Many more people are jumping from one streaming subscription to another, a behavior that could have big implications for the entertainment industry.
Many more people are jumping from one streaming subscription to another, a behavior that could have big implications for the entertainment industry.
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Americans are getting increasingly impulsive about hitting the cancellation button on their streaming services. More than 29 million — about a quarter of domestic paying streaming subscribers — have canceled three or more services over the last two years, according to Antenna, a subscription research firm. And the numbers are rising fast.
The data suggests a sharp shift in consumer behavior — far from the cable era, when viewers largely stuck with a single provider, as well as the early days of the so-called streaming wars, when people kept adding services without culling or jumping around.
Among these nomadic subscribers, some are taking advantage of how easy it is, with a monthly contract and simple click of a button, to hopscotch from one service to the next. Indeed, these users can be fickle — a third of them resubscribe to the canceled service within six months, according to Antenna’s research.
“In three years, this went from a very niche behavior to an absolute mainstream part of the market,” said Jonathan Carson, the chief executive of Antenna.
I really don't understand why streaming business are so surprised. They are providing television for rent and users are renting it plain and simple.They seem to think they are entitled to lengthy subscriptions from users when in reality they aren't providing a service that's even stable or worth it.
The Netflix model was only ever really sustainable as long as there was only one or two providers. As long as there was only Netflix people were quite happy to just stay with the subscription because all of the content was on one convenient platform.
If I want to watch popular shows and how I have to subscribe to five or six services. Why would I do that if they are all still going to be there in a couple of months.
The Netflix model was only ever really sustainable as long as there was only one or two providers
The netflix model of streaming for cash was sustainable. The practice of gouging to where people will churn, that's more widespread and an expected result.
They usually keep new shows at least for a year. And I suppose after that there's no possible way of watching that content ever again, it's lost into oblivion and certainly not available to download from a large number of locations.
Paramount+ ate the children's entertainment app Noggin, which was primarily a streaming media and games app for the Nickelodeon crowd. It was commercial free, highly curated, and generally an exciting thing for the kids to open up and use to discover stuff like STEM games that were actually fun. Enshittification merged Noggin into Paramount, removed the recommendation algorithm geared towards kids, and shut down the Noggin app. Now Paramount is the only option and it's horrible.
My wife wanted to watch the Grammys and when we saw it was on Paramount Plus we got it for 1 day. Afterwards I bought a 25 dollar over the air antennae so we can watch live CBS on the local affiliate for the once per year when we want to watch live TV. Isn't worth it pretty much ever
they thought star trek would carry it.... when that didn't work, they shopped some of those titles around to play elsewhere and don't even have their entire flagship franchise available anymore.
Agreed. I have that shit for free because of where I work and have yet to watch a single thing on it. I mean there's things I would've watched ideally, but my tastes have changed where I don't want to revisit some things. Ah yes, they have the fucking Golf Masters on there. Paramount Plus' selection looks like the home of all of those mundane shows you'd commonly find on cable TV. The ones you skip a lot of the time. They're all here in one package that almost nobody wants unless they want to tap into nostalgia for some of the other ones, like the Nick shows.
Originally we went to get to watch RuPaul's Drag Race but it doesn't have the current season even though its the main attraction. Then when I saw that some Star Trek wasn't on it we canceled within a week.
Are you outside the US? I thought Netflix got all the Trek series everywhere outside of the US, but this was back when Discovery was first coming out so my info may be out of date. I just download the stuff to avoid jumping through these hoops and avoid ads.
You're probably being theoretical rhetorical, but they're definitely not surprised. Any actual confusion as to why an article like this can be cleared up when you consider the author isn't really talking to us. Try reading it as if it's a business brief, talking about us as a 'problem' that must be addressed. That 'problem' is we users are getting more value from the current model than was calculated by corporate.
Soon there will be another article (also addressing the room as if we're not part of the discussion) detailing how corporate managed to "fix" it, and the revenue increases it brings. The other companies will follow suit to thunderous applause