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How the ingredients of Netflix’s success could trigger its downfall

Panic gripped Netflix on Monday. Its shares dropped 13 per cent overnight after the streaming giant posted disappointing results for the first half of the year.

When this is the reaction to adding five million subscribers in three months – taking your total to 130 million across the world – it certainly tells you something.

In the past 12 months the company’s stock skyrocketed from $158 (£121) to $396, light years ahead of the market index S&P 500’s average. This was partly driven by a stellar quarterly earnings report in April, which raised analysts’ and investors’ expectations about whether the company could maintain its incredible growth trajectory.

Netflix had set its quarterly target at 1.2 million more subscribers from the US and five million from the rest of the world. Some analysts decided even this was conservative, publishing still higher growth expectations to justify the ambitious company valuation.

Yet the notes of caution creeping in shortly before the new results, appear to be justified. One analyst, at asset manager Macquarie, said “expectations have gotten ahead of themselves”.

Netflix missed both its US and international targets, adding 700,000 and 4.5 million subscribers respectively. Cutthroat competition from the likes of Amazon, Hulu and HBO was held up to blame.

Netflix has done a remarkable job of reinventing itself from its original incarnation as a DVD sales/rental company founded in 1997, to the world’s leading streaming service. It has managed to differentiate itself from the competition largely by becoming a major producer of award-winning content like House of Cards, Orange is the New Black and Stranger Things.​

Netflix’s commissions are based on a deep understanding of its subscribers’ viewing patterns and preferences. This has enabled the company to raise its charges despite the competition, and capitalise on the huge subscriber base. The aim for the next few years is for half of the entire library to be shows and films made exclusively for Netflix. This year alone, the company is expected to spend $12bn to $13bn on new content – way ahead of the £8bn previously planned.

This has created a service second only to HBO in terms of worldwide subscriber numbers (and a large part of HBO’s 142 million total base is US customers who buy its package of channels via cable networks). Netflix’s approach to streaming is different to many other players in the market. We can broadly split the rest of the contenders into three categories: bundlers, broadcasters and big content giants:

1. The bundler

Amazon’s streaming service is “bundled” into its Amazon Prime offering, which gives Amazon’s retail customers a whole raft of benefits ranging from cheap nappies to faster delivery times. Offering video and music streaming as a complex bundle of products and services has important competitive implications.

It means Amazon is potentially able to run the streaming service at a loss, provided it can create sufficient margins elsewhere in the service. This makes it easier for Amazon to put other streaming providers under pressure with low subscription charges. Amazon Prime is Netflix’s nearest streaming rival with around 100 million subscribers worldwide.

2. The broadcaster

Most broadcasters offer streaming as an add-on to their existing TV or cable TV offering. Such offerings can be without additional cost to the consumer, such as the BBC iPlayer, or part of a subscription model, such as the HBO Now offering.

Similarly to Netflix, these companies also compete by offering unique content. For free broadcasters, it’s a means of maximising the size of their audience – whether for public service or for the benefit of advertisers. For the likes of HBO, it’s a way of tapping into customer segments they would otherwise not capture with their traditional cable TV service.

3. The big content giants

The market for streaming services is set to get even more contested as production giants move in. Disney, for example, is on track to launch its own streaming service next autumn.

Streaming providers already pay a substantial share of revenue in fees to major producers for the rights to blockbusters like Frozen or the Toy Story franchise, but Disney for one has decided it can do better. It will end its exclusive supply deal with Netflix once its own service launches. It has not yet said if the Star Wars and Marvel movies will be included, but Disney’s move is clearly a major blow to Netflix.

The road ahead

Netflix’s decision to bet on unique rather than licensed content looks like the right decision in this context. Yet it faces a challenging future. Apple is also due to launch a streaming service next year and has been spending upwards of a billion dollars on original content in preparation. Spotify and Hulu also recently announced a tie-up to offer a combined video-and-music streaming service.

From Netflix’s point of view, there is arguably little room for growth in the core US market, with almost one in every two households already signed up. It dwarfs Comcast and DirecTV, the largest respective cable and satellite providers in the market, which have little over 20 million subscribers each. Netflix is already putting more emphasis on productions in different languages to maximise the international appeal of the business. Commendable on one level, investing in more “regional” content that might not find mass appeal may be a problem for profitability.

Netflix is experimenting with additional routes to market to increase its subscriber base in other ways. One is joining the “bundlers” via a collaboration with Comcast, in which Netflix is being offered as an added attraction to Comcast pay-TV subscribers. Netflix recently did a similar deal with BSkyB for the UK and Europe.

At the same time, Netflix’s current source of success has created an additional major challenge for the future. It has managed to differentiate itself with superb content in a market that is incredibly fast-moving and constantly looking for innovation. Subscribers expect Netflix to deliver innovative shows that they can binge-watch. The company is looking at a potentially vicious circle of high content costs and fast content consumption. If it is going to defend its position, it is going to have to continue to spot great new stories and turn them into essential viewing.

Martin Friesl is a senior lecturer in strategic management at Lancaster University. This article first appeared on TheConversation.com