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This article was published on April 20, 2022

Say goodbye to sharing Netflix passwords, and say hello to ads

Netflix is suddenly 'quite open' to an ad-supported tier after losing 200,000 subscribers


Say goodbye to sharing Netflix passwords, and say hello to ads

Netflix seems poised to implement some of the biggest changes to its business model in years. In the company’s Q1 2022 earnings call, CEO Reed Hastings dropped two bombshells.

Netflix lost subscribers

First: Netflix lost subscribers for the first time in a decade — 200,000 to be specific. That’s a far cry from the 2.5 million subscribers the company predicted it would gain just three months ago.

It’s worth noting that Netflix is in the red on its subscriber count in part because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — it lost 700,000 accounts after shutting down its services in Russia. Still, even ignoring that chunk of accounts, Netflix fell well behind expectations.

In order to combat dwindling growth, Netflix plans to crack down on password sharing, something which Hastings has called “a positive thing” on several occasions.

On today’s call, Hastings instead said “we’ve just got to get paid for them,” referring to the estimated 100 million viewers who use the service for free. Netflix says that its anti-password sharing system will take a year or so to deploy globally.

The crackdown on password sharing doesn’t come as a huge surprise. I imagine many Netflix users knew this was coming eventually, but Netflix was still growing quickly enough that the company didn’t consider password sharing to be a major issue.

The company has actually been testing deterrents to password sharing for a few months now. That said, COO Greg Peters indicated during the call that Netflix may not completely eliminate password sharing but rather find ways to charge people for it. That suggests to me the company might offer a shared plan or discount for password-sharers who don’t live in the same household, although Peters didn’t specify as much.

Netflix shared a chart comparing its screen time against other streaming services in the US in its letter to shareholders.

Although the company placed a lot of the blame on password sharing, that’s not exactly a recent development. Indeed, Netflix says the proportion of non-paying viewers “hasn’t changed much” over the years.

The company’s growth has instead stalled in large part because there are only so many potential viewers with limited time for TV to go around. It probably doesn’t help that the company keeps on raising prices. Competitors — which are often cheaper — have good shows too.

Ads are (probably) coming

More surprising was the second bombshell: it seems all but certain Netflix will introduce an ad-supported tier down the road.

Hastings said the company is now “quite open” to ad-supported subscriptions after years of being against them:

“Those who have followed Netflix have known that I’m against the complexity of advertising and I’m a big fan of the simplicity of subscriptions. But as much as I’m a fan of that, I’m a bigger fan of consumer choice, and allowing consumers who would like to have a lower price and are advertising tolerant get what they want makes a lot of sense.”

While offering an ad-supported tier is common for streaming services, it’s a dramatic shift for a company that has made its lack of ads a differentiator. Hastings has repeatedly denied speculation of Netflix moving to an ad-supported model in years past.

But I’m fine with them

While some will miss the purity of ad-free Netflix, I think it’s ultimately a good thing.

Netflix has raised prices six times in the last eight years, making subscriptions twice as expensive as they were in 2014. While the company would ideally, you know, stop charging people more money, that’s probably not going to happen. Offering those who only want to watch Netflix occasionally a more affordable option strikes me as a good thing.

I assume the ad-supported tier will be Netflix’s cheapest plan, but frankly, I wouldn’t mind if the company offered an ad-supported option at higher resolutions as well. I’m not a huge binge-watcher, so I don’t mind an ad here and there if it means I get to save a few bucks. But I am picky about image quality, so I still want to watch my favorite shows in glorious 4K. If Hastings really wants to give consumers more options, I hope the ad-supported tier isn’t limited to potato-quality 480p.

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