When the streaming leader started to stumble, it set off a mass questioning about streaming services in general.
Investors in entertainment companies and corporate bosses started to take seriously questions like: Is streaming a worse business than cable TV? What if we overestimated how many people would pay for streaming or misjudged how quickly they would change their habits?
Streaming remains the future of entertainment, but, as I've written before, the future does not necessarily arrive in a straight line.
One investment analyst told my colleague Nicole Sperling that he believed the total potential market for Netflix might be 400 million customers worldwide, rather than one billion, which Netflix had long said it was reaching for. If Netflix's potential is less grand than the company imagined it would be, or if it takes longer to get there, that's not only a problem for Netflix. It also shows that streaming may never be as big as optimists believed.
We don't always need to care when a rich company freaks out that it isn't growing as big and fast as it wanted. But this is different: We have benefited from the heedless streaming optimism, and the potential mismatch of entertainment companies' expectations and reality will affect us.
In the past decade, companies including Netflix, Disney, HBO, Comcast, Apple and Amazon have been throwing money around, mostly without turning a profit, to grab customers for their streaming services. All that money has most likely brought us cheaper and better streaming video services than those we would have had if there weren't so much hope that these entertainment services had a huge and lucrative potential audience.
If we had fun when hope about streaming was high, it might be a bummer now that the industry is questioning its own optimism.
Netflix and other companies say that they're still confident, but they're not acting like it. Netflix said on Tuesday that after spending gobs and then more gobs of money on making or buying entertainment for a long time, it would keep its programming budget roughly the same for the next few years.
Prudence with money at Netflix is a new look, and Netflix is not alone. Reporters have been busy chronicling budget cuts around the streaming industry and cancellations of shows to save money. "The days of the drunken-sailor spending are gone," one entertainment agent recently told Lucas Shaw, a Bloomberg News reporter.
(In fairness, there is still drunken-sailor spending, particularly from companies like Apple, which have goals for their streaming services other than turning a profit.)
All of us will start seeing the effects of this austere-ish streaming phase soon, if we haven't already. If you've wondered why Netflix and some other streaming services are releasing episodes of series one at a time or in batches rather than all at once for our bingeing pleasure, that's partly a result of growth concerns. Netflix wants you to subscribe for months to watch the new season of Stranger Things instead of watching all new episodes in a weekend and then cancelling.
Companies worried about their growth may release less "wow" programming or charge higher prices than we're used to. Netflix is beginning to push "paid sharing" subscriptions, a euphemism for charging extra to those people who now share a single Netflix password with six cousins and the pizza delivery guy. When Netflix was confident about its growth, it mostly ignored account sharing. Not anymore.
Lower-cost streaming subscriptions with commercials have been popular for Hulu and HBO Max, and Netflix will try them, too. They're an option for us to pay less, but they're also an acknowledgment that the relatively low-cost, all-you-can-watch buffet of entertainment with no ads is most likely behind us.
It's possible that this sadder phase for streaming is a blip. We'll see. But it's startling to see how much has already changed since streaming companies that assumed they'd keep growing fast for a long time had to confront the possibility that they were wrong.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Written by: Shira Ovide
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