Can you name playlists on Spotify?

I still remember the first playlist I helped name at Spotify. Im a UX Writer on the Personalization team at Spotify and naming communicating what a playlist is is a big part of what I do. A product manager, a designer, and I held a quick brainstorm. We set a three-minute timer on my iPhone, threw names up on a whiteboard [with one rule: no such thing as a bad idea], and then talked through our ideas. That brainstorming led to what would eventually be called Family Mix, and what would be our first ever Namestorm.

It was a scrappy process, but it worked. Brainstorming [or Namestorming] is still at the heart of how we name personalized playlists at Spotify, but as the number of made-for-you playlists has grown, we realized our process for naming them needed to evolve, too. We needed to think of our entire ecosystem of personalized sets, how the names would work together, and determine a way to document all the thought that went into this process.

Our world of personalized playlists

There are over 4 billion playlists to choose from on Spotify. Some are made by Spotify users, some created by our own-in-house music experts called editors, and some are a blend of human expertise and algorithms.

The Personalization [PZN] team, has its own portfolio of playlists that are made just for you, like Discover Weekly, Daily Mix, Release Radar, and Your Top Songs. These playlists are created by algorithms and assessed by humans before you listen to them on Spotify.

Once these playlists are created and the content in it is approved, the playlist's cover art, description, and name are key to communicating what it is and why you should listen to it.

Whats in a name?

A name needs to be memorable and engaging, but it also has to function. The names of our personalized playlists need to give a glimpse of whats inside that magic package of songs [or podcasts!]. A personalized playlist name needs to:

Describe whats in the playlist

A playlist can contain music, podcasts, or a mix of both. The name needs to give some signal to that, and whether the music in it is new or familiar to you.

Help you decide if you want to listen to it

Some playlists are meant to give you a feeling of nostalgia [Time Capsule] while others aim to give you info, like the latest headlines [Daily Drive]. The name should give you some indication of the type of audio in the playlist in order to help you make a decision.

Let you know its made for you

Your used to be our go-to for letting listeners know a playlist was made for them, like Your Discover Weekly, Your Daily Mix, or Your Release Radar. But as we created more and more personalized playlists, Your became so overused it lost its meaning. It became repetitive, inconsistent, and was causing translation issues. So were dropping Your from almost all of our made for you playlist names [you may have even noticed!]. We know there are other ways to communicate personalization like showing an image of an artist thats familiar to you:

Digging in

So how do we approach naming? The heart of our process is still a Namestorm, just like we originally did way back for Family Mix. But the process has become more thorough and detailed, with more work put in before and after the Namestorm.

The process has four parts:

  • Goals and values: Setting the foundation

We always start with the goal for the playlist: Why were creating it and why its good for our listeners. This helps focus on and prioritize an approach. Whats most important to emphasize in that name? Is it the update cadence [Daily Mix], a special time or moment [Summer Rewind], or a habit or routine [Daily Wellness]?

  • Namestorming: No such thing as a bad idea

When it comes to Namestorming, think blue sky, but stick to the approaches you identified before the Namestorm to give some guidance.

A Namestorm can be done as a team or solo. Either way, its straightforward: timebox yourself to a few minutes and brainstorm any names that can fit the playlist. Jot them down on a whiteboard, stickies, in a doc just get what pops into your brain down. Even ideas that seem crazy can often be the spark that helps get that name thats just right.

Once you have your brain dump of ideas [the bigger the better!], organize names by theme and narrow down potential names and list the pros and cons of each. I list ours out in an actual table to compare and make it easier to share with my team.

  • Naming in real life: Consider the narrative

One of the most useful exercises may sound a little weird, but I promise it works. Think about write about how a name youre seriously considering might fit into the real world. Imagine how you might describe it to a friend, how it'd appear in a Tweet, or how itd sound as a headline. This was a step Id do for my own benefit, but I now include it in our naming decks. Turns out stakeholders love to see how this plays out.

  • Research it: Listening to our listeners

Lastly, we cant forget what may be the most important piece of naming feedback from Spotify listeners. In research sessions, we can get feedback on our narrowed-down list of names or even ask participants what theyd name a playlist. The best thing about usability testing is we can show the playlist in context; how theyd see it in the app. Weve also run quick naming surveys with users if we cant come to a consensus on a name.

Wrapping it up

Next steps! Ideally, you come out of this process with that perfect name for your playlist and can walk away from it all patting yourself on the back. But in all honesty, that rarely happens.

Its hard to get consensus on a single name. From product to marketing to legal to translations teams, everyone wants [and should have] input on a playlist name. But we always get there, and having the process and thoughts documented in an artefact [our artefact is just a low-fidelity deck] is so useful.

Its a creative process, and any creative process takes time and a lot of work. But its worth it names [whether its a playlist, a feature, or a product] are so very important to making a good experience for your users. When the process seems tough, I just think back to some of the early names that almost made it onto playlists if we didnt have this process in place [ Your Current Obsession, BackTracks, and Blast Off ] and it reminds me that its worth the time and effort.

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