Why the Dish/Blockbuster Streaming Service Won't Wound Netflix
So it’s not a Netflix killer. So what exactly did Dish announce today?
The company held a 40-minute press conference in San Francisco to unveil its new Blockbuster branded service, and many folks, including myself, were left scratching their heads by the end.
But best as I can tell, this is a service that might appeal to some Dish satellite TV customers who are paying for Netflix and want to save some money — they can get more or less what Netflix offers, at the price Netflix used to charge before its 60 percent price hike.
That’s not a terrible thing for Dish to offer. And if it does cost Reed Hastings and company some subscribers, then that’s certainly not a good thing for Netflix.
But Netflix — and its investors — have known for a long time that they’d be fighting new entrants in streaming video game. If this is as tough as the competition it gets, they’ll be quite happy.
Though dish is trying mightily to differentiate between the two, they seem quite comparable, except that:
1) The service is only available to Dish customers, and only a subset of the 14 the satellite service’s 14 million subscribers, who have the correct boxes/tech connecting their sets.
2) The Dish service will give people the ability to pick up movies directly from a blockbuster store instead of waiting to get it in the mail box.
3) Dish will offer a much smaller selection of titles for on-demand streaming than Netflix: 3,000 movies available for streaming to TVs, and 4,000 for streaming to PCs; Netflix has roughly 20,000 movie and tv titles.
4) The service will include videogame rentals via mail, which Netflix doesn’t offer yet but plans to roll out via itsnew/old Qwikster spin-off
5) It costs $10 a month. That’s $6 less than a comparable Netflix disc + DVD combo, but $2 more than the Netflix streaming-only package. (Like DirecTV and its Sunday ticket package, Dish will also use the service as a promotional freebie for new sign ups.)
2) The Dish service will give people the ability to pick up movies directly from a blockbuster store instead of waiting to get it in the mail box.
3) Dish will offer a much smaller selection of titles for on-demand streaming than Netflix: 3,000 movies available for streaming to TVs, and 4,000 for streaming to PCs; Netflix has roughly 20,000 movie and tv titles.
4) The service will include videogame rentals via mail, which Netflix doesn’t offer yet but plans to roll out via itsnew/old Qwikster spin-off
5) It costs $10 a month. That’s $6 less than a comparable Netflix disc + DVD combo, but $2 more than the Netflix streaming-only package. (Like DirecTV and its Sunday ticket package, Dish will also use the service as a promotional freebie for new sign ups.)
I think as we get a little more time to delve into this, we’ll get a better sense of how the services really stack up: Does Dish/Blockbuster have access to the same kind of “long tail” content that Netflix says its customers value? What about Apple and Android apps? Etc.
But so far, at least, investors have taken a look at what Dish has to offer and shrugged: NFLX shares up 1.73 percent for the day.
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