Spotify has decided to become more than just a music app. With the introduction of its new DM feature for users aged 16+, it’s clear the platform wants to evolve into a space where music consumption blends seamlessly with social interaction. You no longer just stream; you connect, share, and build micro-communities around what you listen to.
Now here’s the question: should OTT platforms like Netflix and Prime Video attempt the same?
At first glance, it sounds like a neat idea. Imagine discussing Stranger Things directly inside Netflix, or debating James Gunn’s new Superman while you rent it on Prime Video. A built-in community where fans can react, recommend, and rave could add a whole new layer to streaming. After all, fandom thrives on conversation.
But here’s the problem, OTT isn’t music.
Streaming a three-minute song and dropping a quick emoji is effortless. Streaming a two-hour film and then debating it in-app?
That requires time, attention, and moderation. Unlike Spotify, where the “conversation” complements music discovery, an OTT conversation space risks being cluttered, toxic, or worse, a distraction from the actual product: the content itself.
There’s also the question of intent. People open Netflix or Prime Video to watch, not chat. They want escapism, not another inbox. OTT platforms are already juggling licensing headaches, pricing complaints, and user dissatisfaction with confusing models (remember Prime’s one-time rent at ₹499?). Adding a social layer could feel less like innovation and more like desperation to boost engagement metrics.
And let’s not forget, fandom conversations already happen elsewhere. X, Reddit, YouTube, Instagram, audiences don’t need Netflix to reinvent the wheel. In fact, the charm of these platforms is that they create a space outside of the corporate OTT bubble, where discourse feels freer and more authentic.
So should Netflix and Prime Video follow Spotify’s footsteps?
No, not unless they rethink their core value. Their challenge isn’t community, it’s affordability, accessibility, and trust. Before trying to become social apps, maybe they should focus on being better streaming platforms.