How Can Netflix Flip The Script?

Six big questions re: Netflix:
1) How did Netflix subscriber growth compare to Wall Street expectations?
2) What content drove sign-ups??
3) Why is Netflix losing subscribers?
4) Are people watching less Netflix?
5) Is revenue for Netflix declining?
6) When will Netflix launch ads?

Big question #1: How did Netflix subscriber growth compare to Wall Street expectations?

Netflix subscriber growth in 2022-Q2:
1) Projected –  2.0M
2) Actual –  970K

Netflix subscribers (YoY growth):
1) 2015-Q2 – 65.6M     
2) 2016-Q2 – 83.2M (↑ 27%)
3) 2017-Q2 – 99.0M (↑ 19%)
4) 2018-Q2 – 124.4M (↑ 26%)
5) 2019-Q2 – 151.6M (↑ 22%)
6) 2020-Q2 – 193.0M (↑ 27%)
7) 2021-Q2 – 209.2M (↑ 8%)
8) 2022-Q2 – 220.7M (↑ 5%)

Netflix subscribers (% of total):
1) International – 147.4M (67%)
2) U.S./Canada – 73.3M (33%)
3) Total – 220.7M

Big question #2: What content drove sign-ups?

Wow: Stranger Things Season 4 set the Nielsen record for most weekly streaming minutes with 7.2B.

Big question #3: Why is Netflix losing subscribers?

Quick answer: Netflix is approaching saturation in developed markets. As a result, cancellations outpace new sign-ups in markets like the U.S.

Why this matters: Netflix has led the pack with a churn rate roughly half the industry average. Multiple signs point to an increase in recent months.

Average monthly churn rate in 2021 by streaming service:
1) Netflix – 2.2%
2) Disney+ – 3.7%
3) Hulu – 4.3%
4) Average – 4.8%
5) Discovery+ – 5.6%
6) Paramount+ – 6.1%
7) HBO Max – 6.7%
8) Showtime – 6.8%
9) Starz – 7.1%
10) Peacock – 7.7%
11) Apple TV+ – 10.5%

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Interesting #1: 60% of Netflix cancellations come from subscribers who’ve had the service for less than a year.

Interesting #2: Netflix has the highest cancellation rate of any streaming service for subscribers in their first month.

Big question #4: Are people watching less Netflix?

Quick answer: No.  Netflix accounted for the largest share of minutes viewed for any network and grew its share of total TV time by 13% (6.0% → 6.8%).

Top networks by total minutes viewed according to Nielsen:
1) Netflix – 1.3T
2) CBS – 752.8B (924B)
3) NBC – 596.7B (804B)
4) ABC – 471.9B (759B)
5) Fox – 323.1B (575B)
6) Disney+ – 245.4B
7) Prime Video – 173.7B
8) Hulu – 128.1B
9) Apple TV+ – 21.7B

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h/t: Michael Mulvihill @ Fox Sports posted the numbers with local affiliate viewership included.

Interesting: TVision data shows Netflix gaining heavy/average viewers and losing casual viewers.

Big question #5: Is revenue for Netflix declining?

Quick answer: No.  YoY revenue grew 9%.

Netflix growth between 2022-Q1 and 2022-Q2:
1) Subscribers – ↓ 0.4%
2) Share of TV time – ↑ 13.3%
3) Revenue – ↑ 1.3%
4) Revenue/Subscriber – ↑ 1.7%

Big question #6: When will Netflix launch ads?

Quick answer: Early 2023.

Quote from Tim Armstrong – CEO @ Flowcode:

Quick math on the Netflix ad model in the U.S. according to Jessica Toonkel:
1) ≈ 66M current subscribers
2) 10M new sign-ups for ad-supported tier
3) 30% of existing subscribers (20M) switch to an ad-supported tier
4) 30M ad-supported subscribers
5) $10/month subscription fee for ad-supported plan
6) $7/month in advertising revenue/subscriber
7) $17/month in total revenue/subscriber (ARPU)

Outstanding questions:
1) What ad units (pre-roll, mid-roll, etc.) will Netflix offer?
2) What share of their content will carry ads?
3) Will Netflix build the largest walled garden in video advertising?

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