I see the news tout the volume of spending by companies like Netflix, HBO, Hulu and Amazon for original programming, but is there ROI against these massive spends? Will companies ever recoup
these costs?
In the case of a company like HBO, I think I see the value. HBO’s subscriber base on cable appears static to me. When you pay for cable you typically get a
package that might include HBO or Showtime, depending on what’s being offered at that time. Many people choose HBO as part of the bundle, and therefore HBO gets its money.
The mobile app and online subscription offered by HBO Now creates an extended network of users: people like me, who don’t have HBO at home as part of their cable provider but want to watch
their original shows. That online subscriber list probably increases over time, with some churn as people register to pay and then shut it off intermittently as their shows are available.
I only pay for HBO when “Game of Thrones” is broadcasting its first run, then I turn the network off when the show is out of season. I’m not the standard though, since many
people just leave HBO on. Regardless, I see original programming as the draw that gets an extended network of paying subscribers. There’s a clear upside -- and when you factor in
international audiences, it makes sense.
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What about Netflix or Amazon? Does it make sense for them?
Netflix’s original draw was the library of content it provide
access to, and lots of people subscribed solely for that.
Netflix is reportedly spending as much as $16 billion on original programming, but how will it ever make that money back?
Its market cap is currently around $84 billion, but that’s based on a multiple of revenue. Does spending that money provide a measurable, correlative increase in its subscriber base?
Does it provide a significant retention benefit that is noticeably stronger than if it didn’t have that volume of original programming?
What about Amazon? Does its spend
have a measurable impact on its TV property, or is its Prime audience strong enough to maintain that subscriber base on its own?
And where does that leave companies like Hulu and Apple?
In the case of Apple, spending for original programming appears more modest, around $1 billion, but that’s logical since the company is trying to increase its subscriber base.
In
the case of Hulu, differentiation is based on the access to programming it gets from its core network partners. The costs for original programming can effectively be passed along to them.
I may not be a high-paid exec in these media companies, but I am a businessperson and I am curious as to the business case that warrants these spends. The only answer I can come up with is
that these original programs are seen as valuable beyond the subscriber base.
We know that a highly successful piece of content has the opportunity to strike a chord in the popular
zeitgeist and create ongoing revenue opportunity beyond pure broadcast. There’s merchandising and physical unit sales like DVDs and Blu-Ray. There are product tie-ins and
sponsorships that go beyond simple 30- and 60-second spots.
I would assume there is a business case beyond simply defending ones’ subscriber base, especially in a world where this
is not necessarily an either/or decision for the consumer. Consumers are going to pay for more than one TV platform, especially as they continue to cut the cord and migrate from traditional
cable relationships.
Maybe that’s the answer right there. It’s not about what happens in the next two to three years, but what happens over the next 10.
Consolidation + cord cutting creates a substantially different landscape from what we see now.
Maybe these execs are brilliant?
I guess time will tell.