Netflix's letter also said that in the US, the ad plan had greater total average revenue per member, which includes revenue from subscription fees and ads, than the $15.49/month Standard plan.
Yup. The ad business is huge money. Not the least because ad buyers pay ridiculous amounts of money for ads time.There you have it folks. Your eyeballs are worth more than $8.50/mo -- no wonder they're so hungry to get people to get used to ads. If they can get you to crack the door, they can slowly raise prices and also get that sweet sweet ad revenue.
I found a browser extension that can fast forward ads on Amazon Prime video. Ad blocking doesn't work on those ads but having the ad auto-mute and fast forward in a couple of seconds makes them not so bad.Wonder if my ad-blocker can block Netflix ads.
Thing is, Netflix is living on borrowed time. They've been trying to pump out original content for a while, but ultimately they don't have the gravitas of Disney/Paramount/HBO/etc to keep people engaged and the sweetheart deals on licensing are long behind them. The decisions they've been making are those of people who know that the gravy train is slowing down and that in a decade or so Netflix will probably be acquired by Amazon or Disney. The experience of the user is tertiary to pleasing the "anything but infinite growth = failure" shareholders and maintaining high corporate pay packets.Moves like this certainly aren't going to drive people to view Netflix content from less-than official sources. Or, in the very least, cancel their subscriptions. Paying a monthly fee to access content and still seeing ads is an insane concept to me. You'd think that with all the stiff competition they have they'd, I dunno, make their service more enticing to potential and current users.
Yeah, the price was about right so obviously it couldn't last. My kids don't care about 1080 vs 720 and neither do I on my phone on public transit. They won't be getting more money from me, they'll just get it over fewer months before I cycle to the next service.Downgraded just in time. The moment they cancel the 9,99$ option is the same moment I’m canceling.
I haven't had Netflix in 10 years until about a month ago. I thought that kind of time would free me up for a new user sort of deal, a little trial into which I could cram Black Mirror, but nope.Moves like this certainly aren't going to drive people to view Netflix content from less-than official sources. Or, in the very least, cancel their subscriptions. Paying a monthly fee to access content and still seeing ads is an insane concept to me. You'd think that with all the stiff competition they have they'd, I dunno, make their service more enticing to potential and current users.
Given current Netflix decision making, It seems more likely they’ll make the current standard plan ad-supported w/ an optional add on to remove ads.Yup. The ad business is huge money. Not the least because ad buyers pay ridiculous amounts of money for ads time.
With subscribers the amount of money you can make is cost of subscription x # of subscribers and you have a limited number of prices you can charge subscribers. With ad revenue the amount of money you can make is limited only by the number of companies who value your access to eyeballs.
I expect to see them to introduce an ad-supported cheaper version of the Standard Plan the next time they need to show revenue growth and try to move Standard Plan customers onto it.
The golden age of streaming was entirely predicated on studios not realizing how much they could get for licensing rights, not to mention that despite the growing amount of films/shows Netflix had in their stream library there were always certain films/shows that never made it from DVD to stream but showed up in searches.If you had Netflix stock I hope you already sold it, this company is dying.
I'm disappointed in how fast streaming services copied the exact same path as cable television. Was it really only a bit less than a decade that we had it good?
Blew my mind when I learned that before I was alive, one of the selling points of cable television was no commercials.
A healthy combination of uBlock Origin on Firefox* + PiHole on your side of the demark can do the trick.Wonder if my ad-blocker can block Netflix ads.
The reasoning? Netflix hasn't said outright
I get the sinking feeling that they GREW the total subscriber base in total and in most plans.Apparently Netflix has not shed enough subscribers.
See, I think it's exactly the opposite. Execs at Disney, Warner, and Paramount screwed up their own streaming service rollout hard. They all are losing money and their shareholders aren't in it for the long haul, so they are already pulling content off their services and looking to try to sell the rights to stream it to other players to try to recoup the massive black holes of debt they dug for themselves. Meanwhile Netflix is turning a a profit. For all of the studios streaming is a cost sink that loses them money and tangential to their core business. For Netflix streaming is their core business and development of new shows is tangential.Thing is, Netflix is living on borrowed time. They've been trying to pump out original content for a while, but ultimately they don't have the gravitas of Disney/Paramount/HBO/etc to keep people engaged and the sweetheart deals on licensing are long behind them.
The problem is we could never have had the decades before the enshittification caught up.If you had Netflix stock I hope you already sold it, this company is dying.
I'm disappointed in how fast streaming services copied the exact same path as cable television. Was it really only a bit less than a decade that we had it good?
Blew my mind when I learned that before I was alive, one of the selling points of cable television was no commercials.
The limited content part is more a requirement of the studios than something netflix wants. as contracts for content lapse and get renegotiated, the content unavailable to the ads tier will appear there, or become unavailable for all tiers.I have no problems with ads on Hulu, so it depends on how Netflix implements them, but the "limited library" thing turns me off.
Care to share the name of said extension? even a link? Thanks in advanceI found a browser extension that can fast forward ads on Amazon Prime video. Ad blocking doesn't work on those ads but having the ad auto-mute and fast forward in a couple of seconds makes them not so bad.
My assumption is that something similar will, or already does exist for Netflix.
I have no problems with ads on Hulu, so it depends on how Netflix implements them, but the "limited library" thing turns me off.
You are quite wrong. When cable started in the '50s, it was only to retransmit OtA channels, which means cable was born with Ads on ALL channels. The introdution of premium channels with no ads is a latter Phenomenon.If you had Netflix stock I hope you already sold it, this company is dying.
I'm disappointed in how fast streaming services copied the exact same path as cable television. Was it really only a bit less than a decade that we had it good?
Blew my mind when I learned that before I was alive, one of the selling points of cable television was no commercials.
It's not even that - it's about their perception about how much the company is going to pay off, whether their perception is actually grounded in fact or not is another story.For Wall Street it is not about quality, it is about how much you can get out of the masses.
I cancelled it in February and I take every wallstreet analysis with a rock of salt.