Question 4: Discuss the steps of the Buyer Decision Process are being used by Netflix to satisfy existing and prospective customers by their product offerings. (10 marks – approx. 500 words / 1 page).
Netflix Case: Netflix Uses Technology to Change How We Watch Videos
When Netflix was founded in 1997 in the United States, the movie rental giant Blockbuster had thousands of stores from coast to coast, filled with video cassettes ready for immediate rental to customers (Pride et al., 2018). Netflix had a different vision from this well-established, well-financed competitor. Looking at the recent development of DVD technology, Netflix saw an opportunity to change the way consumers rent movies. The entrepreneurial company built its marketing strategy around the convenience and low cost of renting DVDs by mail, for one low monthly subscription fee.
Instead of going to a local store to pick out a movie, subscribers logged onto the Netflix website to browse the DVD offerings and click to rent. Within a day or two, the DVD would arrive in the customer’s mailbox, complete with a self-mailer to return the DVD. And, unlike any other movie rental service, Netflix customers were invited to rate each movie on the Netflix website, after which they’d see recommendations tailored to their individual interests (Pride et al., 2018).
Fast-forward to the 21st century. Video cassettes are all but obsolete, and Blockbuster, once the dominant brand in movie rentals, has only one remaining shop in the US as consumer demand has shifted to digital distribution for entertainment (Porter, 2019). In Australia, both Blockbuster and Video Ezy still had a brand presence in 2018 (Pride et al., 2018). Since then, Blockbuster’s last Australian shop closed in March 2019 (Porter, 2019), and Video Ezy exists in the form of vending machines (kiosks) after its shops closed (Rosenberg, 2018).
Both brands have been prompted to reassess their distribution channels. You may notice more DVD rental kiosks such as “Video Ezy Express” popping up in convenient locations, including outside supermarkets and shopping complexes, in a bid to improve brand reach and accessibility. DVD rental kiosks, like online services, are accessible around the clock and reduce many store costs, including wages.
In contrast, by completely eliminating the need for brick-and-mortar stores or kiosks, Netflix has minimised its costs and extended its reach to any place that has postal service and Internet access (Pride et al., 2018). The company still rents DVDs by mail (Monahan & Griggs, 2019), but it has also taken advantage of changes in technology to add video streaming on demand.
Now, customers can stream movies and television programmes to computers, television sets, videogame consoles, DVD players, Smartphones, and other web-enabled devices. One advantage to the company is that streaming a movie costs Netflix less per customer than paying the postage to deliver and return a DVD to that customer.
Netflix’s Use of Technology: From Data-Tracking to Streaming
Netflix made technology a core competency from the very beginning. Because the business has always been web-based, it can electronically monitor its customers’ online activity and analyse everything that customers view or click on.
With this data, Netflix can fine-tune the website, determine which movies are most popular among which market segments, prepare for peak periods of online activity, and refine the recommendations it makes based on each individual’s viewing history and interests. The company also uses its technical know-how to be sure that the website looks good on any size screen, from a tiny Smartphone to a large-screen television.
A few years ago, planning for a significant rise in demand for streaming entertainment, Netflix decided against investing in expanded systems for this purpose. Instead, it arranged for Amazon Web Services to provide the networking power for streaming (Pride et al., 2018).
By 2018, on a typical night in the US, Netflix streaming occupied up to 20,000 servers in Amazon data centres (Pride et al., 2018). Demand was so strong by that time, in fact, that Netflix streaming accounted for about one-third of all internet traffic to North American homes during the evening (Pride et al., 2018). This percentage is only expected to increase. The Australian market, however, may pose technological hurdles, as the National Broadband Network is still being rolled out and is not available in all areas, meaning that accessibility may not be as straightforward as it is in America (Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications, n.d.).
Although Blockbuster and Video Ezy are no longer a competitive threat in their traditional form, Netflix does face competition from Amazon’s own video streaming service, Amazon Prime Video, which headed to Australia and New Zealand’s shores in 2017 (Pride et al., 2018).
Other direct competitors include well-established Hulu, YouTube, Nine Entertainment, and
Fairfax media’s joint-venture Stan, and Foxtel’s movie-streaming service Presto. It also competes with other entertainment providers, including cable, satellite, and broadcast television. Foxtel, for example, has dramatically reduced its basic cable packages in an effort to retain its share of the market in face of increasing competition from on-demand services (Pride et al., 2018).
Netflix Offers Exclusive Programming to Customers
To differentiate itself from its competitors, Netflix commissioned exclusive programming such as House of Cards, Arrested Development, and Orange is the New Black. The cost to produce such programs runs to hundreds of millions of dollars (Pride et al., 2018). Between May–December 2019, Netflix added 179 original programmes to its American streaming service, or an average of 30 new shows a month, or about one show per day (Fruhlinger, 2019). Netflix plans to continue pouring money into exclusive content because of the payoff in positioning, positive publicity, and customer retention.
The way that Netflix releases its exclusive programming reflects its in-depth knowledge of customer behaviour. The company found through its data analysis that customers often indulge in ‘binge watching’ for a series they like, viewing episodes one after another in a short time.
Based on this research, in 2013 Netflix launched all 13 episodes of the inaugural season of House of Cards at one time, an industry first (Pride et al., 2018). Executives gathered at headquarters to monitor the introduction, cheering as thousands of customers streamed episode after episode. By the end of the first weekend, many customers had watched the entire series and shared their excitement via social media, encouraging others to subscribe and watch. When Netflix won multiple Emmy Awards for House of Cards, it was another first—the first time any Internet company had been honoured for the quality of its original programming.
One key measure of Netflix’s growth is the strong increase in the number of monthly subscribers. In 2015, Netflix had about 70 million subscribers worldwide, of which 26 million were located outside the US (Pride et al., 2018). In 2019, Netflix had 151 million paid subscribers worldwide (158 million if free trials are included) (Kafka, 2019).
Despite the brand only launching in Australia in March 2015, it already has close to 2 million subscribers in 2018 (Pride, 2018). By July 2019, Netflix had more than 11.6 million subscribers in Australia, up 18% from the year prior (Gruenwedel, 2019) Its closest direct competitor, Stan, had 2.6 million subscribes in early 2019 (Knox, 2019).
Netflix will not say how many subscribers that it has in New Zealand, but a recent survey of 1,000 people, commissioned by the Office of Film and Literature Classification and carried out by UMR Research, found that 72% of respondents subscribed to Netflix. Of the same respondent sample, 77% said they watched television shows and movies using a paid online service (Kenny, 2019).
Keys to Netflix’s successful launch include offering free-trials and access to stripped-back free versions, as well as continued investment in original programming. It appears that streaming is the new broadcasting, and that ‘on-demand’ spells the demise of scheduled entertainment.
In: Operations Management
Question 2: Outline the most important macro (demographic, economic, natural, technological, political and cultural), and micro (the company, suppliers, marketing intermediaries, competitors, publics, and customers) environment factors that impact on Netflix. (10 marks – allow ~15 minutes)
Netflix Case: Netflix Uses Technology to Change How We Watch Videos
When Netflix was founded in 1997 in the United States, the movie rental giant Blockbuster had thousands of stores from coast to coast, filled with video cassettes ready for immediate rental to customers (Pride et al., 2018). Netflix had a different vision from this well-established, well-financed competitor. Looking at the recent development of DVD technology, Netflix saw an opportunity to change the way consumers rent movies. The entrepreneurial company built its marketing strategy around the convenience and low cost of renting DVDs by mail, for one low monthly subscription fee.
Instead of going to a local store to pick out a movie, subscribers logged onto the Netflix website to browse the DVD offerings and click to rent. Within a day or two, the DVD would arrive in the customer’s mailbox, complete with a self-mailer to return the DVD. And, unlike any other movie rental service, Netflix customers were invited to rate each movie on the Netflix website, after which they’d see recommendations tailored to their individual interests (Pride et al., 2018).
Fast-forward to the 21st century. Video cassettes are all but obsolete, and Blockbuster, once the dominant brand in movie rentals, has only one remaining shop in the US as consumer demand has shifted to digital distribution for entertainment (Porter, 2019). In Australia, both Blockbuster and Video Ezy still had a brand presence in 2018 (Pride et al., 2018). Since then, Blockbuster’s last Australian shop closed in March 2019 (Porter, 2019), and Video Ezy exists in the form of vending machines (kiosks) after its shops closed (Rosenberg, 2018).
Both brands have been prompted to reassess their distribution channels. You may notice more DVD rental kiosks such as “Video Ezy Express” popping up in convenient locations, including outside supermarkets and shopping complexes, in a bid to improve brand reach and accessibility. DVD rental kiosks, like online services, are accessible around the clock and reduce many store costs, including wages.
In contrast, by completely eliminating the need for brick-and-mortar stores or kiosks, Netflix has minimised its costs and extended its reach to any place that has postal service and Internet access (Pride et al., 2018). The company still rents DVDs by mail (Monahan & Griggs, 2019), but it has also taken advantage of changes in technology to add video streaming on demand.
Now, customers can stream movies and television programmes to computers, television sets, videogame consoles, DVD players, Smartphones, and other web-enabled devices. One advantage to the company is that streaming a movie costs Netflix less per customer than paying the postage to deliver and return a DVD to that customer.
Netflix’s Use of Technology: From Data-Tracking to Streaming
Netflix made technology a core competency from the very beginning. Because the business has always been web-based, it can electronically monitor its customers’ online activity and analyse everything that customers view or click on.
With this data, Netflix can fine-tune the website, determine which movies are most popular among which market segments, prepare for peak periods of online activity, and refine the recommendations it makes based on each individual’s viewing history and interests. The company also uses its technical know-how to be sure that the website looks good on any size screen, from a tiny Smartphone to a large-screen television.
A few years ago, planning for a significant rise in demand for streaming entertainment, Netflix decided against investing in expanded systems for this purpose. Instead, it arranged for Amazon Web Services to provide the networking power for streaming (Pride et al., 2018).
By 2018, on a typical night in the US, Netflix streaming occupied up to 20,000 servers in Amazon data centres (Pride et al., 2018). Demand was so strong by that time, in fact, that Netflix streaming accounted for about one-third of all internet traffic to North American homes during the evening (Pride et al., 2018). This percentage is only expected to increase. The Australian market, however, may pose technological hurdles, as the National Broadband Network is still being rolled out and is not available in all areas, meaning that accessibility may not be as straightforward as it is in America (Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications, n.d.).
Although Blockbuster and Video Ezy are no longer a competitive threat in their traditional form, Netflix does face competition from Amazon’s own video streaming service, Amazon Prime Video, which headed to Australia and New Zealand’s shores in 2017 (Pride et al., 2018).
Other direct competitors include well-established Hulu, YouTube, Nine Entertainment, and
Fairfax media’s joint-venture Stan, and Foxtel’s movie-streaming service Presto. It also competes with other entertainment providers, including cable, satellite, and broadcast television. Foxtel, for example, has dramatically reduced its basic cable packages in an effort to retain its share of the market in face of increasing competition from on-demand services (Pride et al., 2018).
Netflix Offers Exclusive Programming to Customers
To differentiate itself from its competitors, Netflix commissioned exclusive programming such as House of Cards, Arrested Development, and Orange is the New Black. The cost to produce such programs runs to hundreds of millions of dollars (Pride et al., 2018). Between May–December 2019, Netflix added 179 original programmes to its American streaming service, or an average of 30 new shows a month, or about one show per day (Fruhlinger, 2019). Netflix plans to continue pouring money into exclusive content because of the payoff in positioning, positive publicity, and customer retention.
The way that Netflix releases its exclusive programming reflects its in-depth knowledge of customer behaviour. The company found through its data analysis that customers often indulge in ‘binge watching’ for a series they like, viewing episodes one after another in a short time.
Based on this research, in 2013 Netflix launched all 13 episodes of the inaugural season of House of Cards at one time, an industry first (Pride et al., 2018). Executives gathered at headquarters to monitor the introduction, cheering as thousands of customers streamed episode after episode. By the end of the first weekend, many customers had watched the entire series and shared their excitement via social media, encouraging others to subscribe and watch. When Netflix won multiple Emmy Awards for House of Cards, it was another first—the first time any Internet company had been honoured for the quality of its original programming.
One key measure of Netflix’s growth is the strong increase in the number of monthly subscribers. In 2015, Netflix had about 70 million subscribers worldwide, of which 26 million were located outside the US (Pride et al., 2018). In 2019, Netflix had 151 million paid subscribers worldwide (158 million if free trials are included) (Kafka, 2019).
Despite the brand only launching in Australia in March 2015, it already has close to 2 million subscribers in 2018 (Pride, 2018). By July 2019, Netflix had more than 11.6 million subscribers in Australia, up 18% from the year prior (Gruenwedel, 2019) Its closest direct competitor, Stan, had 2.6 million subscribes in early 2019 (Knox, 2019).
Netflix will not say how many subscribers that it has in New Zealand, but a recent survey of 1,000 people, commissioned by the Office of Film and Literature Classification and carried out by UMR Research, found that 72% of respondents subscribed to Netflix. Of the same respondent sample, 77% said they watched television shows and movies using a paid online service (Kenny, 2019).
Keys to Netflix’s successful launch include offering free-trials and access to stripped-back free versions, as well as continued investment in original programming. It appears that streaming is the new broadcasting, and that ‘on-demand’ spells the demise of scheduled entertainment.
In: Operations Management
Question 3: Netflix wants to stay ahead of their competitors (for example: Disney+, Amazon Prime Movies, Hulu, and New Zealand companies like LightBox, NEON, etc.). What strategy for growth and downsizing do you think Netflix could use to stay the dominant in the marketplace? Explain your choice. (10 marks – allow ~15 minutes)
Netflix Case: Netflix Uses Technology to Change How We Watch Videos
When Netflix was founded in 1997 in the United States, the movie rental giant Blockbuster had thousands of stores from coast to coast, filled with video cassettes ready for immediate rental to customers (Pride et al., 2018). Netflix had a different vision from this well-established, well-financed competitor. Looking at the recent development of DVD technology, Netflix saw an opportunity to change the way consumers rent movies. The entrepreneurial company built its marketing strategy around the convenience and low cost of renting DVDs by mail, for one low monthly subscription fee.
Instead of going to a local store to pick out a movie, subscribers logged onto the Netflix website to browse the DVD offerings and click to rent. Within a day or two, the DVD would arrive in the customer’s mailbox, complete with a self-mailer to return the DVD. And, unlike any other movie rental service, Netflix customers were invited to rate each movie on the Netflix website, after which they’d see recommendations tailored to their individual interests (Pride et al., 2018).
Fast-forward to the 21st century. Video cassettes are all but obsolete, and Blockbuster, once the dominant brand in movie rentals, has only one remaining shop in the US as consumer demand has shifted to digital distribution for entertainment (Porter, 2019). In Australia, both Blockbuster and Video Ezy still had a brand presence in 2018 (Pride et al., 2018). Since then, Blockbuster’s last Australian shop closed in March 2019 (Porter, 2019), and Video Ezy exists in the form of vending machines (kiosks) after its shops closed (Rosenberg, 2018).
Both brands have been prompted to reassess their distribution channels. You may notice more DVD rental kiosks such as “Video Ezy Express” popping up in convenient locations, including outside supermarkets and shopping complexes, in a bid to improve brand reach and accessibility. DVD rental kiosks, like online services, are accessible around the clock and reduce many store costs, including wages.
In contrast, by completely eliminating the need for brick-and-mortar stores or kiosks, Netflix has minimised its costs and extended its reach to any place that has postal service and Internet access (Pride et al., 2018). The company still rents DVDs by mail (Monahan & Griggs, 2019), but it has also taken advantage of changes in technology to add video streaming on demand.
Now, customers can stream movies and television programmes to computers, television sets, videogame consoles, DVD players, Smartphones, and other web-enabled devices. One advantage to the company is that streaming a movie costs Netflix less per customer than paying the postage to deliver and return a DVD to that customer.
Netflix’s Use of Technology: From Data-Tracking to Streaming
Netflix made technology a core competency from the very beginning. Because the business has always been web-based, it can electronically monitor its customers’ online activity and analyse everything that customers view or click on.
With this data, Netflix can fine-tune the website, determine which movies are most popular among which market segments, prepare for peak periods of online activity, and refine the recommendations it makes based on each individual’s viewing history and interests. The company also uses its technical know-how to be sure that the website looks good on any size screen, from a tiny Smartphone to a large-screen television.
A few years ago, planning for a significant rise in demand for streaming entertainment, Netflix decided against investing in expanded systems for this purpose. Instead, it arranged for Amazon Web Services to provide the networking power for streaming (Pride et al., 2018).
By 2018, on a typical night in the US, Netflix streaming occupied up to 20,000 servers in Amazon data centres (Pride et al., 2018). Demand was so strong by that time, in fact, that Netflix streaming accounted for about one-third of all internet traffic to North American homes during the evening (Pride et al., 2018). This percentage is only expected to increase. The Australian market, however, may pose technological hurdles, as the National Broadband Network is still being rolled out and is not available in all areas, meaning that accessibility may not be as straightforward as it is in America (Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications, n.d.).
Although Blockbuster and Video Ezy are no longer a competitive threat in their traditional form, Netflix does face competition from Amazon’s own video streaming service, Amazon Prime Video, which headed to Australia and New Zealand’s shores in 2017 (Pride et al., 2018).
Other direct competitors include well-established Hulu, YouTube, Nine Entertainment, and
Fairfax media’s joint-venture Stan, and Foxtel’s movie-streaming service Presto. It also competes with other entertainment providers, including cable, satellite, and broadcast television. Foxtel, for example, has dramatically reduced its basic cable packages in an effort to retain its share of the market in face of increasing competition from on-demand services (Pride et al., 2018).
Netflix Offers Exclusive Programming to Customers
To differentiate itself from its competitors, Netflix commissioned exclusive programming such as House of Cards, Arrested Development, and Orange is the New Black. The cost to produce such programs runs to hundreds of millions of dollars (Pride et al., 2018). Between May–December 2019, Netflix added 179 original programmes to its American streaming service, or an average of 30 new shows a month, or about one show per day (Fruhlinger, 2019). Netflix plans to continue pouring money into exclusive content because of the payoff in positioning, positive publicity, and customer retention.
The way that Netflix releases its exclusive programming reflects its in-depth knowledge of customer behaviour. The company found through its data analysis that customers often indulge in ‘binge watching’ for a series they like, viewing episodes one after another in a short time.
Based on this research, in 2013 Netflix launched all 13 episodes of the inaugural season of House of Cards at one time, an industry first (Pride et al., 2018). Executives gathered at headquarters to monitor the introduction, cheering as thousands of customers streamed episode after episode. By the end of the first weekend, many customers had watched the entire series and shared their excitement via social media, encouraging others to subscribe and watch. When Netflix won multiple Emmy Awards for House of Cards, it was another first—the first time any Internet company had been honoured for the quality of its original programming.
One key measure of Netflix’s growth is the strong increase in the number of monthly subscribers. In 2015, Netflix had about 70 million subscribers worldwide, of which 26 million were located outside the US (Pride et al., 2018). In 2019, Netflix had 151 million paid subscribers worldwide (158 million if free trials are included) (Kafka, 2019).
Despite the brand only launching in Australia in March 2015, it already has close to 2 million subscribers in 2018 (Pride, 2018). By July 2019, Netflix had more than 11.6 million subscribers in Australia, up 18% from the year prior (Gruenwedel, 2019) Its closest direct competitor, Stan, had 2.6 million subscribes in early 2019 (Knox, 2019).
Netflix will not say how many subscribers that it has in New Zealand, but a recent survey of 1,000 people, commissioned by the Office of Film and Literature Classification and carried out by UMR Research, found that 72% of respondents subscribed to Netflix. Of the same respondent sample, 77% said they watched television shows and movies using a paid online service (Kenny, 2019).
Keys to Netflix’s successful launch include offering free-trials and access to stripped-back free versions, as well as continued investment in original programming. It appears that streaming is the new broadcasting, and that ‘on-demand’ spells the demise of scheduled entertainment.
In: Operations Management
Question 4: Discuss how the steps of the Buyer Decision Process are being used by Netflix to satisfy existing and prospective customers by their product offerings. (10 marks – allow ~15 minutes)
Netflix Case: Netflix Uses Technology to Change How We Watch Videos
When Netflix was founded in 1997 in the United States, the movie rental giant Blockbuster had thousands of stores from coast to coast, filled with video cassettes ready for immediate rental to customers (Pride et al., 2018). Netflix had a different vision from this well-established, well-financed competitor. Looking at the recent development of DVD technology, Netflix saw an opportunity to change the way consumers rent movies. The entrepreneurial company built its marketing strategy around the convenience and low cost of renting DVDs by mail, for one low monthly subscription fee.
Instead of going to a local store to pick out a movie, subscribers logged onto the Netflix website to browse the DVD offerings and click to rent. Within a day or two, the DVD would arrive in the customer’s mailbox, complete with a self-mailer to return the DVD. And, unlike any other movie rental service, Netflix customers were invited to rate each movie on the Netflix website, after which they’d see recommendations tailored to their individual interests (Pride et al., 2018).
Fast-forward to the 21st century. Video cassettes are all but obsolete, and Blockbuster, once the dominant brand in movie rentals, has only one remaining shop in the US as consumer demand has shifted to digital distribution for entertainment (Porter, 2019). In Australia, both Blockbuster and Video Ezy still had a brand presence in 2018 (Pride et al., 2018). Since then, Blockbuster’s last Australian shop closed in March 2019 (Porter, 2019), and Video Ezy exists in the form of vending machines (kiosks) after its shops closed (Rosenberg, 2018).
Both brands have been prompted to reassess their distribution channels. You may notice more DVD rental kiosks such as “Video Ezy Express” popping up in convenient locations, including outside supermarkets and shopping complexes, in a bid to improve brand reach and accessibility. DVD rental kiosks, like online services, are accessible around the clock and reduce many store costs, including wages.
In contrast, by completely eliminating the need for brick-and-mortar stores or kiosks, Netflix has minimised its costs and extended its reach to any place that has postal service and Internet access (Pride et al., 2018). The company still rents DVDs by mail (Monahan & Griggs, 2019), but it has also taken advantage of changes in technology to add video streaming on demand.
Now, customers can stream movies and television programmes to computers, television sets, videogame consoles, DVD players, Smartphones, and other web-enabled devices. One advantage to the company is that streaming a movie costs Netflix less per customer than paying the postage to deliver and return a DVD to that customer.
Netflix’s Use of Technology: From Data-Tracking to Streaming
Netflix made technology a core competency from the very beginning. Because the business has always been web-based, it can electronically monitor its customers’ online activity and analyse everything that customers view or click on.
With this data, Netflix can fine-tune the website, determine which movies are most popular among which market segments, prepare for peak periods of online activity, and refine the recommendations it makes based on each individual’s viewing history and interests. The company also uses its technical know-how to be sure that the website looks good on any size screen, from a tiny Smartphone to a large-screen television.
A few years ago, planning for a significant rise in demand for streaming entertainment, Netflix decided against investing in expanded systems for this purpose. Instead, it arranged for Amazon Web Services to provide the networking power for streaming (Pride et al., 2018).
By 2018, on a typical night in the US, Netflix streaming occupied up to 20,000 servers in Amazon data centres (Pride et al., 2018). Demand was so strong by that time, in fact, that Netflix streaming accounted for about one-third of all internet traffic to North American homes during the evening (Pride et al., 2018). This percentage is only expected to increase. The Australian market, however, may pose technological hurdles, as the National Broadband Network is still being rolled out and is not available in all areas, meaning that accessibility may not be as straightforward as it is in America (Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications, n.d.).
Although Blockbuster and Video Ezy are no longer a competitive threat in their traditional form, Netflix does face competition from Amazon’s own video streaming service, Amazon Prime Video, which headed to Australia and New Zealand’s shores in 2017 (Pride et al., 2018).
Other direct competitors include well-established Hulu, YouTube, Nine Entertainment, and
Fairfax media’s joint-venture Stan, and Foxtel’s movie-streaming service Presto. It also competes with other entertainment providers, including cable, satellite, and broadcast television. Foxtel, for example, has dramatically reduced its basic cable packages in an effort to retain its share of the market in face of increasing competition from on-demand services (Pride et al., 2018).
Netflix Offers Exclusive Programming to Customers
To differentiate itself from its competitors, Netflix commissioned exclusive programming such as House of Cards, Arrested Development, and Orange is the New Black. The cost to produce such programs runs to hundreds of millions of dollars (Pride et al., 2018). Between May–December 2019, Netflix added 179 original programmes to its American streaming service, or an average of 30 new shows a month, or about one show per day (Fruhlinger, 2019). Netflix plans to continue pouring money into exclusive content because of the payoff in positioning, positive publicity, and customer retention.
The way that Netflix releases its exclusive programming reflects its in-depth knowledge of customer behaviour. The company found through its data analysis that customers often indulge in ‘binge watching’ for a series they like, viewing episodes one after another in a short time.
Based on this research, in 2013 Netflix launched all 13 episodes of the inaugural season of House of Cards at one time, an industry first (Pride et al., 2018). Executives gathered at headquarters to monitor the introduction, cheering as thousands of customers streamed episode after episode. By the end of the first weekend, many customers had watched the entire series and shared their excitement via social media, encouraging others to subscribe and watch. When Netflix won multiple Emmy Awards for House of Cards, it was another first—the first time any Internet company had been honoured for the quality of its original programming.
One key measure of Netflix’s growth is the strong increase in the number of monthly subscribers. In 2015, Netflix had about 70 million subscribers worldwide, of which 26 million were located outside the US (Pride et al., 2018). In 2019, Netflix had 151 million paid subscribers worldwide (158 million if free trials are included) (Kafka, 2019).
Despite the brand only launching in Australia in March 2015, it already has close to 2 million subscribers in 2018 (Pride, 2018). By July 2019, Netflix had more than 11.6 million subscribers in Australia, up 18% from the year prior (Gruenwedel, 2019) Its closest direct competitor, Stan, had 2.6 million subscribes in early 2019 (Knox, 2019).
Netflix will not say how many subscribers that it has in New Zealand, but a recent survey of 1,000 people, commissioned by the Office of Film and Literature Classification and carried out by UMR Research, found that 72% of respondents subscribed to Netflix. Of the same respondent sample, 77% said they watched television shows and movies using a paid online service (Kenny, 2019).
Keys to Netflix’s successful launch include offering free-trials and access to stripped-back free versions, as well as continued investment in original programming. It appears that streaming is the new broadcasting, and that ‘on-demand’ spells the demise of scheduled entertainment.
In: Operations Management
In: Accounting
Question provided us with Adjusted, Unadjusted and Post-closing trial balance sheets. With this information listed below please fill in:
The Mobility Solutions Company began operations on December 1, 2019. The unadjusted trial balance of the Mobility Solutions Company as of December 31, 2019 is found on the trial balance tab. The following information is required to prepare the necessary adjusting entries for the Mobility Solutions Company found in chapter 3.
1) The balance in Prepaid insurance represents a 24-month policy that went into effect on December 1, 2019. Review the unadjusted balance in Prepaid insurance, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
2) Based on a physical count, supplies on hand total $4,650. Review the unadjusted balance in Supplies, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
3) The equipment is expected to have a 4-year useful life, and be worth about $10,000 at the end of four years. Review the unadjusted balance in Accumulated depreciation, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
4) On December 26, the client paid a $9,000 60-day fee in advance, covering December 27 to February 24. Review the unadjusted balance in Unearned Consulting Revenue, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
5) Mobility Solutions's sole employee earns $160 per day for a five-day workweek beginning on Monday and ending on Friday. The employee was last paid on Friday, December 26. Review the unadjusted balance in Salaries payable, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
6) In the second week of December, Mobility Solutions agreed to provide 30 days of consulting services to a local fitness club for a fixed fee of $3,900. The terms of the initial agreement call for Mobility Solutions to provide services from December 12, 2019, through January 10, 2020, or 30 days of service. The club agrees to pay Mobility Solutions $3,900 on January 10, 2020, when the service period is complete. Review the unadjusted balance in Consulting revenue, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
Prepare the required adjusting and closing entries for the Mobility Solutions Company.
1 The balance in Prepaid insurance represents a 24-month policy that went into effect on December 1, 2019. Review the unadjusted balance in Prepaid insurance, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
2Based on a physical count, supplies on hand total $4,650. Review the unadjusted balance in Supplies, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
3The equipment is expected to have a 4-year useful life, and be worth about $10,000 at the end of four years. Review the unadjusted balance in Accumulated depreciation, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
4On December 26, the client paid a $9,000 60-day fee in advance, covering December 27 to February 24. Review the unadjusted balance in Unearned Consulting Revenue, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
5Mobility Solutions's sole employee earns $160 per day for a five-day workweek beginning on Monday and ending on Friday. The employee was last paid on Friday, December 26. Review the unadjusted balance in Salaries payable, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
6In the second week of December, Mobility Solutions agreed to provide 30 days of consulting services to a local fitness club for a fixed fee of $3,900. The terms of the initial agreement call for Mobility Solutions to provide services from December 12, 2019, through January 10, 2020, or 30 days of service. The club agrees to pay Mobility Solutions $3,900 on January 10, 2020, when the service period is complete. Review the unadjusted balance in Consulting revenue, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry, if any.
7Prepare the journal entry necessary to close the revenue account(s).
8Prepare the journal entry necessary to close the expense account(s).
9Prepare the journal entry to close Income Summary.
10Prepare the journal entry to close R. Walsh, Withdrawals.
Unadjusted
| Mobility Solutions | ||
| Trial Balance | ||
| December 31, 2017 | ||
| Account Title | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Cash | 23,505 | |
| Supplies | 6,200 | |
| Prepaid insurance | 2,400 | |
| Equipment | 34,000 | |
| Accounts payable | 8,200 | |
| Unearned consulting revenue | 9,000 | |
| R. Walsh, Capital | 46,000 | |
| R. Walsh, Withdrawals | 900 | |
| Consulting revenue | 8,500 | |
| Rental revenue | 450 | |
| Salaries expense | 2,720 | |
| Rent expense | 2,100 | |
| Utilities expense | 325 | |
| Total | 72,150 |
72,150 |
Post-closing
| Mobility Solutions | ||
| Trial Balance | ||
| December 31, 2019 | ||
| Account Title | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Cash | 23,505 | |
| Accounts receivable | 2,600 | |
| Supplies | 4,650 | |
| Prepaid insurance | 2,400 | |
| Equipment | 34,000 | |
| Accumulated depreciation - Equipment | 500 | |
| Accounts payable | 8,200 | |
| Salaries payable | 480 | |
| Unearned consulting revenue | 8,250 | |
| R. Walsh, Capital | 46,000 | |
| R. Walsh, Withdrawals | 900 | |
| Consulting revenue | 3,650 | |
| Rental revenue | 450 | |
| Depreciation expense | 500 | |
| Salaries expense | 3,200 | |
| Rent expense | 2,100 | |
| Supplies expense | 1,550 | |
| Utilities expense | 325 | |
| Total | 75,730 | 67,530 |
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