Monday, October 10, 2011

Netflix backs off - a little - from their radical restructuring

This appeared on the New York Times Media Decoder blog this morning:

Abandoning a break-up plan it announced last month, Netflix said Monday morning that it had decided to keep its DVD-by-mail and online streaming services together under one name and one Web site.

The company admitted that it had moved too fast when it tried to spin-off the old-fashioned DVD service into a new company called Qwikster.

“We underestimated the appeal of the single web site and a single service,” Steve Swasey, a Netflix spokesman, said in a telephone interview. He quickly added: “We greatly underestimated it.”

Mr. Swasey said that the Netflix chief executive Reed Hastings declined an interview request. But in a statement, Mr. Hastings said, “Consumers value the simplicity Netflix has always offered and we respect that. There is a difference between moving quickly — which Netflix has done very well for years — and moving too fast, which is what we did in this case.”

Others will likely pile on with criticism of the change, its timing, the original decision, etc. I, for one, respect them for adjusting quickly. And it will be interesting to see what, exactly, Netflix does look like 4 or 5 years from now.

Related post: Reed Hastings: "I messed up" in communicating price increases

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