IS THE INTERNET & DIGITAL LIFESTYLE MOVING TO FAST???

IS THE INTERNET AND DIGITAL LIFESTYLE MOVING TO FAST FOR PEOPLE?? I WAS READING THIS BLOG ABOUT BLOCKBUSTER AND I HAD TO SHARE BECAUSE IT SPEAKS TO THE QUESTIONS I ASK? WHAT ARE THESE CEOS DOING TO KEEP UP?

Six months after making a big PR splash that Blockbuster’s platform was now available on TiVo, Blockbuster only has a total of 26 HD movies available and just under 1,000 movies all together. To put that in perspective, Apple has more than 2,500 HD only movies available via iTunes. How can Blockbuster think they are going to make any traction in the market with a catalog of 26 HD movies on a platform that has less than 1.5M stand-alone subscribers? YouTube and Netflix content on the TiVo platform has to date only streamed a few million videos in total, or as TiVo put it “millions and millions of streams” – and that’s content that is free.

Of course one of the major arguments I heard from some shareholders the last time I wrote about Blockbuster was that Blockbuster’s big advantage is that the vast majority of their customers rent new releases. Apparently they felt I didn’t “get it” since they seem to think that gives Blockbuster a huge advantage in the market. While they are right in that about 80% of Blockbuster’s rentals are from new releases, show me one instance how that has helped them on the digital front? If Blockbuster has all these new releases, why are only 26 movies available in HD on TiVo? And for all the shareholders who think Blockbuster is going to be on fifteen or twenty million devices by the end of this year, that’s just not realistic.

Another deal I hear some shareholders talk about is the one with T-Mobile where Blockbuster will be the exclusive movie download experience embedded on the upcoming HTC HD2 smartphone in the U.S. While that sounds nice, there are a couple of major problems keeping this from being a big deal. For starters, consumers have already shown us that they don’t want to download full-length movies to their phones, let alone pay for that content. Not to mention, the movies will only be available to download on the phones via WiFi and from folks at T-Mobile I have spoken to, they hope to sell a “few million” HTC HD2 phones over the next eighteen months. That’s not enough of an install base to make any real impact on Blockbuster’s business. Oh, and I should also mention that in Blockbuster’s PR release with T-Mobile the company said that, “This will be the first download and multi-screen mobile movie application for Blockbuster and is part of the Blockbuster multichannel offering to connect customers with more than 100,000 movies, television shows and games.” Well if 100,000 is the number they are aiming for, they are currently at 1% with their movie inventory on TiVo.

Listening to Blockbuster’s earnings call last week, you really get a good feel on just how confused they, or at least their CEO is. Additional answers to questions included statements like, “As for the competition, we’re not worried. The Blockbuster brand is so well-known. Netflix is much more longtail. We’re known for hit movies. So this is all very good to us.” Other statements included, “Netflix has said that it is not interested in going into mobile. So we think we’ve got a nice head start in mobile.” Why do companies seem to think they can be successful in every market just because they have a “well-known brand”? Having a well known brand in retail does not automatically carry over to digital. Not to mention, the company has one announced deal in the mobile space, for a phone that has not yet even been released, but they think that gives them a “head start”? And would someone please tell Blockbuster’s CEO that it does not matter if you have a “well-known brand”, it only matters if that brand is connected to a service or product that consumers feel is valuable. One could very easily use the example of Toyota, which has a very well-known brand, but not for a good reason.

In an interview on CBNC last Thursday, Blockbuster’s CEO said, “we don’t think we’re late on the digital side” and he also made the comment that when it comes to digital, “there is very little actual traffic today.” Apparently he missed the press release from Netflix and Microsoft from last year that said in the first three months of Netflix being on the Xbox platform, Netflix streamed 1.5 billion minutes worth of videos. That’s not a number you can argue with. You have to shake your head wondering how or why Blockbuster’s board would want the CEO speaking on digital when clearly he’s not aware of what’s going on in the market. Just watch the CNBC interview, listen to the direct questions asked and then listen to all of the fluff and marketing provided for answers. If Blockbuster does in fact have a real digital strategy like the CEO says, where is it? Has anyone seen them present it in public? Is there a slide that showcases what they are working on? I got some details from Blockbuster eight months ago when they were nice enough to walk me through it, but most of it was from a high-level with no real details other than to reinforce they want to be on as many devices as possible. Well isn’t that everyone’s digital media strategy? While no company is under any obligation to share their game plan with the market, for a company that has no creditability on Wall Street or the industry when it comes to a digital strategy, you’d think they would go out of their way to prove otherwise.

I didn’t see it get a lot of press but it was interesting to see that last week, Blockbuster quietly brought back late fees on video rentals in their stores. While that may help their core business, it’s not going to do anything to help their digital offering. I have a Blockbuster store 6 blocks from my house, yet I use the Redbox machine that is right across the street from them in the grocery store. If I wanted to use a Blockbuster Express machine, I’d have to drive about 15 miles away since Blockbuster won’t put machines in any locations close to where they have a store. As a result, they leave me no choice but to use Redbox.

While I am not a shareholder in Blockbuster or any other public company, some of their shareholders sure are adamant about the stock. One of the funniest comments I got was from a shareholder who wanted to convince me that the brick and mortar stores would always do better than digital due to the “experience” it provides. He wrote, “many consumers still find it fun to rent DVDs at a physical store instead of getting movies in the mail because of the experience of walking into a store where there are lights and other videos to look at and the whole experience”. Maybe that’s true if you’re a five year old, but if that’s the biggest thing Blockbuster has going for their brick and mortar business, then don’t be surprised when their lights go out sometime soon.

Share This Post
Have your say!
00
8 Comments
  1. Opportunity, opportunity, opportunity!!! I see nothing but opportunity for the small guy. This is a perfect time to really shoot good independent films and put it out yourself. You can go and break bread with them ON DEMAND people and you don’t have to get into the theaters. In the next 10 years movie theaters all over the country will be closing and people will be staying at home to watch the latest movie on their 3D TV’s. I watch more ON Demand right now then I do regular TV.

    It is not about the CEO’s not being able to keep up, it’s about these big companies being able to keep control of the market. Every time the small guy has something and it’s selling, the big companies come in and the small guy sells out. It’s going to be harder and harder for companies to justify that up front money when the little guy is already making big money via the internet. Blockbuster has been in trouble for a while because they are still using an old business model. Either CHANGE with the market or GET OUT the market…

    Spock

  2. Way to FAST and I believe it is going to explode. I feel there will be a point where people will become scared to get onto the internet. Security will become an issue!!!

  3. This article touches on a few things that I have been saying for a while…(by the way who wrote this article? You need to provide attribution to the author if you didn’t write it…)

    But this article touches on the the fact that some Executives (read older people) are not up on new trends in technology, many of these types think that everyone lives like them, they don’t realize the the world outside of their bubble is headed an entirely different direction. Some of these CEOs and Presidents joke about how they don’t use email, blackberrys, or the internet, their shareholders should be afraid when they make statements like that. If you are not on the internet outside of your corporate site you have no clue as to what’s coming next in your industry or the world at large.

    This article also shows how folks at the top can be ignorant of new trends in their own industry. This guy was making statements about something happening in his own industry and he was completely un-informed. Not only was he not informed of new trends in his business, but he was not prepped properly to speak at his press conference. He should never have been in the position to make statements that he or his staff had not researched.

    I see this all the time, I am a consultant in the IT industry and at least half of the senior execs I work with have no clue of what’s really going on in the world, let alone what’s coming over the horizon. The major problem whit that is these types cause companies to be 3 steps behind on implementing new ideas when its something beyond the comprehension of the Execs, or even worse new ideas can be canned if these types don’t realize that the future of their industry is headed in a new direction, while they want to stay the course.

  4. I think how funny it is when you post good info on very important issues shaping our world how very few comments are posted. This also says a lot about some of our generation who are failing to do the simple task of reading to stay informed. (WOW)
    The biggest thing that’s going on like some people have already highlighted is the some of the OLD heads of companies aren’t embracing technology very well. Majority of these old fellows have grandkids so just watch and learn what these kids are gravitate towards. The research is free and it’s living under your nose and sometimes at your house. Hold on

  5. @Boobear I realized that too. If the topic isn’t about sex, new music, a scandal or some new item the comments are lacking. I enjoy the informative type of post more as they give us some insight into the things that are important for us to progress as individuals. It also shows the young ones following, that to stay on top like JD, you have to educate yourself and not just focus on building beats and rapping. Keep up these type of post please…I enjoyed this one.

  6. It is not moving too fast at all I believe it is going at a good pace sometimes I think its a bit slow, but I am from the age of faster is better and I want results now. Perks of being a millennial I guess. But I agree with Spock its a great opportunity for the small business to tap into this and get ahead of big business. They are so comfortable being a monopoly that they dont try to change for the masses until they are threatened by something thats different!

  7. First of all I’d like to say, great article! I’ve got a big question bothering me, I really enjoy the design of your site and tried to download the same theme on my WP website. However, there is some kind of weird php error in the footer. Do you have any hints, what version are you using? Please PM me on Twitter @FitnessGuru or per e-mail.

  8. Classic post JD. I started not to read it…well I was skimming through and then I caught myself actually reading. lol. But I agree with you. Blockbuster needs to get with the times. They are like the mom and pop stores that still rent out VHS tapes. Move on.

Leave a Reply