Jessica Heygate
Jan 20, 2023

Netflix wants ad tier to be ‘as large as Hulu’

Streaming giant is aiming for its ad-supported tier to become a $3 billion business, surpassing more established players.

Netflix wants ad tier to be ‘as large as Hulu’

Netflix is modeling the future prospects of its advertising-supported plan on Hulu, which it aims to grow to “as large as” over the next few years, chief financial officer Spencer Neumann told investors on Thursday (Jan. 19).

Hulu launched as a free, ad-supported platform in 2008 before establishing a subscription tier in 2015. The Disney-owned streamer had 47.2 million paid subscribers as of Oct. 1 last year, and was estimated to have generated $2.1 billion in ad sales in 2021.

Netflix estimates that roughly half of Hulu’s subscribers are ad-supported.

While Netflix’s own $6.99 ad-supported subscription tier is just two months old, executives are hopeful it can reach similar figures over time.

“It is a multi-billion dollar business for [Hulu]. That is U.S.-only — so lower reach, lower engagement than us,” Neumann said. “Given what we have seen and the engagement on our ad plan…we would expect to be as large or larger over time.”

He told investors that Netflix “wouldn't get into a business like this if we didn't believe it would be bigger than at least 10% of our revenue — and hopefully much more over time.” Netflix generated $31.6 billion in revenue in 2022.

The company also signaled it was open to potentially adding a free ad-supported tier to its offering. Co-CEO Ted Sarandos said he was “open to all these models that are out there right now,” adding “we are keeping an eye on that segment, for sure.”

Netflix will present for the first time during the TV industry’s Upfront week in May after securing Paramount’s vacated spot.

While it may be surprising to see a streaming service present alongside traditional TV companies, co-CEO Greg Peters said Netflix is initially competing “mostly with the traditional TV advertising pool” by offering a “lean-back experience.”

“We can layer into that, over time, components of what has made digital advertising so effective,” he added, pointing to Netflix’s ambition to use its first-party data to improve its targeting and measurement capabilities. 

He said Netflix was working on improvements to its ad delivery validation and measurement, targeting and user experience. It is also working with Microsoft to improve its ad sales and operations processes. The limited capabilities that Netflix launched with frustrated early advertisers.

Netflix’s president of worldwide advertising Jeremi Gorman provided a brief preview of upcoming innovations for the new ad-supported tier — including new targeting capabilities — at CES 2023 earlier this month.

Netflix has not provided subscriber or revenue figures for its ad tier. It had initially promised to sign up 500,000 subscribers by the end of 2022, but warned advertisers in November that it was lagging behind projections. Netflix issued refunds to advertisers in December for falling short on audience guarantees.

In a letter to shareholders the streaming company said the tier is driving incremental membership growth, and that it has witnessed “very little” users switching from its paid tiers.

Source:
Campaign US
Tags

Related Articles

Just Published

2 hours ago

Women’s cricket searches rose by 103% in 2024: ...

Live music events including Coldplay, Taylor Swift, Vijay Antony, and Diljit Dosanjh concerts also saw a 43% increase, according to the report.

2 hours ago

Pitch consultants respond to 'pay-to-play' ...

Industry body VoxComm said the rise of this model puts agency-client relationships at risk.

3 hours ago

Coach appoints Mother to creative account and ...

The latest campaign features actors Elle Fanning and Nazha, model and songwriter Koki, and rapper Youngji Lee, all of whom are global ambassadors for Coach.

3 hours ago

Do the latest holding company results signify a ...

Industry leaders weigh in on what Dentsu, Omnicom, Publicis Groupe and Interpublic Group results mean for media.