Friday 14 September 2018

Netflix focusses growth on broadcast carriage not sports


Streaming Media

Netflix has denied (again) that it plans to acquire live sports.  “There's nothing we can do differently or that would bring value to live sports that a broadcaster or those doing live don't already do,” VP business development for Europe Mid East and Africa, Maria Ferreras told IBC.
http://www.streamingmediaglobal.com/Articles/Editorial/Featured-Articles/Netflix-Focusses-its-Growth-on-Broadcast-Carriage-Not-Sports-127423.aspx
However, she added, “We never say never.”
With international subscriber numbers surpassing those inside the US for the first time this year, Netflix focus is on securing more carriage deals with payTV broadcasters and telcos.
The SVOD giant has amassed 130 million subscribers worldwide with growth now rising higher – 42% year on year - outside than inside the US. 2017 also marked the first year of the 20-year old company in which its international business was profitable.
“When we decided we weren’t going to have our own box the natural thing to do was to partner with STBs and smart TVs,” said Ferreras.
In the past 12 months Netflix has renewed and expanded partnership deals with BT, Orange and Deutsche Telekom.It has also struck new deals with Sky, OSN and Telefonica. The Sky deal for instance sees the pay-TV firm bundle the full Netflix service into a new Sky TV subscription pack available through the Sky Q platform.
“It’s important to understand how we get to this point,” she explained. “One, is that we’re committed to producing good quality shows.”
Netflix landed 112 Emmy nominations in 2018 up from 91 last year.
“Another is Quality of experience,” she said. Most new Netflix productions are 4K on top of over 2000 hours of existing 4K HDR content.
The third touchpoint for Ferreras was to make the Netflix experience consistent across all devices.
“When we make a partnership we ensure that the Netflix experience is exactly the same,” she said.
Despite, or perhaps because of, the dominance of Netflix there is room for plenty of other SVOD players to make a decent business provided they have the right formula.
Kerensa Saminidis, GM for Turner’s Filmstruck movie SVOD boiled this down to access, audience and community.
“Filmstruck is not looking to compete with Netflix or Amazon. We’re about being additive or complementary,” she said.
Britbox president Soumya Srirama likened Amazon, Netflix and Hulu to broadcast networks with smaller SVOD players emerging like cable nets catering to specialist needs.
“They have become a utility, people won’t turn them off,” said Saminidis of Netflix et al. “At the same time people are overwhelmed by choice. They are fed up wasting time browsing for what to watch. Amazon and Netflix have to respond algorithmically but we feel there’s an opportunity to focus on a smaller volume of curated content.”



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