Netflix Q2 2024: Continuing growth as older viewers take control
Netflix saw revenue grow 17% YoY (to $9.6 billion) in Q2 with margin continuing to stay healthy at 27%, approaching the levels of legacy media. It appears that the immediate revenue benefits of 'paid sharing' are now dissipating but any shift in perception around paying for the service will continue as a positive
In the UK, older viewers continue to drive viewing growth on the service—they will increasingly dictate whether something is a hit
Despite Netflix's perennial narrative of amplifying the effectiveness of foreign-language programming, English-language content continues to travel better than anything else
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Netflix doesn’t think about its audience in terms of traditional demographics, instead it aligns them with ‘taste clusters’, which are formed by thousands of metadata tags on its programmes.
We have replicated Netflix’s approach to content analysis: layering its ‘mood tag’ and genre metadata with viewing data to identify what makes a Netflix hit.
Suspenseful, dark scripted dramas perform best globally, licensed high-volume sitcoms drive viewing in the UK, while unscripted TV has thus far underperformed.
Netflix Q1 2024: Revenues grow as reporting contracts
19 April 2024Netflix's Q1 revenue was up 15% YoY (to $9.4 billion) bolstered by firm global subscriber growth and the continued momentum of 'paid sharing'. Operating margin is forecast to be 25% across this year (up from 21% in 2023)—approaching the realms of legacy linear media—but transparency will be diluted as the company stops reporting subscribers and ARPU
UK subscriptions and overall engagement are mostly flat; growth by older viewers is masking declines by the young
Even with the strikes driving viewing towards UK content, licensed programming remains a relatively minor factor in Netflix’s library
Netflix Q4 2023: Big strides as people pay up
24 January 2024Netflix had its second-biggest quarter ever for net subscriber additions—up 13.1 million to 260 million, behind only Q1 2020—with the streamer's 'paid sharing' initiative the key factor. Meanwhile, Netflix's expansive deal with WWE moves it definitively into the live streaming market, although perhaps not yet sports
The universality of Netflix's non-English content is overstated but it did mitigate the reduced volume of new US content due to the strikes. With a continuing bleak US production outlook, this is not a card most competitors hold
Netflix's ad business is making gradual progress, with the streamer's suite of games now a target for further monetisation
Netflix Q3 2023: Fewer freeloaders, flattening engagement
19 October 2023Paid sharing and "price optimisation" are returning clear benefits for Netflix, with healthy subscriber growth (+8.8 million, up to 247 million) and an 8% YoY increase in revenue ($8.5 billion) in Q3. However, success of the advertising tier remains slow
In the UK, Netflix is growing revenues and ARPU, and although it is now a challenge to grow the subscriber base, there is a clear and large group of non-paying users that are now being targeted
Netflix's per household engagement is materially higher than its direct competitors. However, this is plateauing and has implications for revenue levers such as advertising impacts and price rises
Netflix Q2 2023: Free no more
20 July 2023The three planks of Netflix's strategy to stoke growth are beginning to pick up pace: pricing optimisation, charging of non-paying users and advertising are returning benefits, if at different rates. For Q2, Netflix announced growth of 5.9 million subscribers (+8% YoY) with revenues growing but at a slower rate ($1.83 billion, +2.7% YoY)
Netflix's advertising tier remains predictably peripheral. However the restructuring of its product offering and an influx of potential new subscribers who find themselves kicked out of other accounts could result in the company beginning to present to advertisers what they really want: viewers that they cannot reach easily elsewhere, if not yet at scale
The published draft Media Bill does not appear to present major issues for Netflix from a compliance standpoint, however, a clearer understanding of what "appropriate prominence" for the PSBs means is needed to calculate the impact on the streamer's access to viewers
Netflix doesn’t think about its audience in terms of traditional demographics, instead it aligns them with ‘taste clusters’, which are formed by thousands of metadata tags on its programmes.
We have replicated Netflix’s approach to content analysis: layering its ‘mood tag’ and genre metadata with viewing data to identify what makes a Netflix hit.
Suspenseful, dark scripted dramas perform best globally, licensed high-volume sitcoms drive viewing in the UK, while unscripted TV has thus far underperformed.
Netflix Q1 2024: Revenues grow as reporting contracts
19 April 2024Netflix's Q1 revenue was up 15% YoY (to $9.4 billion) bolstered by firm global subscriber growth and the continued momentum of 'paid sharing'. Operating margin is forecast to be 25% across this year (up from 21% in 2023)—approaching the realms of legacy linear media—but transparency will be diluted as the company stops reporting subscribers and ARPU
UK subscriptions and overall engagement are mostly flat; growth by older viewers is masking declines by the young
Even with the strikes driving viewing towards UK content, licensed programming remains a relatively minor factor in Netflix’s library
Netflix Q4 2023: Big strides as people pay up
24 January 2024Netflix had its second-biggest quarter ever for net subscriber additions—up 13.1 million to 260 million, behind only Q1 2020—with the streamer's 'paid sharing' initiative the key factor. Meanwhile, Netflix's expansive deal with WWE moves it definitively into the live streaming market, although perhaps not yet sports
The universality of Netflix's non-English content is overstated but it did mitigate the reduced volume of new US content due to the strikes. With a continuing bleak US production outlook, this is not a card most competitors hold
Netflix's ad business is making gradual progress, with the streamer's suite of games now a target for further monetisation
Netflix Q3 2023: Fewer freeloaders, flattening engagement
19 October 2023Paid sharing and "price optimisation" are returning clear benefits for Netflix, with healthy subscriber growth (+8.8 million, up to 247 million) and an 8% YoY increase in revenue ($8.5 billion) in Q3. However, success of the advertising tier remains slow
In the UK, Netflix is growing revenues and ARPU, and although it is now a challenge to grow the subscriber base, there is a clear and large group of non-paying users that are now being targeted
Netflix's per household engagement is materially higher than its direct competitors. However, this is plateauing and has implications for revenue levers such as advertising impacts and price rises
Netflix Q2 2023: Free no more
20 July 2023The three planks of Netflix's strategy to stoke growth are beginning to pick up pace: pricing optimisation, charging of non-paying users and advertising are returning benefits, if at different rates. For Q2, Netflix announced growth of 5.9 million subscribers (+8% YoY) with revenues growing but at a slower rate ($1.83 billion, +2.7% YoY)
Netflix's advertising tier remains predictably peripheral. However the restructuring of its product offering and an influx of potential new subscribers who find themselves kicked out of other accounts could result in the company beginning to present to advertisers what they really want: viewers that they cannot reach easily elsewhere, if not yet at scale
The published draft Media Bill does not appear to present major issues for Netflix from a compliance standpoint, however, a clearer understanding of what "appropriate prominence" for the PSBs means is needed to calculate the impact on the streamer's access to viewers