Apple has announced that coming in June it will completely revamp Apple Music to make the streaming service more intuitive for subscribers. These changes will come in the wake of complaints of user confusion and disinterest.

Though it has scored deals with big name artists like Drake and Taylor Swift, Apple Music has been unable to draw the same volume of subscribers that its main competitor, Spotify, has been able to amass without the added benefit of exclusive artist promotion rights.  Apple blames this lacking on ineffective promotion and the inability to properly integrate management from its 2014 purchase of Beats into the company.

iStock_000081844365_MediumIn addition to re-designing Apple Music, it is also likely Apple will be removing “Connect,” the company’s latest attempt at installing a social network within its subscription music service. Though some artists post and send updates out on Connect, their attempts to connect with audiences have gained little traction. Furthermore, Apple has announced no new updates to Connect for this year, signaling the company may be losing faith in the service’s ability to meet user needs.

This would not be the first time Apple has let an attempt at a social network fail. The company’s 2010 effort, iTunes Ping, was met with a similarly lackluster response and Apple killed it in 2012.

“We tried Ping and the customer voted and said, this isn’t something I want to put a lot of energy into. Some customers love it, but there’s not a huge number that do,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said.

As a whole, Apple Music has disappointed its users. Complaints of erased music and a confusing interface have plagued the service. If the June version does not fix these problems, Apple Music service may be doomed to fail entirely.