#166
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However, it is safe to say that their expenses can be view broadly under two categories. Customer acquisition and customer retention. I'd say that once they acquire a customer, they still need to keep that customer happy (above some threshold level) or else they will cancel their subscription. Let's say that 80% of their content spend in the quarter is for customer retention, and 20% for customer acquisition. So that is 1.4B spent (in addition to the marketing) to acquire customers, and those customers will take more than 1 year to pay off the marketing costs mentioned above, plus another year to pay off the customer acquisition piece of the content costs. So, it will take 2 years to pay off that piece of the costs that have been front loaded. And possibly more, because there are other costs (like technology) that they still create on top of the customer acquisition. So, to answer your question, yes, of course the hope is that new customers eventually become recurring customers. But there is also a requirement, in the case of recurring customers, that the firm must spend to create new content and new technology and some continued marketing to keep them engaged. Otherwise, existing subscribers would be stuck watching house of cards and old seasons of orange is the new black.
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And we have just one world, But we live in different ones |
#167
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Yes it becomes very hard to calculate these servicecompanies that relies heavily on subscriptions as its also very determined by current competition and or future competition. To many unknowns hence i feel like they likely have ppl who are far better at this then me (duh) yet they still want to push forward so there there must be good chance of reward down the line (obviously even ppl with the best intentions and skills makes misstakes tho).. |
#168
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It don't mean a thing, if it ain't got that certain je ne sais quoi. --Peter Schickele |
#169
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qM79_itR0Nc&t=8s |
#170
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The main question for me is how many subscribers do they expect to have when they peak? From that you can extrapolate revenues. Netflix has about 130MM subscribers worldwide, and about half of those are in the United States. My guess is that they are shooting for around 500MM+ evenutually...at ~$15 per month = $7.5B in revenues just from subscriptions
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2003 CSi / Legend Ti / Seven 622 SLX |
#171
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I'm pretty sure that the monthly subscription rate is and will be dependent on where the service is offered. i.e. It will be what the market will bear in that country/region. At some level the content is a sunk cost and $3/mo from a subscriber in a country where the median household income is $12,000 is better than the $0 Netflix would get from that household if the price were $15/mo.
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#172
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specific stock examples that i pay attention to personally: amgn 2.6% bud 5% codi 8.2% csco 2.9% gild 3% ibm 4.3% jnj 2.6% jpm 2.9% mrk 2.7% pg 3.5% vz 4.5% xom 4% |
#173
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I think I read somewhere that Amazon Prime members number at over a hundred million.
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#174
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personally, I have both streaming and still have the DVD delivery and am paying about $20 per month for Netflix plus we have Amazon Prime. I figure by the time they get to 500MM subscribers I will be paying $30+ per month....while someone in rural Peru will be paying about $5 (no disrespect to Peru intended....)
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2003 CSi / Legend Ti / Seven 622 SLX |
#175
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I was honestly surprised to learn recently that Netflix still offers the DVD service. I became a customer back when that was the service, but I thought they had discontinued that. |
#176
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Yeah, the DVD service is a separate website now (single sign-on) and they make it a little hard to find, but it is still there. It just has more content of older movies that I like, so I keep it around.....
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2003 CSi / Legend Ti / Seven 622 SLX |
#177
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thanks
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#178
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And I'd say that existing content is a sunk cost, but netflix is currently producing lots of non-English programming for their different global markets. So going forward, it is not clear to me that consumers will be satisfied with a static library of content. Netflix (as opposed to being a technology platform, essentially a business that takes a cut of the action for matching paying viewers with content producers) has now gotten on the treadmill of producing content. I don't think it is obvious yet what the end game is for that strategic shift. (They made that shift because the content producers wanted a bigger percent of the action, and netflix wanted more negotiating leverage, and to not be at the whim of studios.)
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And we have just one world, But we live in different ones |
#179
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If I were MGM, Disney, Warner, Universal, HBO, NBC, CBS, ABC, et al, I would be worried....
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2003 CSi / Legend Ti / Seven 622 SLX |
#180
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You seem to be asserting that they are pursuing a business model that perpetually calls for costs that exceed revenues based on the results of some recent period. What I'm saying is it's possible. . just maybe that that is not the case. I'm not investing in Netflix (that I'm aware of), but I'm not going to assume they don't have a clearly defined path to profitability that is achievable. More broadly, my point was that I don't think it's apt to lump Netflix in with social media companies. |
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economy, freemoneyhouse, stonks, vertdoug for fed chair, wealth, yen carry trade |
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