The Netflix Effect

from the fighting-the-big-names dept

Wired Magazine takes a look at what Netflix can do to fend off Blockbuster and Walmart, who both recently entered the DVD-rental-by-mail market. The article suggests that Netflix's recommendation engine is its secret weapon. The movie studios love it, because it breathes new life into smaller films that weren't box-office smashes. Some of the top rental films on Netflix did horribly at the box-office, but are making the studios lots of extra money via Netflix. Blockbuster and Walmart are companies that focus on the lowest common denominator, and thus (the theory goes) are likely to just push the big popular hits, and not worry about the smaller independent films that are so successful on Netflix. I wonder, though, how sustainable an advantage that really is. It really is not that hard for Blockbuster and Walmart to add their own recommendation engine - and to put plenty of resources behind it to make it even better than Netflix's system.
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  1. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 19 Nov 2002 @ 2:14pm

    No Subject Given

    If the recommendation engine is there secret weapon, then Netflix is in big trouble. Their engine sucks beans.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  2. identicon
    Jim Beam, 11 Jan 2003 @ 11:17pm

    Re: No Subject Given

    Their engine works like this: keep new releases a secret because we are cheap greedy bastards and won't pay to stock enough new releases to go around. I workaround the problem by opening yahoo dvd news and looking through for new releases and requesting them from netflix. Of course then there is the standard one month wait for netflix to send it to me.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  3. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Jun 2003 @ 9:07am

    No Subject Given

    I like the Netflix service, although there is certainly some "corruption" going on with their wait times etc.

    I find that having a smaller queue gets you a faster turnaround - I guess it's because they can't mark all your rentals as "Long wait" or nobody would use them.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  4. identicon
    Dalia, 30 Nov 2003 @ 5:19pm

    Netflix

    Do you think that what Netflix is doing with small films that weren't box office hits is bad? is it better that netflix helps out smaller films, and deemphasizes on the big films? keep in mind that movies that are so called smash hits in our society today, might not be of a worthy quality, perhaps netflix can bring forth higher quality films, that might not be appreciated now, but maybe appreciated in the future? or it could go the other way, Netflix could bring forth lower quality films?

    link to this | view in thread ]


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