Synthesis
What happens when an underdog becomes a hegemon? Rivaling David’s upset over Goliath, a DVD rental by mail company rode the booming steaming service business, and become a multibillion dollar company, capable of going blow for blow with the cable television industry. Netflix now has a dominant grasp on the streaming service industry, and is in the process of expanding worldwide. Additionally, Netflix’s creative apparatus created award winning original content that is further contributing to the continuous decline of cable companies. However, an anti-hegemonial coalition, looking at breaking Netflix’s share of the streaming service industry, has formed between Apple, Amazon, HBO, Hulu, and others. Pessimists have come knocking at
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Yet, consumers’ affliction for Netflix has not gone down. All due to brand recognition. In dissecting data from a survey of 2,500 consumers conducted by iModerate, Jason Lynch of Adweek wrote, “Consumers…believe [Netflix] will ultimately replace other entertainment options. At the same time, they can’t distinguish Amazon Prime Instant Video from Amazon Prime shipping”. In other words, consumers view Netflix as the streaming service at the forefront in the transition from cable television. Most importantly, if Amazon is viewed primarily through the lens of an online retailer, then Apple must be viewed as hardware company.
Alternatively, lets looks beyond Amazon and Apple’s lack of brand recognition in the streaming service industry and delve further into the brand that is Netflix. From college students using the application as a form of procrastination, and being the quintessential application to use for a date night, Netflix has constantly innovated the way individuals interact with it. Joe Nocera, writing for The New York Times, wrote that “[Netflix] invented the binge-streaming phenomenon when it became the first company to put a show’s entire season online at once, it then secured a place in the popular culture: “Netflix and chill”. In fact, “Netflix and chill” has become so ingrained in popular cultural that the then presidential campaign of Ted Cruz, without knowing properly what
Netflix was founded in 1997 with the intent to revolutionize the way in which consumers watch movies and television shows. Their accomplishments both in innovation and in customer base for their service indicate that the firm has been, and continues to be, successful in doing so. Currently, the
Blockbuster Entertainment, Inc. was once a highly successful and profitable brick and mortar home movie and video game rental store. At its peak in 2004, Blockbuster had up to 60,000 employees and more than 9,000 stores. The idea behind Netflix came from an unsatisfied, embarrassed customer of Blockbuster, Mr. Reed Hastings, now CEO of Netflix, paid a $40 late fee because he returned the movie Apollo 13 six weeks later (Zarafshar, 2013). He began to contemplate ingeniously about a notion to change the movie-leasing pattern into a more pioneering industry. In 1997 Netflix was started as a DVD rental-by-mail business without subscriptions. In 1999, taking a stride additional in the direction of evolving the industry, Hastings began the subscription-based business mode based on renting DVDs by mail with plans reliant on the quantity of titles taken at a time. Netflix put forward 120,000 titles for limitless monthly DVD rental with free shipping no late and per title fees. Since that time Netflix has become one of the most popular subscription services in the world, and is now valued at over $28 billion and steadily increasing. What factors contributed to the success and failure of these two companies?
In the book “David and Goliath Underdogs, Misfits, And the Art of Battling Giants”, written by Malcolm Gladwell, Gladwell depicts a story of Caroline Sacks’ college experience. To enumerate, Caroline Sacks was an intelligent student who was in love with science and whose dream college institution was to attend the Ivy League, Brown University. However, due to the fact that Brown is a very prestigious and very selective school, she applied to the University of Maryland as well; she considered Maryland as her back up plan. She was accepted to Brown, than began struggling academically at Brown. She began giving up her dreams of science because she was struggling in her organic chemist class. Alternately, she could’ve got an A in the class instead of a –B than dropping it; it’s several things she could’ve took into consideration instead of dropping the class, and giving up on being a scientist. Regardless of all of the statistics that Gladwell shares in the book that proves that this behavior of relative deprivation is far too normal, she could have surpassed this feeling if she would’ve actually took the time to reflect on what she could do to improve her grade instead of just stressing out, than dropping the class all together.
1. Netflix’s original marketing strategy offered several flat-rate monthly subscription options; in which, members could stream movies and shows via the Internet or have disks sent to their homes in a pre-paid and pre-addressed envelope. Free from the despair of due dates and late fees, members could keep, up to, eight movies at a time. Upon the return of a disk, Netflix would automatically mail out the next movie from the customer’s video queue. Members were able to change and update their queues as frequently as they liked. The sheer innovation of Netflix’s strategy encouraged several competitors to enter the market to compete directly,
Hulu is a first mover in this space and is currently enjoying the first mover advantage. However with the ubiquity of internet technology accompanied by lower costs and the commoditization of the technology, the barrier to entry will be reduced and more players will be attracted to the profitable online video business, eating into Hulu’s profitability and success. Also, the increase in IT investments in the internet age causes “a Winner-take-all dynamic and high turbulence, as each group of dominant innovators is threatened by succeeding waves of innovation” (McAfee and Brynjolfsson, 2008) in Schumpeterian competition. This makes Hulu’s success vulnerable.
Entering and transforming the video rental industry was a large undertaking for the start-up company. The first marketing objective the company undertook was the process of building a brand. Netflix’s identity was crucial to future growth and success. Without a strong brand, competitors with deep pockets could have easily duplicated the company’s business model. Secondly, leveraging technology was critical to establishing the business and infrastructure growth. The consumer base was the final objective Netflix sought to achieve. Retaining and growing subscribers were fundamental to revenue and marketing goals.
Growing competition as a challenge represents the various companies that are now entering the market of online media-streaming. Companies such as HBO, Amazon, Google, and Hulu Plus have all began to offer media-streaming on the same electronic devices as Netflix, Inc. Currently Netflix, Inc. remains in the lead amongst its competitors; however, there is no guarantee that this advancement is a permanent one. It is inevitable that emerging companies will come up with creative ideas to gain the competitive edge and receive more consumers. For example, Amazon.com has “amplified
The main problem facing Netflix is the pending conflict with its content providers. Netflix has low bargaining power both over suppliers and buyers, and this represents an existential threat to the business. Netflix has proven to be a popular service, but despite the successes of its first ten years, there is now evidence that it has not fostered much brand loyalty, and that its customers are quite price sensitive. Combine this with the fact that its content suppliers are becoming direct competitors in the online streaming business and Netflix is in significant danger of having its growth trajectory derailed.
In the first circle, the analysis includes what the Netflix team feels its customer base would consider to be the most important things that the Netflix product provides or offers. Netflix is able to offer its customers the ability to either rent DVD’s through a mail service or watch television episodes or movies through a streaming download on devices that can connect to the intranet. Examples of these devices are computers, newer televisions, x-box game set, PS-3 game set, I-pads, I-phones, Windows and Android cell phones or tablets (Pearce II et al, 2015).
As the world entered into the 21st Century, humanity has witnessed an ecology of innovation that ranges from artificial hearts and livers to iPods to Bluetooth technology to smartphones and many more ("21st Century Inventions That Made an Impact”). Each with its own unique attraction has become a catalyst in nature for how individuals think, act and live. Along with these state of the art developments, Netflix has become the cutting – edge service for internet streaming media. Deemed as “a worthless piece of crap” from Wall Street analysts, Netflix with tremendous leadership gained control of their industry and swiftly transformed the delivery of movie rentals ("How Netflix Beat Blockbuster: An Exemplar of Emerging Technologies”). Faced with impossible odds, we will discover how Netflix was able to survive, conquer and prosper as the emerging technology in their industry.
Netflix Inc. is in the entertainment market, which is a part of a larger video, film
Netflix exhibits dominant economic characteristics in the online movie rental business. They enjoy strong market size and growth rate when compared to rivalry competition. The number of rivalries are increasing, and the market remains dominated by only a few sizeable rivalries like Blockbuster Video, Wal-Mart, Walt Disney Movies and Movielink’s Downloadable Movies. Netflix is determined to offer new and innovative technology to sustain their competitive advantage.
Today, digital technology and the Internet are deeply reshaping the motion picture industry with a trend toward the digitalisation and disintermediation (Zhu, 2010). Media streaming services are an example of this current restructuration. Providing an access to a wide collection of entertainment online at a cheap price, they have penetrated the monopoly that cinema once enjoyed (Herberg, 2017). A significant example can be found in the US company ‘Netflix’, source of nearly a third of all North American downstream internet traffic at peak hours (Hallinan & Striphas, 2016). Once a small DVD subscription service created in 1997, it offers today to its subscribers to watch its own produced movies and shows as well as content of other
Many of their competitors have longer operating histories, larger customer bases, greater brand recognition and significantly greater financial, marketing and other resources than Netflix does. Some of their competitors have adopted, and may continue to adopt, aggressive pricing policies and devote substantially more resources to marketing and Web site and systems development than Netflix does. The rapid growth of their online entertainment subscription business since their beginning may attract direct competition from larger companies with significantly greater financial resources and national brand recognition. For instance in 2003 the extremely wealthy Wal-Mart used their online site to launch an online DVD subscription service, Wal-Mart DVD Rentals. With increased competition reduced operating margins may result as well as a loss of market share and reduced revenues. In addition, our competitors may form or extend strategic alliances with studios and distributors that could adversely affect our ability to obtain titles on favorable terms.
This essay will provide insights and sufficient background to understand Netflix’s success and difficulties the company is facing.