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Netflix pulling ahead, newly rebranded Lovefilm lags

Netflix pulling ahead, newly rebranded Lovefilm lags

UK Netflix membership has shown strong growth over the past six months, up from 10% to 14%, according to Decipher’s latest MediaBug report – a contrast to the newly rebranded Amazon Prime Instant Video, previously Lovefilm Instant, which dropped from 8% to 6% over the same period.

According to Decipher, loyalty to the Netflix scheme is also on the rise, with the proportion of subscribers committing to only a free trial reducing from 39% to 25% of total subscribers.

The report states that the current success of Netflix can be attributed in part to its presence on Virgin TiVo. Mediabug’s TV VOD ‘Share of Usage’ metric counts Virgin Media’s own on-demand content at 10% share of total UK TV VOD usage. However, Netflix on TiVO has now itself garnered a 5% share.

The new figures mean that Netflix remains the biggest online subscription VOD service in the UK, however, more recent entrants are also making their presence felt. Sky’s Now TV service has grown steadily to claim 3% of online consumers, whilst new service Wuaki has arrived on the radar with just under 1%.

“These findings really show that the battle for dominance in the Video On Demand space has reached fever pitch,” said director of Decipher Media Research, Dr. Hamish McPharlin.

“Whilst Netflix is ahead in the online arena, and Sky leads on the TV, the volume of new entrants end up pulling audiences in all directions. The intensity will have to abate at some stage, and in the end, it is the vendors that can provide.”

Key Findings From Mediabug Wave 4 2014

Sky On Demand has the largest share of usage of all TV Video On Demand services:
It is no secret that Sky has been rapidly expanding its base of broadband connected set top boxes. Combine that with a large expansion of their video on demand library and they have the biggest share of usage, with 24% of the TV VOD market; and that is excluding any usage of the PSB content that is also on there. BBC iPlayer follows, with a 16% share from its cross-platform range of services and apps, which include Sky On Demand.

Tablets have now overtaken smartphones in video consumption:
Tablet ownership has been growing steadily for a number of years. As of Wave 4, they have surpassed smartphones in the number of consumers who use them to watch video regularly. Smartphones, in the meantime, have flatlined. There is no indication that tablets are slowing down, having also past the 50% mark in general ownership.

Both Sky and Google launch new OTT devices:
Two new devices to arrive recently have been the Now TV box and the Google Chromecast dongle. Edging into a crowded device landscape, they both offer new ways to get VOD content to the TV screen. 2% of the online population now own a Now TV box, and Chromecast owners are expected to be more than 100,000.

Older generations still not engaging with new technology:
Despite the flurry of new innovations and behaviour, much of the activity is still confined to the 16-34s. For older age groups, VOD and EST behaviour still drops off dramatically.

More information can be found on the Decipher website.

Anonymous, Software Engineer, Foobar, on 16 Apr 2014
“Amazon's subscription numbers may be lagging, but they also brought their extensive pay-per-view collection to the UK, which was missing from LoveFilm. Compared to Netflix's dated collection, this offers much more choice and unlike Netflix, it has all the recent movies. See this VOD search engine to find out which service has a given movie or TV show: http://www.findable.tv”

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