Skip to main content

Netflix details new strategy: become HBO

netflix-ceo-reed-hastings-arms-in-the-air
Image used with permission by copyright holder

When you’ve just become the top movie subscription service in the world, you don’t raise rates without explanation. That comes off as greedy. And if you’re going to apologize for that mistake, try not to announce that you’re splitting your company in half and renaming half of it Qwikster. These actions will lead to 800,000 subscribers jumping ship and send your stock price tumbling from more than $300 a share to about $87 bucks in a couple months.

So what’s next for Netflix? Well, according to CEO Reed Hastings, it’s more problems. Just as we pointed out way back in February, Netflix is just now realizing that it has a problem: its business model is too limited. Without being willing to charge users extra or include ads in programming, it can’t own stream all movie and TV show content (like it does DVDs). The movie and TV studios are beginning to charge an arm and a leg for content. In a way, Netflix is at the mercy of these companies. If they decide not to sell it content, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, or any other upstart service could easily take over the top spot. Amazon especially, has already built a fairly extensive library of films.

Hastings has a solution though: Less content, more exclusivity. His plan is to become like HBO and buy up exclusive streaming rights to really good TV shows and movies. Netflix will even produce its own content as well. The risk with this new strategy is that people really have to like the smaller amount of exclusive shows. The first TV show Netflix will produce is called House of Cards and is produced by Kevin Spacey.  

Here is a snippet from a letter Hastings sent out to shareholders (via AllThingsD): 

In television… the networks (ABC, FX, etc.) have long relied upon exclusive content to differentiate among themselves. As video moves online, so too has this practice of exclusive content. HBO has an exclusive license to recent Universal movies that includes its online HBO GO, for example. Netflix has signed exclusive licenses for DreamWorks Animation, for Relativity, and others. In episodic television, exclusives are also the norm. Netflix doesn’t license “Deadwood” from HBO because they see strategic value in keeping it exclusive. Netflix licenses “Mad Men” and “House of Cards” exclusively for much the same reason.

…We don’t have to “beat” Starz or other networks to succeed…We won’t have every movie or TV series; but we do provide enough value that consumers also want to subscribe to Netflix.

Any given consumer will have only one of DirecTV or Comcast, say, for their video service. That is classic either‐or competition. But with premium television networks like Netflix, the more good experiences there are, the more consumers are willing to spend to have multiple channels from which to get enjoyment.

 We have to say, it seems odd that Netflix is refusing to do what could be a very good option: add in streaming rentals for new movies and TV episodes. No, people don’t like paying extra, but they like getting what they want when they want it more. 

Editors' Recommendations

Jeffrey Van Camp
Former Digital Trends Contributor
As DT's Deputy Editor, Jeff helps oversee editorial operations at Digital Trends. Previously, he ran the site's…
Everything you need to know about The Orville season 4
The cast of The Orville.

It's been nearly two years since the third season of The Orville, collectively known as The Orville: New Horizons, finished its run on Hulu. And the wait for word about the fourth season has been excruciating. The show was conceived by Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane as a sci-fi comedy series that doubles as his love letter to Star Trek. MacFarlane even stars in the series as Ed Mercer, the captain of the USS Orville.

To bring his vision to life, MacFarlane turned to Star Trek veterans like executive producer Brannon Braga, as well as directors Jonathan Frakes and Robert Duncan McNeill. Co-star Penny Johnson Jerald also had a recurring role on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine before she was cast in The Orville as Doctor Claire Finn.

Read more
3 Peacock crime dramas you should watch in May 2024
Al Pacino as Tony Montana in Scarface sitting at his desk in an iconic scene.

If you’re looking for a good crime drama to sink your teeth into this month, Peacock has you covered with a wide selection of options ,including some classic gangster movies that are worth watching again and again. If you haven’t watched them yet, now is the perfect time to check each one off your list so you can join the decades-long conversations about them.

Among three Peacock crime dramas you should watch in May, we’re looking at iconic movies starring the likes of Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, and Joe Pesci. Yes, it’s the movies you’re thinking of and they’re all available to stream right now.
Carlito’s Way (1993)
Carlito's Way (1993) Trailer #1

Read more
New York City falls in new trailer for A Quiet Place: Day One
Lupita Nyong'o and Joseph Quinn in A Quiet Place: Day One.

The Office's John Krasinski established himself as a first-rate horror and sci-fi director and writer with 2018's A Quiet Place and its 2021 follow-up, A Quiet Place Part II. For the third film in the franchise, A Quiet Place: Day One, Krasinski is turning the clock back to the beginning of the franchise's central alien invasion .

Krasinski co-wrote the script with Michael Sarnoski, who also directed the film. And in the new trailer, we get a firsthand look at the fall of New York City.

Read more