Why Won't Netflix Party?
Disney+ has a shared viewing mode. Amazon's Prime does, too. There's even a "Netflix Party" Chrome extension available in the Google Play store. So, why won't Netflix launch the feature?
As a product leader, your job is to delight customers in hard-to-copy, margin-enhancing ways. On the face of it, a Netflix Party feature seems to combine all three elements:
Delight. During COVID19, when we all crave connection, enabling members to watch the same TV show or movie simultaneously makes sense. Even more, letting them chat, heckle, and compare notes on the movie sounds fun.
Hard to Copy. Netflixโs APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) make it easy to enable features like this, while other companies would struggle. But the stronger hard-to-copy effect is a network effect. If you connect with your friends on Netflix, youโre less likely to quit and leave your friends behind.
Margin-enhancing. A Netflix Party feature could enhance profits in two ways: 1) Members rave about the feature, thus attracting more new members, and 2) The feature improves retention and thus lifetime value. If the feature keeps one in a thousand members from leaving, it could improve the monthly cancel rate from 2.0% to 1.9%.
The Netflix Party Chrome extension, built by a small team of engineers unaffiliated with Netflix, provides a proof of concept. According to their page on Patreon, one million Netflix members have used the Chrome extension, and there have been more than 10 million downloads from the Google Play Store. (The team just renamed themselves Teleparty โ it took that long for the Netflix lawyers to notice them!)
So, why hasnโt Netflix launched the feature? Hereโs a summary of Netflixโs failed social efforts:
In 2008, Netflix launched a โPartyโ feature on Xbox. At peak, 5% of Xbox members used the feature, and it was killed in 2010.
Its โFriendsโ feature enabled Netflix members to share movie ideas with their friends. โFriendsโ was killed in 2010โonly 5% of members engaged with the feature. The problem: your friends have sucky taste in movies; plus, you donโt really want your friends to know about all of your guilty pleasures. โIndian Matchmaking,โ anyone? โSelling Sunset?โ โCake Boss?โ
The reality is that for features like this to create a meaningful business impact, there needs to be high engagement โ likely 20% of members to create a worthwhile lift via raving customers or improved retention.
If youโre reading this article, I suspect you might think Netflix Party is a great idea โ you would DEFINITELY use it and, of course, this is a different time and situation with folks so isolated by COVID19. But youโre a freak. Normal people donโt read Substack posts โ yet! And Netflixโs goal has always been to create an easy to use experience the entire world can embrace โ not just Silicon Valley freaks and LA movie buffs.
The downside of implementing lots of features like this โ lots of โfive percentersโ โ is you create a complicated experience where the product feels like a Swiss Army Knife. โWhatโs this tool for? When do I use this knife?โย
These five-percenters gunk up the experience and make it harder to use. And zillions of edge cases start popping up: โHey! Why canโt I use โPartyโ on devices other than my laptop?!โ or โHow do I execute โPartyโ using voice on an Amazon Show device?โ
Not All Good Ideas Benefit the Brand
Why wonโt Netflix party? For more than two decades, Netflix has been building a product that delivers on the brand promise โMovie Enjoyment Made Easy.โย
Think for a moment about the experience of forming a Netflix Party. First, you need to choose a movie everyone likes. Then, you agree on a time to watch. Finally, you hope the experience of watching a TV show/movie with friends somehow overcomes the downsides (your friendsโ lame banter and the hesitancy you had about this movie choice at this particular time).
Netflix understands this. Thatโs why they give premium members the ability for family members to watch four simultaneous streams. Kristen and I can watch a movie in our bedroom, while Kelsey watches in her room, and Britney is on the living room couch. Thatโs โMovie Enjoyment Made Easy.โ No debate about what movie to watch and when! And thatโs why I think itโs unlikely that youโll see Netflix Party implemented anytime soon.
Thanks for reading,
Gib
Gibson Biddle
PS. Click here to give feedback on this essay.
Thanks for sharing Gib! I was thinking hard about this recently... until I tried the Group Watch feature on Disney+. I was excited to share a holiday classic with our families. It was a cruddy experience. There was no connection other than our devices that could pause/play each other. It wasn't a shared viewing experience like I had hoped.
I think that's what people are looking for but in reality, a remote shared movie experience is at best... cruddy. Who wants to watch someone else watching a movie? Who wants to be interrupted by others when they're watching a movie? I'm sure there's some use cases where this will work beautifully. I really like the 20% perspectives for adoption. If it doesn't hit a critical threshold (20%), then let's try other things that we think will.
How about conversations around a movie ? You see a movie and then you start a conversation about it with your close friends. That already happens off Netflix....also in this world of overflowing content, some people want to checkout curated 'lists'...maybe a few influencers could share lists of their fav movies...