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Netflix Touts Record 7.7% Share Of Total TV Viewing In June, Defends Binge-Release Model

Posted on 7/19/22 at 5:46 pm
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
68325 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 5:46 pm
quote:

Netflix jumped ahead of Thursday’s planned release by Nielsen of monthly viewership through TV sets, revealed in its second-quarter shareholder letter today that its share of total TV viewing in the U.S. hit an all-time high of 7.7% in June, up from 6.6% in June 2021.

The stat, which is expected to be part of Nielsen’s monthly report on the overall TV and streaming field, proves “our ability to grow our engagement share as we continue to improve our service,” the company wrote in the letter.

“While we always have room to improve, we’re very pleased with how far we’ve come in providing so much satisfaction and enjoyment to our members,” it said. “In the U.S., which is one of the most competitive markets in the world, we drew more TV viewing time than any other outlet during the 2021-22 TV season.” The letter included a chart showing Netflix at 1.334 trillion minutes of streaming, dwarfing second-place CBS, which had 753 billion minutes of viewing.

Stranger Things, the start to whose fourth season set a Nielsen record with 7.2 billion minutes of streaming from May 30 to June 5, along with and widely seen titles like The Lincoln Lawyer and Adam Sandler basketball drama Hustle, drove tune-in during the month.

How release strategy correlates with tune-in continues to be the subject of vigorous debate. While Netflix’s signature binge-release strategy — a marked contrast with the typically one-episode-at-a-time method of Disney+, Apple TV+, HBO Max and other rivals — has served it well by some measures for the past decade, skeptics have questioned the company’s insistence on it during such a reversal of fortune for Netflix. The company has now lost more than 1 million subscribers in the first half of 2022 compared with a gain of 26 million in the first half of 2020. Why keep burning off all of that programming, the criticism goes, when a phenomenon like Stranger Things could become a two-month orgy of publicity and word of mouth?

In the shareholder letter, the company appeared to push back and defend its methodology, though it did not draw attention to the fact that both Ozark and Stranger Things had staggered rollouts of their most recent seasons.

“As a pure play streaming business, we’re unencumbered by legacy revenue streams,” the letter said. “This freedom means we can offer big movies direct-to-Netflix, without the need for extended or exclusive theatrical windows, and let members binge watch TV if they want, without having to wait for a new episode to drop each week. This focus on choice and control for members influences all aspects of our strategy, creating what we believe to be a significant long term business advantage.”



Deadline
Posted by Cosmo
glassman's guest house
Member since Oct 2003
125807 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 5:57 pm to
Stranger Things is gone for now

Their numbers will drop bigly

I just cancelled
Posted by Lsut81
Member since Jun 2005
82819 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 6:00 pm to
quote:

Stranger Things is gone for now Their numbers will drop bigly I just cancelled


I’d imagine a lot will… don’t see how they predicted such massive losses, knowing tons would sign up/keep until last two episodes dropped in July.
Posted by Proximo
Member since Aug 2011
20133 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 6:00 pm to
quote:

The company has now lost more than 1 million subscribers in the first half of 2022

Burying the lead there don’t you think
Posted by PNW_TigerSaint
Member since Oct 2016
1209 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 6:02 pm to
I'm a fan of the bing-release model. Wish all of the streaming services did that.
Posted by Jsand43
Member since May 2021
882 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 6:04 pm to
I like the binge release model also, but obviously it's not working for Netflix.
Posted by TheQuestioner
Member since Jul 2022
115 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 6:04 pm to
quote:

Their numbers will drop bigly


They're projecting a net increase for next quarter.

I suspect their numbers won't drop that significantly - they actually gained subscribers outside of the US/Europe.

I think their numbers will drop slightly but not as much as people think.

Stranger Things only had 2.9 billion minutes of viewing time. When total viewership was around 1.3 trillion, 2.9 billion suggests most viewers aren't watching Stranger Things (it's still the most popular show for sure BUT I'd still estimate that most people are subscribed for more than Stranger Things).

I'm subscribed to Netflix for their true crime documentaries and other documentaries. I can't get enough of them.


Posted by 225rumpshaker
Texas
Member since Sep 2006
11059 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 6:05 pm to
I like the binge release model, it’s just a shame that a lot of the truly original content is garbage. Not talking about the right to distribute “original content” like Derry girls.

Honestly Netflix is kind of shite at coming up with good series or movie ideas. But I will give them credit, they are good at identifying content from other countries that is niche that will be well received.
Posted by TheQuestioner
Member since Jul 2022
115 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 6:06 pm to
They raised prices by 10% in the US/Europe.

To only lose 0.5% of your subscriber base while increasing prices by 10% suggests that most people are still retaining Netflix.

It suggests that there's still capacity to raise prices even further, retain their subscribers, and actually start making larger profits.

Netflix in fact has the lowest churn rate of any streaming service in the US (Apple+ has the highest churn rate), which means people who are subscribed rarely leave the platform.
Posted by BlackAdam
Member since Jan 2016
6868 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 7:13 pm to
Netflix won't exist in ten years.
Posted by kciDAtaE
Member since Apr 2017
16820 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 7:28 pm to
quote:

Stranger Things is gone for now Their numbers will drop bigly


Is ST really that popular? What is its target demographic?
Posted by 225rumpshaker
Texas
Member since Sep 2006
11059 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 8:02 pm to
quote:

Is ST really that popular? What is its target demographic?
Apparently my older two children and myself.

So preteen through late 30’s.

The music this year was pretty awesome since it was set in my childhood of the mid to late 80’s
Posted by Jay Are
Baton Rouge
Member since Nov 2014
5509 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 10:13 pm to
quote:

I just cancelled


Cool. Even with losing subs, Netflix has many times more viewing hours than any other streaming service. They're the only streaming service that actually makes money right now. They don't need to defend anything.

Many of us here don't like or don't care about their programming. The world at large still isn't turning it off.
Posted by Jay Are
Baton Rouge
Member since Nov 2014
5509 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 10:15 pm to
quote:

The company has now lost more than 1 million subscribers in the first half of 2022


Burying the lead there don’t you think


No. One of the recent episodes of The Town podcast covered this. As netflix and Disney move to advertising models, subscriber numbers matter less. What matters more is viewing time. The advertisers care how many minutes per day they can reach potential customers.
Posted by kciDAtaE
Member since Apr 2017
16820 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 10:17 pm to
quote:

Apparently my older two children and myself.


So in your case, Families. Correct?
Are you cancelling Netflix?
Posted by Midget Death Squad
Meme Magic
Member since Oct 2008
27032 posts
Posted on 7/19/22 at 10:42 pm to
quote:

subscriber numbers matter less. What matters more is viewing time. The advertisers care how many minutes per day they can reach potential customers.



100% accurate. The subs are important, sure, but their main target to bring profit is clicks and viewing hours.
Posted by smash williams
San Diego
Member since Apr 2009
20351 posts
Posted on 7/20/22 at 12:47 am to
quote:

Many of us here don't like or don't care about their programming. The world at large still isn't turning it off


Probably because of the streaming options internationally. I can’t use Hulu when I’m out of the country and Prime content is limited when not in the States.

I’m still interested in what their global numbers are though because I’ve met several people that use pirated streaming sites instead. When I told them I pay for several streaming platforms they looked at me like I was crazy.
Posted by 225rumpshaker
Texas
Member since Sep 2006
11059 posts
Posted on 7/20/22 at 6:03 am to
quote:

So in your case, Families. Correct? Are you cancelling Netflix?
No my children have a lot of series on Netflix they watch, content catalog is pretty large for them.

I still have to finish peaky blinders as well.
Posted by Brettesaurus Rex
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2009
38261 posts
Posted on 7/20/22 at 6:59 am to
quote:

I'm a fan of the bing-release model. Wish all of the streaming services did that.

I am…but also not.
Certain shows that I go more than a year between watching seasons of I don’t remember much of any of the nuance or finer detail on.

I reeeeally like what they did with Stranger Things splitting up in two. I think the bigger story here is not necessarily just the binge model, but, the general freedom to release content in the format you please.

Want to release 4 then 2? Sure. All at once? Sure. Three sets of episodes in a trilogy? Sure. I want to see more creativity in that regard frankly.
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