Skip to main content

Sorry, subscribers: Netflix price hike makes good business sense

netflix-envelopes
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Netflix sparked a flurry of customer outrage Tuesday with the announcement that it would no longer offer a plan that includes both unlimited movie streaming and unlimited DVD rental. These services will now be split into two plans, which start and $7.99 apiece. Together, they will cost about $16 — a 60 percent increase from the $9.99 price of the dual-option plan, which the company will cut on September 1.

This news was met by tens of thousands of furious comments on the Netflix blog announcement and the company Facebook page, with many users declaring the movie rental company dead in the water.

“Bad idea. Epic epic epic screw-the-customer fail,” says one Facebook commenter.

“I agreed to like this page so I could say that I am no longer a Netflix customer,” says another. “I told my family to cancel also.”

These types of comments go on and on. At the time of this writing, there were nearly 38,000 comments on the company’s Facebook page, most of them highly negative.

Despite the intense dissatisfaction among customers, however, investors’ reaction couldn’t be better: Netflix stock price popped by about 3 percent, at the time of this writing, to just under $300.

So, why the disconnect between the optimistic mood on Wall Street and the outright fury on Main Street?

According to Pacific Crest market analyst Andy Hargreaves, who specializes in technology companies, Netflix raised its prices in an attempt to actively shift from the expensive business of physical DVD rentals to the far more cost-effective endeavor of streaming movies and TV shows online. This, he says, is simply a wise business decision, at least in the long-term.

“Streaming, at a very basic level, is a better business than DVD distribution,” said Hargreaves in a phone interview with Digital Trends. That’s “because people use it more, the costs are fixed rather than variable, so you have more leverage longer term, and you can address new clients really easily, with no start-up costs, essentially.”

Netflix-unlimited-plansWhile changing the plan price structure may make sense for Netflix’s ultimate goals of becoming a streaming-only company, as opposed to a mail-order DVD rental operation, Hargreaves says that Netflix will likely lose some subscribers because of the price jump, but that the total number of lost users will be “negligible.”

“There are clearly subscribers who are pissed. There are clearly going to be subscribers who cancel because of this,” says Hargreaves. “I think, at the end of the day, that’s probably a vocal minority, a very small vocal minority.”

Hargreaves adds that, because the cost of a Netflix subscription is still far less than the average $100 price tag that goes with cable service, he expects the company will be able to survive the crashing wave of negativity, and still “continue to add [customers] in the next several quarters.”

“At the end of the day — and this is the gamble that [Netflix is] making — there’s going to be some saber rattling at the beginning, customers that are going to be annoyed because their price just got raised,” says Hargreaves. “Is that really going to change how customers view the service? Probably not.”

netflix-combo-plansThe obvious downside to a streaming-only Netflix subscription is that few new movies, especially the most popular titles, are available through that service, which is likely why the DVD rental option has remained so attractive to customers.

By making customers pay a minimum of $7.99 per month for the one DVD at-a-time plan, or $11.99 per month for two DVDs at once, Hargreaves says Netflix has made itself vulnerable to competitors like RedBox.

“On the DVD side you have viable alternatives. Redbox is pretty decent,” says Hargreaves. “They don’t have the depth of catalog [that Netflix has]. But you can get the same new movies.” In terms of streaming, however, “there are no other options.”

Editors' Recommendations

Andrew Couts
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
The best mysteries on Netflix right now
A man peers through a telescope in Body Double.

There's a mystery that Netflix has never solved: Why isn't there a mystery tab under the movies section? Almost every other genre has one, but Netflix seems content to hide its mysteries among its thrillers. Perhaps the reason why is that there simply aren't many mysteries on Netflix. This month's selections, Body Double and The Little Things, are the only two recent additions that actually fall into the mystery genre.

Regardless, our roundup of the best mysteries on Netflix does have enough titles to keep your inner sleuth guessing. Older films like Devil in a Blue Dress and All Good Things are just a few of the titles that you can find below. Can you solve the mysteries before the on-screen detectives? There's only one way to find out.

Read more
The best fantasy movies on Netflix right now
Matt Damon in The Great Wall.

Heading into summer, Netflix's fantasy lineup could really use a touch of magic. When the 2021 remake of Mortal Kombat is one of the top suggestions in fantasy, then Netflix has a real problem on its hands with this category. The latest fantasy additions, The Great Wall, Hellboy, and Conan the Destroyer, aren't masterpieces themselves. But they're better than nothing.

Aside from a handful of originals like Damsel and The School for Good and Evil, fantasy is just not getting a lot of love from Netflix. We really want to see this genre flourish on Netflix, but that's going to require a lot more effort from the streamer. In the meantime, these are the best fantasy movies on Netflix right now.

Read more
The best animated movies on Netflix right now
Shrek talks down to Donkey in Shrek.

This month's best animated movies on Netflix are all about DreamWorks Animation. In the absence of an animated Netflix original or anything from Universal/Illumination, three classic DreamWorks' flicks are heating up the movie charts for Netflix: Shrek, Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron, and Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa.

Those films may be old, but they've got the staying power to stand alongside Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse and The Super Mario Bros. Movie, both of which remain prime attractions on Netflix after cleaning up at the box office last year. There may not be comparable animated hits coming down the pipeline this year, but the best animated movies on Netflix will remain in good shape as long as Netflix keeps adding films from the past and present.

Read more