Netflix has issued a new viewing definition:
Anything over two minutes of watching something on its
platform -- a TV show or a movie -- counts as a household view.
It doesn’t matter whether you are watching a three-hour-plus movie, such as “The Irishman,” or a 23-minute
TV broadcast comedy rerun of ‘The Good Place.” Just two minutes. Then you can watch your favorite “Wheel of Fortune” episode.
Previously, Netflix counted viewing as
a subscribing household watching 70% of a TV show or movie. What does this new measure mean for Netflix? Higher numbers, of course.
“The new metric is about 35% higher on average than
the prior metric,” according to Netflix. “For example, 45 million member households chose to watch ‘Our Planet’ under the new metric versus 33 million under the prior
metric.”
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That’s good news? Well, probably for the show's producers and their next effort in selling or creating a new program for Netflix.
Netflix says the analysis is
similar “to the BBC iPlayer in their rankings, based on ‘requests’ for the title, ‘most popular’ articles on The New York Times.”
In the U.S., this
new metric doesn’t help in measuring, or comparing, TV and movies usage against other longtime existing metrics, such as Nielsen’s average minute ratings of an entire TV program or movie
on a traditional TV network.
Since it doesn’t sell advertising, Netflix continues to play by its own rules. It doesn’t really care about program performance.
What it
does want to know is the current value of a show for new Netflix customers -- all to gauge what programming content/genre direction it should go in.
That -- we guess -- is where the new metric
comes in -- those two minutes plus viewing. It’s all about viewers “intent” to watch. The confusing part is that Netflix seemingly intends to release some of this data in the
future.
While this is probably more for business reasons (noted above), consumers will also see it. Why? Video consumers seek TV shows and movies that not only interest them, but are
considered popular.
Will they learn that from the new measurement? Seems a bit fuzzy. What if viewers simple abandoned a show after two minutes? How is that counted? Further, will Netflix
regularly release viewing for all its top shows on a weekly basis, whether produced in-house or licensed from other producers?
Those questions are not being asked, nor are results offered. You
know why: Netflix doesn't have to.