There has been a lot of love for Spotify this year. But you know what they say: if you love something, you have to set it free.
I'm starting to wonder if this applies to entertainment services. I look at what happened to Netflix NFLX and cringe. This was the company that took down Blockbuster! It was the company that made being lazy fun; why get off your butt and go to a video rental store when you could simply wait three days for a DVD to arrive in the mail? Netflix was cheaper, more efficient, and quickly became the dominant force in video rentals.
In the financial world, Netflix had become a sure thing. It was the company that couldn't lose. But once greed and stupidity entered the picture, consumers told CEO Reed Hastings where to stick it, and investors scattered. While some argue that the firm is twitching but not yet dead, the reality is that Netflix may never fully recover from its mistakes.
Unfortunately for music lovers who appreciate the low-cost, all-you-can-eat digital streaming buffet known as Spotify, a Netflix-inspired strategy may be in the company's future. It's not that Spotify's execs are eager to imitate what is arguably the most hilarious stock decline of the year. Rather, Spotify is eager to take over. And when it does – when it believes it has achieved an appropriate level of success – the company won't respond by showing us a bit of gratitude. Spotify will respond by attempting to take advantage of a situation it thinks it controls.
That's what Netflix did. Hastings actually believed that consumers would accept a price hike because he told us that the company was “offering our lowest prices ever.” He thought this not merely as a cocky CEO but as a corporate exec that believed that his company's product was too important for people to walk away from. He was wrong.
Hastings may have also been using the logic that if Comcast CMCSA can do it, why can't Netflix? Comcast, however, has never raised its rates proudly and loudly; it does so on the sly with as little PR as possible. Then, one day when consumers get their bills, they discover what Comcast has done, pick up the phone, and complain. Those consumers often get a fee or two removed, but only after spending an hour or more on the phone. Comcast knows that there are inevitably some consumers who won't complain. It also knows that some consumers will walk away from the service, but it doesn't care because, unlike Netflix, Comcast has a true monopoly in some markets. To be clear, Comcast isn't impervious. But its protective barriers are much thicker than those of Netflix.
Consequently, Netflix is the one that has lost more than 50% of its stock value – not Comcast. Netflix is the one who will struggle to turn a profit in 2012 – not Comcast.
You might be wondering what this has to do with Spotify. Let's review a few facts:
Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs- Just as Netflix offers unlimited streaming of movies on a multitude of devices, Spotify offers unlimited streaming of music on Android and iOS.
- Netflix became an investor favorite after experiencing rapid subscriber growth. Spotify's paid subscriber rate is also very impressive; in less than two months the service reached two million paid subscribers.
- After its first success story, Spotify responded not by rewarding consumers but by forcing new users to sign in with Facebook. Consumers did not respond favorably.
- Well, for starters, how about Netflix? The stock is a potential steal at less than $80. If the company gets its act together, investors who buy now could be delighted by the results.
- If services like Netflix and Spotify prevail, data will continue to become a more valuable commodity, increasing the importance of and the reliance on Comcast, AT&T T, Verizon VZ, Sprint S, and other broadband and mobile Internet providers.
- Apple AAPL is already the digital leader in music sales. iCloud will enhance that leadership. Over the next couple of years, Apple could also become a prominent player in streaming entertainment.
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
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