AT A GLANCE

Spotify
Klarna
2006
Founded
2005
Stockholm, Sweden
HQ
Stockholm, Sweden
$2.7 billion
Total Raised
$4.6 Billion
Daniel Ek, Martin Lorentzon
Founder
Sebastian Siemiatkowski
Streaming
Type
Fintech
Public (NYSE: SPOT)
Status
Public (NYSE: KLAR)

FUNDING HISTORY

Spotify

Series A2008
$22M raised
Series B2010
$50M raised$250M val.
Series C2011
$100M raised$1.0B val.
Series D2013
$250M raised$4.0B val.
Series G2015
$526M raised$8.5B val.
Direct Listing2018
$0 raised$30.0B val.

Klarna

Series A2010
$9M raised$40M val.
Series C2014
$155M raised$1.5B val.
Series D2017
$225M raised$2.5B val.
Series E2019
$460M raised$5.5B val.
Series F2021
$1.0B raised$46.0B val.
Down Round2022
$800M raised$6.7B val.
IPO2025
$1.5B raised$15.0B val.

BUSINESS MODEL

Spotify

Spotify operates on a freemium model. The free tier is ad-supported — users listen with periodic audio and display ads.

Spotify Premium costs $11.99/month (individual) for ad-free listening, offline downloads, higher audio quality, and on-demand playback. Family ($19.99/month) and Student ($5.99/month) plans drive additional subscriptions.

Duo ($16.99/month) covers two people.

The economics are challenging by design. Spotify pays roughly 70% of revenue to rights holders — record labels, publishers, and distributors.

This means for every dollar Spotify earns, about 70 cents goes back to the music industry before Spotify pays for anything else. Gross margins have historically been around 25-28% — razor thin compared to software companies that keep 70-80%.

Podcasting was supposed to fix the margin problem. Spotify spent over $1 billion acquiring podcast companies (Gimlet, Anchor, Parcast) and signing exclusive deals (Joe Rogan for reportedly $200 million+).

The logic: podcasts don't have the same royalty obligations as music, so margins are dramatically better. Results have been mixed — podcasting revenue is growing but hasn't transformed the overall margin structure yet.

Klarna

Klarna makes money from merchant fees and consumer interest. Merchants pay Klarna 3-6% of each transaction — they're willing to pay because Klarna increases conversion rates by 30%+ and average order values by 45%.

On "Pay in 4" (interest-free installments), Klarna makes money purely from merchant fees. On longer financing (6-36 months), Klarna charges consumers interest up to 25% APR.

Klarna also earns revenue from its shopping app (affiliate commissions when users discover and buy from merchants), and from its Klarna Card.

HOW THEY STARTED

Spotify

Daniel Ek was a teenage tech prodigy in Stockholm who had been running web businesses since age 14. By his early twenties, he'd already made money from several ventures and retired briefly at 23 — then got bored.

Martin Lorentzon, co-founder of the digital marketing company Tradedoubler, was looking for his next venture. They met and bonded over a shared observation: people were pirating music because paying for it was terrible, not because they didn't want to pay.

In 2006, the music industry was in freefall. Napster had been shut down, but LimeWire, BitTorrent, and dozens of piracy tools had taken its place.

CD sales had dropped 40% from their peak. The record labels' strategy was suing individual downloaders — literally taking grandmothers to court for sharing files.

It wasn't working.

Ek and Lorentzon founded Spotify in 2006 with a radical proposition: make a legal streaming service that was better than piracy. Faster, easier, higher quality, and free (with ads) or cheap (with a subscription).

The technical challenge was making songs play instantly — no buffering, no lag. Ek's engineering team built a peer-to-peer caching system that made playback feel instantaneous.

They launched in Sweden in 2008, expanded across Europe, and finally reached the US in 2011 after two years of negotiating licensing deals with major labels.

Klarna

Sebastian Siemiatkowski, Niklas Adalberth, and Victor Jacobsson were students at the Stockholm School of Economics. In 2005, they entered a startup competition with an idea: let people buy things online and pay later.

At the time, online shopping was still new and most people were terrified of entering their credit card details on the internet. The idea was simple — Klarna would pay the merchant immediately, and the customer would get an invoice with 14-30 days to pay.

The competition judges hated it. The idea was dismissed as financially irresponsible and the team didn't win.

But Siemiatkowski pressed on. Swedish e-commerce was growing fast and merchants were desperate for any way to reduce cart abandonment.

Klarna's "pay after delivery" model was a hit because it shifted the risk — customers could receive the product, try it on, and only pay for what they kept.

The first customers were Swedish e-commerce merchants selling fashion and home goods. Klarna handled the invoicing, fraud detection, and collections.

Merchants saw conversion rates jump because customers were more willing to buy when they didn't have to pay immediately.

HOW THEY GREW

Spotify

Spotify grew by being better than piracy. The free tier was the Trojan horse — give people unlimited legal music for free, then convert them to paying subscribers over time.

The conversion rate from free to Premium hovers around 40%, which is extraordinary for a freemium product.

Playlist culture became the growth engine. Spotify didn't just offer music — it offered curation.

Discover Weekly, Release Radar, and editorially curated playlists like RapCaviar became cultural institutions. Getting on a major Spotify playlist could make an unknown artist famous overnight.

This gave Spotify power over music discovery that radio stations used to have.

International expansion was methodical and effective. Spotify launched country by country, negotiating local licensing deals and adapting content.

They're now in 184 markets. In markets where piracy was rampant (Latin America, Southeast Asia), the free tier was particularly effective — it gave people a legal alternative that felt just as good as stealing.

Klarna

Klarna grew by being embedded at checkout. The strategy was to sign up the biggest online retailers and become a payment option alongside Visa and PayPal.

Once Klarna was at checkout, consumers discovered it organically. The "Pay in 4" button became ubiquitous across fashion, electronics, and home goods retailers.

The Klarna app became a growth engine beyond checkout. By building a shopping app where users could browse products, discover deals, and track deliveries, Klarna turned from a payment method into a shopping destination.

The app has 35+ million monthly active users who start their shopping journey inside Klarna before even visiting a retailer.

International expansion was aggressive. Starting in Sweden, Klarna rolled out across Europe, then into the US, UK, and Australia.

The US became the biggest growth market — American consumers were especially receptive to Pay in 4 as an alternative to credit cards. By 2023, Klarna had 34 million US users.

THE HARD PART

Spotify

The music label dependency is structural and permanent. Universal Music Group, Sony Music, and Warner Music control roughly 70% of all music.

Spotify cannot exist without their catalogs. This gives the labels enormous leverage in licensing negotiations.

They can (and do) demand higher royalty rates, and Spotify has limited ability to push back. Spotify's margins are essentially set by the labels.

Artist relations are perpetually contentious. Taylor Swift pulled her music from Spotify in 2014 (she returned in 2017).

Artists regularly complain about low per-stream payouts — at $0.003 per stream, an artist needs roughly 350,000 streams to earn the equivalent of a minimum-wage monthly salary. The "Spotify doesn't pay artists fairly" narrative is a constant PR headache, even though Spotify has paid over $40 billion to rights holders cumulatively.

Apple Music is the premium competitor. Apple bundles Music with its hardware ecosystem and Apple One subscription.

They pay slightly more per stream and don't have a free tier diluting revenue. Apple doesn't need Music to be profitable — it's a retention tool for the iPhone ecosystem.

Spotify has to be profitable as a standalone business, which is fundamentally harder.

Klarna

The valuation collapse was humiliating. Klarna raised at a $46 billion valuation from SoftBank in 2021.

One year later, they raised a down round at $6.7 billion — an 85% haircut. It was the most dramatic valuation drop in fintech history.

Employee stock options were underwater. Siemiatkowski had to lay off 10% of the workforce.

The entire BNPL category went from hot to radioactive in months.

Credit losses are the existential risk. Klarna is lending money to consumers who want to buy things they can't afford to pay for right now.

When the economy slows, defaults rise. Klarna's credit losses hit $1 billion in 2022.

The company had to tighten underwriting significantly and pull back from riskier markets. The tension between growth (approve more loans) and profitability (reject risky borrowers) defines every quarter.

The IPO in 2025 was a comeback story but with caveats. Klarna went public at $15 billion — a major recovery from the $6.7 billion trough but still less than a third of its 2021 peak.

The company finally turned profitable by slashing costs with AI (replacing hundreds of customer service agents with AI chatbots) and tightening credit standards. But investors remain cautious about the BNPL model's long-term sustainability.

THE PRODUCTS

Spotify

Spotify Premium — the flagship subscription with ad-free music, offline listening, and on-demand playback across 184 markets worldwide. Spotify Free — the ad-supported tier that serves as the world's largest music discovery and conversion funnel.

Spotify for Podcasters (formerly Anchor) — the platform where creators host, distribute, and monetize podcasts. Hosts over 6 million podcast titles.

Spotify Wrapped — the annual personalized year-in-review feature that goes massively viral every December. Essentially free global marketing.

Discover Weekly — an algorithmically generated playlist delivered every Monday with 30 personalized song recommendations. Over 8 billion streams since launch.

Klarna

Pay in 4 is the signature product — split any purchase into four interest-free payments over six weeks. Pay in 30 lets customers receive the product first and pay within 30 days.

Financing offers longer-term payment plans with interest for larger purchases. The Klarna App is a shopping destination — browse deals, track orders, manage payments, and earn cashback.

The Klarna Card is a physical Visa card that lets users Pay in 4 anywhere. Klarna Creator is a platform for influencers to earn commissions sharing products.

Klarna AI is their customer service chatbot that handles two-thirds of support queries.

WHO BACKED THEM

Spotify

Tencent invested $1 billion and holds a significant stake through a share swap arrangement. Technology Crossover Ventures led early rounds.

Accel Partners, Kleiner Perkins, and Goldman Sachs participated in growth funding. DST Global invested pre-IPO.

Spotify went public through a direct listing in April 2018 (not a traditional IPO — no new shares were sold, existing shares just started trading on the NYSE). The reference price was $132 per share, valuing the company at roughly $30 billion.

Klarna

Sequoia Capital, SoftBank, Silver Lake, GIC, Atomico, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Heartland

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