Home CTV Roundup Price Drops Are Part Of The Streaming Profitability Picture

Price Drops Are Part Of The Streaming Profitability Picture

SHARE:

Like retailers, streamers take Black Friday as an opportunity to slash prices and get more customers in the door, so to speak.

Hulu, Peacock, Paramount+ and Max all advertised steep subscription discounts last week: Hulu with ads at 99 cents per month for a year and Peacock with ads for $1.99 per month (also for a year), to name just a few. I, for one, gave into the temptation to resubscribe to Hulu so I can watch old reality shows like “Wife Swap” and “Hoarders.”

Growth in sign-ups from discount offers is unpredictable. Some consumers, for instance, may cancel their subscriptions once their discounts expire. But based on what I’ve gathered from online forums and personal anecdotal evidence, viewers are certainly signing up. (Check out this Reddit thread in r/cordcutters for proof.)

Uncertainty aside, streamers benefit from selling super-discounted memberships because they design most of their deals specifically for their ad-supported tiers.

More AVOD subscribers translates to higher average revenue per user (ARPU) for streaming services. And, of course, platforms hope new subscribers stick around after their discounts expire and start paying full price for ad-supported memberships, which would boost ARPU even more.

Churn burns

Most streamers are in their profitability phase, so their priority is curbing subscriber churn.

Churn is the “new existential crisis in premium streaming,” said producer and business professor Evan Shapiro, speaking at Paramount Advertising’s TV Now summit in New York City earlier this week.

According to recent data from Antenna and Adobe, the rate of subscription cancellations is rising: The report classifies roughly a quarter of paid streaming subscribers as “serial churners,” or consumers who have canceled three or more paid streaming subscriptions in the last two years.

Blame price increases and more streaming competition.

Making a profit

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

But seasonal discounts certainly help boost user acquisition.

Even for subscribers that don’t stick around long term, a sign-up at a fraction of the price is still a bonus for a platform’s ARPU as long as that consumer is streaming with ads.

ARPU is one of the primary indicators of a streaming service’s long-term profitability, and the most straightforward way to raise it is by serving ads to more viewers to generate more revenue.

The direct link between ad revenue and ARPU is why platforms are blatantly trying to push more of their subscribers from ad-free to ad-supported accounts.

Case in point: Both Netflix and Disney+ have raised the prices of their ad-free options, and Netflix is actively enforcing against account sharing while Disney has plans to take a similar path next year. Both platforms have been vocal about prioritizing building their ad-supported subscriber bases – and both recently reported rising ARPU numbers as a result.

So, regardless of how many Black Friday-induced subscribers don’t churn, streaming services can at least expect a healthy bump in ARPU from dropping the price of ad-supported access (even if only temporarily).

In the meantime, I’m gonna go watch an episode of “Wife Swap.”

Are you enjoying this newsletter? Let me know what you think. Hit me up at [email protected].

Must Read

Amazon Juices Profits, With A Big Assist From The Ads Biz

Wall Street wanted profits. Big Tech delivered. That was the case for Google, Meta, Microsoft, Apple and – more than any other US tech giant – Amazon.

Comic: Welcome Aboard

Google’s Ad Revenue Rockets Upward Again, But The Open Web Is Getting Less

Google has always been the internet waystation. People arrive to be shuttled someplace else. Increasingly, though, Google is the destination.

How Bayer Is Using Creative Analytics To Cure Its Data Divide

Bayer partnered with its data agency, fifty-five, to develop a custom in-house creative analytics dashboard built on Google Cloud to more effectively measure and evaluate creative performance.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

First-Party Data On Ice? How Conagra’s Birds Eye Brand Navigates The New Video Ecosystem

Conagra-owned brand Birds Eye brings a new approach to online video, social shopping and first-party data.

As The Open Web Wobbles, Index Exchange Is Betting On Curated Deals

Index Marketplaces activates the curation capabilities of DSPs, DMPs and RMNs – and the demand for their PMP deals – across Index Exchange’s network of publishers.

an almost handshake

LUMA: 2024 Will Be Better For M&A (No, Seriously This Time)

Overall deal activity in the ad tech market was down 10% year over year in 2023, according to LUMA Partners. But 2024 may be looking up.