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By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

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www.netflix.com. By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11. Chapter 4- Netflix: The Making of an E-commerce Giant and the Uncertain Future of Atoms to Bits. What is Netflix?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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By: Dora E. Plancarte- Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11 www.netflix.com Chapter 4- Netflix: The Making of an E-commerce Giant and the Uncertain Future of Atoms to Bits
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Page 1: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas

BUS 550- Spring 2011

04/26/11

www.netflix.com

Chapter 4- Netflix: The Making of an E-commerce Giant and the Uncertain Future of Atoms to Bits

Page 2: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

What is Netflix?• Online company that offers on-demand

streaming of TV shows, concerts, documentaries, and movie and DVD rentals by mail

• Over 100,000 titles to chose from creating a near-limitless section (long tail)

• One flat rate service starting at $7.99 with no late fees and no shipping costs

• Online streaming 24/7 with no limits from Netflix ready devices

How many people in this class have a subscription to Netflix?

Page 3: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

Timeline• 1997: Incorporated in DE• 1998: www.netflix.com launched• 1999: Start of online subscriptions• 2002: Completed IPO (initial public

offering)• 2003: Revenues up 78% > than 2002 and profit was $6.5 million• 2006: Profit of $1 billion• 2007: Internet streaming• 2010: Streaming > DVD • 2010: Expansion to Canada• 2011: Over 20 million users

Page 5: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

Business Processes•58 ultrahigh-tech distribution centers located within driving distance of 119 USPS facilities•Handle 1.8 million DVD per day•100% of DVDs are hand-inspected•Turnaround time per DVD is 8 hrs. •Reach 97% of customers in a 2-day window•43 phone reps•2,180 FT & 2,149 PT employees

Page 6: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

Technology Features

• Queue• Blogs• Friends and Communities• Reviews• Social Media share feature• Ready Devices• Suggestions via Cinematch

(Collaborative filtering)• The Netflix Prize for $1 million

(crowdsourcing)

Page 8: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

Competition

• DVD Windowing is forever (Film release window) yet licensing creates restrictions, typically 28 days after DVD release date

• Low cost start up• Pure play (no storefronts)• Helped drive DVD brick-and mortar rental stores to bankruptcy• Affecting the cable industry• Netflix offers: largest selection, largest customer base, largest distribution

centers, and the industry leading strength in brand and data assets

Why have competitors not been as

successful as Netflix?

Page 9: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

New Business Model

• Blockbuster and Redbox: Rent a movie for a specified amount of time or late fees apply

• Netflix: Keep the movie as long as possible (no late fees) so less mail transactions are made since it costs 88 ¢ round-trip for a DVD by mail

Page 10: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

Achievements• #1 in customer satisfaction 9 times in

a row by Foresee• The best at satisfying customers by

Nielsen and Fast Company • Retail Innovator of the Year by the

National Retail Federation• CEO: 2010 Business Person of the

Year• Churn rate <3%• 95% of subscribers have

recommended Netflix• 71% of new subscribers have been

encouraged by an existing subscriber

Do you think customer

satisfaction has been the main reason for Netflix’s success?

Page 12: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

Takeaways• Netflix’s business assets• IPO “mistake”• Netflix’s attractive business• Why is Netflix successful?• Durable brands: customer

experience• Physical retailers are limited• E-Commerce reaches more

users• Atoms to bits concept• Windowing and licensing limits

Any questions?

Page 13: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

Question

A) Happy customers refer friends minimizing in subscriber acquisition costs.

B) It costs more to acquire a new customer than to keep one.

C) The longer a company has the customer, the less likely they are to leave.

D) The longer a customer stays with the firm, the more profitable they company becomes.

E) All of the above.

Why do companies strive for a low churn rate if new customers are always available?

Page 14: By: Dora E. Plancarte-Yslas BUS 550- Spring 2011 04/26/11

Works Cited1. Gallaugher, J. (2011). Information Systems: A

Manager’s Guide to Harnessing Technology 1.1, Flat World Knowledge Inc.

2. Netflix’s 10-K filings with the SEC for 2010.

3. Yahoo Finance: http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=NFLX NFLX <31 April 2011>

4. Virtual fun. Economist [serial online]. May 15, 2004;371(8375):15-16. Available from: Academic Search Premier, Ipswich, MA. Accessed April 24, 2011.

5. http://www.business-strategy-innovation.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Adam-Hartung-Netflix-Opportunity.jpg

6. http://www.ehow.com/facts_6757161_did-netflix-start_.html


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