on personalization to stay competitive.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

“It’s not a specific gap we’re looking to plug as much as accelerating what we can do in this space,” Richman said. “When it comes to personalized recs, you can never be too good.”

Spotify launched its programmatic audio offering last July. Richman declined to comment on how much Spotify is spending on developing programmatic audio capabilities but said it takes the “lion’s share” of investment.

“As far as where we’re spending our time and attention from an innovation perspective, it’s audio first,” he said. “We need to position ourselves such that audio is seen a first-class digital format so that when those dollars start to transition, we’re well positioned to capture them.”

Programmatic sales in general are “far and away our fastest growth channel,” Richman said, although he declined to provide numbers. Programmatic sales are led by display, and followed by video and audio.

“Audio is a nascent space that we’re developing, but it’s forming way quicker than expected,” he said. “It’s one thing to lay the pipes, but it’s another to build and generate demand in the marketplace.”

MightyTV will help Spotify understand when and where to push promotional messages for concerts, albums or artists based on listenership data. It will also help Spotify better market its own brand messaging to upsell users to its on-demand subscription product, Richman said.

“We see Spotify the marketer as the best first customer for everything we build on behalf of brands,” he said. “If we can super-serve our own needs, we’ll be well positioned to satisfy the needs of performance marketers in the future.”

The acquisition is also part of a broader push at Spotify to make its ad-supported product a premium experience for users rather than just an upsell.

“Stage one of our ads engineering mission was to keep free free, as it was a critical funnel to paid,” Richman said. “As of last year, we’ve doubled down on the [ad-supported] business in the hopes of establishing it as a standout standalone. This marks the latest investment in that area.”

Must Read

Gamera Raises $1.6 Million To Protect The Open Web’s Media Quality

Gamera, a media quality measurement startup for publishers, announced on Tuesday it raised $1.6 million to promote its service that combines data about a site’s ad experience with data about how its ads perform.

Jamie Seltzer, global chief data and technology officer, Havas Media Network, speaks to AdExchanger at CES 2026.

CES 2026: What’s Real – And What’s BS – When It Comes To AI

Ad industry experts call out trends to watch in 2026 and separate the real AI use cases having an impact today from the AI hype they heard at CES.

New Startup Pinch AI Tackles The Growing Problem Of Ecommerce Return Scams

Fraud is eating into retail profits. A new startup called Pinch AI just launched with $5 million in funding to fight back.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
Comic: Shopper Marketing Data

CPG Data Seller SPINS Moves Into Media With MikMak Acquisition

On Wednesday, retail and CPG data company SPINS added a new piece with its acquisition of MikMak, a click-to-buy ad tech and analytics startup that helps optimize their commerce media.

How Valvoline Shifted Marketing Gears When It Became A Pure-Play Retail Brand

Believe it or not, car oil change service company Valvoline is in the midst of a fascinating retail marketing transformation.

AdExchanger's Big Story podcast with journalistic insights on advertising, marketing and ad tech

The Big Story: Live From CES 2026

Agents, streamers and robots, oh my! Live from the C-Space campus at the Aria Casino in Las Vegas, our team breaks down the most interesting ad tech trends we saw at CES this year.