• The Peak TV era is over, according to new research as subscripti

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Wednesday, October 23, 2024 14:30:05
    The Peak TV era is over, according to new research as subscription prices continue to soar

    Date:
    Wed, 23 Oct 2024 13:23:19 +0000

    Description:
    As streaming prices soar and content spending is reigned in, surveys reveal that subscribers are increasingly fed up.

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    You might think that declining subscriber satisfaction with the best
    streaming services was a given in the face of rising subscription prices, the introduction of more ads and increasing account restrictions, but new
    research suggests it's more to do with customers being less satisfied with what's available to stream.

    A recent TiVo survey of close to 5,000 people in the US and Canada shows that subscribers are increasingly fed up with the quality of content available, reports Ars Technica . This trend has only become more pronounced over the past three years, with survey respondents' abilities to find 'moderate to good' stuff to watch falling from 78.6% in 2022 to 74.5% in 2024.

    What's most intersting is which services subscribers are most unhappy with. A CableTV.com study from the start of the year that surveyed a similar group of participants revealed that Disney Plus, Hulu, Max, Netflix and Paramount Plus have all seen satisfaction rates fall this year and that's no surprise with each platform raising subscription prices in 2024.

    The outliers of this trend? Apple TV Plus, Peacock and Prime Video have all improved since 2023, with Apple TV Plus and Peacock in particular seeing consistent gains since the same surveys were conducted in 2022 and 2021. That confirms a trend that a Whip Media survey from 2023 first revealed, showing that smaller sized platforms are winning subscribers over more than their incumbent rivals. Is the Peak TV era over?

    FX networks' boss John Landgraf has been predicting the end of the peak TV
    era since 2022. He's been speculating that streaming services would have to start reigning in spending before the writers' strikes completely scuppered production in 2023 and signs of that increasing decline in originals being made have only grown.

    We've since seen more cut-throat decisions being made from all the major streamers, in particular Netflix, which has ramped up its cancellations in 2024 that doesn't mean you should completely disregard these though, here
    are seven cancelled Netflix shows still worth watching .

    But arguably the biggest confirmation we've had that streaming services are
    no longer investing as much as in original movies and shows is that the
    number of new scripted series being released has dropped for the first time
    in 10 years, according to FX Research.

    My biggest takeaway from this temperature check of the streaming space is
    that the behemoths need to switch up their strategies. Raising prices, ads
    and bundling isn't going to win over subscribers even if we are seen as not complaining enough content is.

    This is where the likes of Netflix could really take a page out of its
    smaller rival's playbook. Its strategy of quantity over quality seems to have run its course with industry insiders telling Bloomberg that "most people in the film business dont think Netflix makes good movies" and looking at some
    of its recent movies I'm not entirely shocked. It's high time we got Stranger Things and Black Mirror back. You might also like Annoyed by Prime Video forcing ads on you? Well, it's about to get even worse Angry Netflix UK and Canada fans threaten to close their accounts Furious Max users follow Netflix fans' lead by cancelling their subscriptions



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/streaming/the-peak-tv-era-is-over-according-to-new-r esearch-as-subscription-prices-continue-to-soar


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