Netflix: Promotional Activity Heats Up for the close of 2011

I’ve been checking my inbox the last week and it seems that Netflix is all about me buying a subscription for friends and family.  I can understand after the last year of activity and movement of their stock price they need to do something to prop up the value.

Dave Thomas, a reader here, submitted a guest post on the topic of Netflix.  So many thanks to Dave for the submission and here it it:

Will the Netflix Brand Ever Truly Recover?

When many marketing experts look back on 2011, they are likely to converse over some of the major successes and flops when it came to branding campaigns these last 12 months. By all accounts, it is likely that Netflix and a pair of its endeavors will be branded in the latter category.

While it is still a major player in the movie DVD market, Netflix and CEO Reed Hastings can only wonder what would have been had they not open the floodgates to a pair of disastrous public relations moves earlier this summer.

During a recent UBS Media conference in New York City, Hastings was open and to the point in discussing how the company with the famed red logo had essentially screwed up.

 

Netflix Was Feeling Pretty Good About Itself

According to Hastings, “We did so many difficult things this year that we got overconfident. Our big obsession for the year was streaming, the idea that ‘let’s not die with DVDs.'”

While Netflix did not die in 2011, it sure put itself in a pickle to say the least with a pair of bad moves, resulting in losing more than 1 million paying monthly customers in less than a month

Meantime, Netflix shares have dropped 74% over the past six months, something no company CEO or its investors for that matter want to hear. Looking at it from another vantage point, Netflix stock was soaring back in July at nearly $300 per share, while today it sits near the $70 mark.

First the company went public with its idea to charge separate fees for its DVDs-by-mail and streaming video plans. As if that were not bad enough in a challenging economy, the company then followed up with the negative announcement that it was going to rebrand its DVD service to be known as Qwikster. That in essence was strike two.

 

Two Strikes and You’re out?

With those first two strikes, Netflix soon saw customers taking to social media and other venues to express their outrage at the plans, leaving Hastings and other company officials to enter the spin zone, trying to paint a picture that the price hikes were needed, while the new service would be better for customers over time.

As Hastings would eventually come to admit, the company moved too quickly with its plans, not entirely thinking through the potential ramifications.

According to Hastings, streaming is the future, so he and others are not being out of touch when looking to devote the energy and resources to this area of the movie entertainment business. “In streaming, we’re a cable network from a rights standpoint Hastings remarked.” As such, one prediction is that Netflix’s streaming content licensing fees will jump from a mere $180 million in the last year to a sizeable $2 billion over the next 12 months.

What does this all mean for a company who stood by as companies like Hollywood Video and Blockbuster watched the curtains fall on their productions?

While Netflix moves forward and continues to be part of the online streaming and home DVD movie discussion, other competitors will continue to put pressure on Hastings and his mates.

Another slip up along the way could end up branding Netflix the latest Hollywood Video or Blockbuster; only time will tell.

 

Dave Thomas, who covers among other items how to start a small business extensively for Business.com.

PCamp Minnesota: See You Thursday!

This week’s travel brings me to Minneapolis and the folks from the ProductCamp are getting together.  If you are in Minneapolis on Thursday I hope to see you there.

Many thanks to Barry and Jennifer Doctor for again getting the Product Management and Marketing community together to talk shop.  I hope to see you there, below is an overview from the invite:

Join us for the first ever ProductCamp Happy Holiday Hour. If you were at ProductCamp last month, one of the big takeaways was to always keep your network alive. Here is a chance to hug old friends and shake hands with new ones in a very casual, festive environment. It is another chance to work on building a vibrant, local product community.

AT: St. Louis Park Woodfire Grill, 6501 Wayzata Boulevard, Minneapolis, MN 55426  http://www.slpwoodfiregrill.com7:00 PM – 9:00 PM

  

PLEASE RSVP: http://pcampmn4.eventbrite.com/  

Hope to see some Spatially Relevant readers there!

Brand Brilliance? White Coke Cans, saving the environment and the benefits of PR

I’ve been interested in the white coke cans for several weeks now, mainly because the new white coke cans have more than once created confusion in my house and I think it provides for an interesting brand case study or at least an interesting story to share.

So in October the announcement of how “Coca-Cola is ditching its iconic red cans as part of a fundraising campaign to protect the polar bear’s Arctic habitat. ” didn’t really sink in. From a buying experience, everything felt the same – the pricing, the red 12 pack packaging and the presence of a polar bear, which many of us already associate with Coke. So no issue or brand confusion there, but that is where it stopped before Coca-Cola halted the production of the white cans.

When it comes to drinking and procuring the product from the fridge is where Coke fundamentally changed the experience for diet coke and regular coke drinkers alike. Maybe that’s a little much, but from a branding perspective doesn’t Coca Cola own Red and Diet Coke owns white, right?

First you have to say kudo’s for Coke for giving back and trying to improve the habitat for polar bears. Muhtar Kent, chairman and CEO of The Coca-Cola Company said: “We want to help the polar bear — a beloved Coca-Cola icon since 1922 — by helping conserve its Arctic habitat… That’s why we’re using one of our greatest assets — our flagship brand, Coca-Cola — to raise awareness for this important cause. And by partnering with WWF, we can truly make a positive difference for these majestic animals.”

A great idea, but it does abandon a classic branding reality that “it is advantageous for a brand to consistently “own” certain colors, which provide an additional recognition cue”. It’s that lack of a visual cue which I think has created experiential confusion for me as a diet coke drinker. It wasn’t only me, but I recently had our annual open house and our guest were confused as well. It started out innocently enough, people inquiring if I had Coke and I dutifuly confirmed I had plenty of Coke. That being said, when folks reached into the fridge or coolers to grab a coke, they were met with a sea of undifferentiated white cans.

There were other anomalies I noticed throughout the day of our open house during my real-time straightening up as I walked by abandoned drinks only to notice a trend – many of the white coke cans were essentially full. Maybe not full, but 1 sip short of a full can which upon digging in I found out was caused by Diet Coke drinkers who thought they were getting diet and not regular. It appears to have been a problem for others as well per the WSJ article from last week, which even asserted a difference in taste for some folks:

Some consumers complained that it looked confusingly similar to Diet Coke’s silver cans. Others felt that regular Coke tasted different in the white cans. Still others argued that messing with red bordered on sacrilege.

Despite the confusion of the cans, I found this brand extension as an interesting case study on how to spotlight corporate initiatives and to solidify a brand’s contribution to the community, but it has for at least me made me start looking at the actual impact of this. While I’m confident the strategy to put forth an initiative to preserve the habitat was a good thing, I wonder if all the 1.4 billion white cans had made it to the market how many were wasted?

If I use my experience of between 9-11 cans out of the 96 cans we had in the house, then even at half the waste rate in my house of over 9% on the low end, as many as 64,000,000 cans could have gone to waste which can’t be good for urban, suburban or rural habits in their markets. Using a study done by Coke in the UK, a standard 330ml can of Coke embodies the equivalent of 170g of carbon dioxide (CO2e)” or nearly 11M kilograms of unnecessary CO2.

That’s I’m sure my experience is an untended consequence of the initiative and it looks like cancelling the cans will provide some environmental benefits beyond habitat donation with the reduced carbon footprint of wasted or un-enjoyed product.

So I wonder how this is going to impact the WWF?

Originally there was a target contribution of $3M dollars from Coke and the potential for increased awareness of the arctic habitat and additional public contributions via text, WWF could stand to benefit as much as say $10M (guesstimate) which is non-trivial.

So the final question I have: Could a more environmentally conscious plan have been pursued and even potentially benefited WWE and Coke’s bottom line better?

Acknowledging that strategically the initiative has done much for Coke and WWF, but I thought I would take a stab at the math. So with say $0.15 per can (some estimates are north of $.40/can) in cost of manufacturing and delivery, Coke could have saved nearly $9.5M in productions costs and committed a guaranteed $5M from Coca-Cola instead of the $3M and everyone may just possibly may have been ahead, but I doubt they would have got such a PR benefit.

I wonder what the internal and operational costs were or creating and ending the campaign? I guess it’s unimportant, but I guess Coke proves that a brand’s impact is more than the product, but the whole experience.

So what is your brand’s promise and customer experience doing for your products?

Time to reflect: 100 Things I’m Thankful for in 2011

Thanksgiving already?!?!  There are lot’s of reasons this year flew, but mainly it’s been driven by family, friends and my career which has made 2011 fly by.  2011 has been fun and full of memories which I couldn’t have imagined would have taken place this year.

Since it’s Thanksgiving, that means I get the opportunity to do what my 5th 100 Things I’m thankful for post, which is my favorite post of the year.

 

  1. My family which just keeps getting bigger – kids, parents, brothers, cousins, nieces, nephews and my wife
  2. Watching all my kids grow closer as friends
  3. My automagic coffee maker which greets me everyday with fresh coffee when I’m home
  4. That kids provide a consistent reality check
  5. Breakfast at Chompies
  6. A crisp sunny fall morning.
  7. A block of time just to curl up with the kids and catch up on Umizoomi
  8. The way Hadrian slowly wakes up every morning
  9. That Kevren and Dijouri are setting goals already
  10. Catching up with Friends when on the road
  11. A morning walk
  12. A house full of dogs and kids with the BBQ going
  13. The day I realized that I really don’t have to respond to a given email in real-time
  14. Netflix, regardless of their price increase make my life easy – let’s watch Pocoyo again!
  15. Catching up on TV on a dreary day
  16. When I actually get time to use my iPad when I home
  17. Watching Hadrian try and swipe at the TV like an iPad
  18. The day I realized that gravity always wins
  19. The weekend I just lost to Cut the Rope
  20. A user interface that doesn’t require any documentation
  21. That I still believe most people are kind and mean well.
  22. Free Wireless in the airports
  23. Every time I get asked to be a mentor
  24. Opportunities to talk metrics
  25. The Georgia climate, I know it’s hot in August, but it all is forgotten on a sunny day in February
  26. Steamed asparagus
  27. Every time I get the opportunity time to read to my kids
  28. Instagram
  29. The folks that read spatially relevant
  30. Layovers I can actually enjoy
  31. Sunrises cresting over mountains
  32. Ideas that work
  33. Ideas that don’t work and learning from them
  34. Small businesses
  35. Any opportunity where I can teach someone something
  36. Going out to dinner with the kids at the local diner.
  37. Sleeping in to 6:00 am – it keeps getting earlier every year!!!!
  38. The day I realized most of the things that pop up in life are just noise
  39. Going to an aquarium
  40. Every chance I get the time to enjoy a city when I’m on the road
  41. That I was able go do fun stuff on Halloween this year with the family
  42. Walking on a beach
  43. Sunsets over the ocean
  44. Going the High Museum of Art on a weekend morning
  45. Being home and having nothing to do but chill
  46. Every meeting which starts on time
  47. GoGo Inflight wireless
  48. That everyday I have the opportunity to help solve problems
  49. Sunny Days with big fluffy clouds where I can imagine shapes with my kids
  50. The day I just decided to have an omelette this year for the first time
  51. Watching live music with friends
  52. My dogs – Lilly and Tewsy, plus the neighborhood dog Lucy which hangs out 16 hours a day.
  53. Every time I am reminded that history is important.
  54. Taking the time to walk to all my flights at hartsfield jackson
  55. Naps
  56. Watching my teenagers grow up, learn and become responsible.
  57. Any chance I get to catch a baseball game.
  58. A good bottle of random wine.
  59. That all my kids take every opportunity to learn new things
  60. Every chance I get to blog
  61. Playing Plants vs. Zombies
  62. Engaging discussions with the folks I work with
  63. 2 week long Words with Friends games.
  64. That Atlanta has such an active product management community with TAG PM and ProductCamp ATL
  65. The team at Pragmatic Marketing
  66. Traveling to new places
  67. That I’m able on most days to wake up excited and go to bed fulfilled.
  68. Everyday I have the opportunity to learn something new
  69. Every time I don’t forget stuff in a rental car – glasses again!
  70. Not having to travel for Thanksgiving this year – four years in a ROW!
  71. Each time I read a quote which just makes me think
  72. Every time I get the opportunity to have a thoughtful discussion
  73. Every time I get an amazing meal when I least expect it – that Marriott in Colorado has amazing catering
  74. Dinner with friends
  75. That most days I have no surprises and when I do, I’m up for them
  76. On time departures
  77. Cooking dinner with Emily for friends and family
  78. Desert bacon – thick cut bacon with brown sugar and orange zest – mmmm
  79. Finding that zone when writing a blog post.
  80. Shark week
  81. When the coffee maker in my hotel room actually works.
  82. Every chance to catch up with those folks I’ve been hanging out with for the last decade
  83. A good book which I can put down.
  84. 8 hours of uninterrupted sleep where I wake up on my own volition.
  85. When I don’t leave my coat in my car before I fly north
  86. Volunteering with my kids in the community on a Saturday
  87. Farmers Market – Phay does amazing crepes at the Alpharetta Farmer’s market – www.crepecottage.com
  88. Listening to talk radio on my way to the airport
  89. The rare occasion of watching live TV, instead of DVR content.
  90. All the people that help me along the way in life
  91. When I find a nugget of information I wouldn’t have thanks to folks I follow on Twitter
  92. Anita who kindly volunteers to watch our kids so Em and I can have a life
  93. Catching up with folks IRL who I only know online when I’m on the road
  94. Any chance to take a ride in the country side
  95. That my mom understands when I forgot to give her a call on her birthday because I was on the road. Thx mom!
  96. Every time we random into a small town festival and have time to just stop and mill around
  97. Any opportunity to share a happy moment with friends or family.
  98. Google Maps
  99. That I can get most of my holiday shopping done online without issue
  100. Any chance I get to tell a story which can help someone improve or avoid a pitfall I’ve hit before

Hopefully you are spending time with people you care about and sharing a great day with others!  If you are one of the randoms that show up thanks to Bing and Google, welcome and thanks for stopping by.

Have a great and safe Thanksgiving!

 

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