Welcome | Sign In
MacNewsWorld.com
News

Blockbuster Lowers Subscriptions Rates

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Blockbuster Lowers Subscriptions Rates

Blockbuster will now offer a new plan allowing customers to place online orders to rent three movies at a time for $16.99, a dollar less than its previous top-tiered offering, called Total Access. The movies are mailed to the customer. Blockbuster is losing money on the online business but says it will be profitable next year as orders rise.


Leveraging Social Media To Boost E-Commerce Holiday Sales
Addressing the power of mobile messaging, social media and other word-of-mouth technologies, this paper provides concrete advice on how to integrate them into an e-commerce business plan. [Download PDF: 8 pgs | 665k]

Blockbuster is offering lower-price plans for its Web rental service to steal business from online video rental star Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX).

The Dallas-based Blockbuster is cutting prices $1 a month for customers ordering movies online just a month after the company's CEO suggested raising prices.

Price Pressures

Industry insiders are predicting Netflix may be forced to reduce subscriptions rates in an industry expected to grow more than 40 percent this year.

"Whether it is on demand or going online, or going to an actual store, people's thirst for movies is continually growing and now they have even more choice with how they access the entertainment," Mukul Krishna, global manager of digital media practice at Frost & Sullivan, told the E-Commerce Times.

Those choices put pressure on companies such as Blockbuster, which must continue to find new ways to compete.

"Online video and services like on demand are giving consumers the ability to say 'I want to see that movie right now,'" said Krishna. "Blockbuster needed to offer some new incentives."

A Dollar Less

Blockbuster will now offer a new plan allowing customers to place online orders to rent three movies at a time for $16.99, a dollar less than its previous top-tiered offering, called Total Access. The movies are mailed to the customer Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse.

Blockbuster also has a $4.99 deal for up to two online rentals per month, which is putting pressure on NetFlix to create a new price plan, according to Krishna.

Netflix charges $17.99 for a three-out-at-a-time plan, and it has begun including movies streamed over the Internet for customers with high-speed access and a Windows-based computer.

Although Netflix does not operate brick-and-mortar stores, it got the jump on the Internet movie subscription business and mail delivery of DVDs, pushing past the more established Blockbuster, Krishna explained.

Blockbuster has 3 million subscribers, according to the company. Netflix said it has reached 6.8 million subscribers but recently cut its year-end subscriber forecast to 7.3 million to 7.8 million from its January outlook of 8 million to 8.4 million.

Blockbuster is losing money on the online business, but says it will be profitable next year as orders rise.

After the Blockbuster announcement, company shares rose more than 8 percent.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Tim Gray


More by Tim Gray

Toshiba Slashes HD DVD Sales Targets
June 12, 2007
Toshiba now expects to sell 44 percent fewer HD DVD players than forecast this year. The slump comes at a critical time for the company, as the market still has not shown which high definition disc player format will dominate. Blu-ray Disc technology, rival of the HD DVD format, already has a foothold in 170 major companies.
Jobs: We Also Make Computers
June 12, 2007
Apple provided at its annual developer conference a peek at some of the 300 new features of "Leopard," the company's latest operating system, which is slated for October release. The computer maker will also make its Safari Web browser available for users of Microsoft's Windows operating system.
Developers Get a Whiff of Adobe's Fresh AIR
June 11, 2007
Adobe unveiled Adobe Integrated Runtime -- formerly called "Apollo" -- which allows developers to extend rich Internet applications to the desktop. "Adobe AIR expands the universe of possibilities for Web developers who can now deliver a new generation of applications that work across operating systems, and both inside and outside the browser," said Kevin Lynch, senior vice president and chief software architect at Adobe.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network