Why it matters: The widening gap between other entertainment apps and music and audio app sessions reflects a broader shift in consumer media engagement in a period of massive attention fragmentation.
- Nielsen reported that streaming reached a record share of TV viewing time in 2025, highlighting consumers’ growing preference for video-first experiences as music streaming enters a more mature phase defined by passive listening behaviors.
- Audio consumption remains strong, but is often relegated to background media. Nielsen’s audio research found Americans still spend nearly four hours daily consuming audio across radio, podcasts, streaming, and satellite, but streaming music represents only a fraction of total audio consumption as other formats compete for listening time.
Takeaways for marketers: The findings underscore how content format influences engagement quality, not just audience size. Consumers are concentrating time around video, streaming, and interactive experiences, while audio apps are increasingly becoming more relegated to background listening.
Longer sessions on entertainment apps create more opportunities for content consumption, ad exposure, and subscription value. The data suggests that consumers are spending more active and engaged time in other entertainment apps.
Music streaming growth, meanwhile, is increasingly coming from optimization and retention rather than large increases in user engagement as the format becomes a more passive, utility-like behavior. Audio apps also face growing competition from podcasts and short-form content.
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