Company Management
Gregory Peters - Co-Chief Executive Officer |
Spencer Neumann - Chief Financial Officer |
Spencer Wang - Vice President of Finance, Investor Relations and Corporate Development
|
Theodore Sarandos - Co-Chief Executive Officer |
Analyst
Jessica Reif Ehrlich - Bank of America Merrill Lynch |
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
Now that one strike is over, the Writers Guild, what are the implications for your business?
Theodore Sarandos
Let me first say, we want nothing more than to resolve this and get everyone back to work. That's true for Netflix. That's true for every member of the [NPTP]. It's why our member CEOs have prioritized these negotiations above everything else we are doing. We spent hours and hours with SAG-AFTRA over the last few weeks, and we were actually very optimistic that we are making progress. But then at the very end of our last session together, the Guild presented this new demand that kind of on top of everything for a per subscriber levy unrelated to viewing or success, and this really broke our momentum, unfortunately. But you should know, we are incredibly and totally committed to ending this strike. The industry, our communities and the economy are all hurting. So we need to get a deal done that respects all sides as soon as we possibly can.
In terms of the impact, these are the times that I'm glad we have such a rich and deep and broad programming selection. Programming costs themselves rise nearly every year, primarily driven by competition. Competition for talent, competition for shows and films. And you can see we've managed successfully through that year on year on year. And the same is true for – during COVID when we were able to manage the slate through a prolonged and pretty unpredictable production interruptions. But I really think we are not really that focused right there on it and how this impacts much, except for our biggest opportunity, which is to continue improving the quality of the slate. We focused on that day-in, day-out, year-in, year-out. And I'm incredibly pleased with Bela and the team and the progress that they are making.
So if you'll indulge me for just a second, I just would draw your attention to the Q4 slate as an example of that, headlined by the return of The Crown for its final season. This is one of the most ambitious television shows in the history of television. We have a new season of Big Mouth, history – a new season of [Elite], the launch of Berlin, which is a spin-off from our La Casa de Papel, our Money Heist franchise, and new limited series like All the Light We Cannot See from Shawn Levy. That's Incredible and Bodies from the UK. And that's just on the TV side.
And on the film side, one of our strongest quarters ever. We have this enormous Sci-Fi Spectacular from Zack Snyder, Rebel Moon, a new film from David Fincher, The Killer and these films that just lit up the fall film festivals recently, like May, December from Todd Haynes and Bradley Cooper's Maestro, The Dock Feature, American Symphony. That's all coming in Q4. And for family viewing too, we've got a new animated feature from Adam Sandler, [indiscernible] Leo, that's hysterical, Chicken Run 2, which is a sequel to the most successful stop-motion animation film ever, and a new series from the CoComelon World called CoComelon Lane, Family Switch from Director McG, sorry, it's Jennifer Garner and Ed Helms. So it's an incredible slate, something new and exciting for all taste, all moods, all ages, and we're just super proud of the team that they've been able to manage through this and still deliver so much joy for our members.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
One more on strike-related like just the aftermath, you discussed at a recent conference, giving talent more transparency. Could you talk about what that looks like? What are the new metrics talent will be paid on? And is it even standardized across the industry?
Theodore Sarandos
Yes. what I talked about there was heading towards a world that we're streaming data will be much more readily available. Remember, streaming itself is not that exotic anymore. We've been doing it for 15 years. So we – at the beginning, we thought there was a hard kind of apples and oranges comparison to ratings and streaming. And I think we've gotten to a place where it's mostly about engagement and that does capture the value of watching and that things will become much more transparent the way TV has always had ratings and music has always had billboard and the theatrical has always had box office. So it will be much more common for the data to be fully transparent.
What I didn't mention though is that part of that – of our reason for not publishing early was part of our promise with creators. At the time we started creating original program, our creators felt like they were pretty trapped in this kind of overnight ratings world and weekend box office world defining their success and failures. And as we all know, show might have enormous success down the road and it wasn't captured in that opening box office. So part of this was the relationship with talent, not just the business aspects of it.
And I do think that over time, people are much more interested in this. We're on the continuum today of how much data do we publish. I think we've been leading the charge, starting everyone down the path of a top 10, publishing our top 10 list and our annual wrap-up list and everything that give a lot of transparency to the viewing. And I just expect it will be more and more transparent.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
Let's move on to page sharing. Have you identified most of the borrowers and can you provide any help in, in how much more is left to go and the challenge in completing the crackdown?
Gregory Peters
Sure. I'll take that one. And I'll start by saying we're just incredibly pleased with how it's been going. And you can see the progress from our membership growth in Q2. Now in Q3, you can see it embedded in the revenue outlook for Q4. I think paid sharing represents the kind of difficult challenge where we needed to balance both important relevant consumer considerations with the importance of ensuring that our business got reasonably paid when we deliver entertainment. And it's an example where we leveraged core executional capabilities that we've been building for over a decade, sort of how you develop good product experiences, how do you solve hard problems through them? How do you have an iterative model where you listen to consumers to tell us what's working and what's not? So we've been excited about that.
But because it's such a challenging problem, we're shifting essentially consumers' expectations and what they expect from us. We've always thought that making this change should be done in a steady, considered way. And so our plan has been to stage out this rollout. We've been delivering our product experience to different borrower cohorts according to that plan. And as a result, I think as you're alluding to, there are a number of borrower cohorts, which has, as of today, have not received part of that experience.
And just to explain that a bit. I mean, part of the motivation to stage it out is based on technical considerations. So this is our ability to build features and improve model accuracy over time in a way that allows us to ensure that we're accurately developing and applying our interventions and as effective and as positive a way for consumers as possible. Part of that has been just to stage things out based on borrower behavior. So we want to show up with the right product experience at the right moment. That's more likely to convert a borrower over rather than have them spin-off. So we want to think about that from maximizing long-term revenue.
So we're going to continue the rollout for the next couple of quarters. I think folks are trying to figure out how much juice is left there. And I would say we anticipate that we will have incremental acquisition, incremental adds for the next several quarters. We've seen that in the last couple of quarters. I think also worth noting that, that was on top of also very healthy organic, meaning not driven by paid sharing growth. So we anticipate seeing that for the next several quarters to come.
And then just stepping back, there's a set of borrowers that we're not going to convert. We haven't converted yet. We're not going to convert over the next couple of quarters. But that really represents how we think about paid sharing going forward, which is it's now become part of just our standard way of operating. And we have many hundreds of millions of qualified households out there. There are Smart TV households that we want to win over the next several years. And those borrowers we're not going to convert in the next couple of quarters represent that same group. So we got to go after them the same way we're going after people who have never signed up for Netflix, which is having an incredible content offering and incredible value and get them so excited that they just have to sign up.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
Right. Moving on to the recent advertising restructuring. Can you talk about why you made the management change and what you would like to accomplish?
Gregory Peters
Yes. First, I'd say Jeremy has done a great job getting us essentially from zero to where we are today. She laid the foundation for the ads business. She's hired and built a burgeoning team of leaders who in turn now are hiring the teams and people who are going to take the business forward. But it's an important time and I think a great time for Amy to come in and extend that great work to build on that foundation and drive our ads business to the next level. And why am I so specifically excited about Amy in the role. First of all, she's a high Netflix tenure employee. She's been with the company for over seven years. She's demonstrated really positive impact and great results in several different roles, but most recently as part of the studio and leading a big global team that is scaling very, very, very quickly, which sounds familiar when you think about where we want to take our ads business.
Second, she's got broad entertainment experience, ranging from content licensing, distribution. She's got business development, finance strategy at Netflix and in prior roles. So I think when you think about that assemblage of skills, and you think about the existing ads leadership team that we have that has got a rich, rich history in ads in general and connected TV, especially if you think about somebody like Peter Naylor, who started selling connected TV at Hulu. That's a strong team to take our ads business to the next level.
And maybe I'll just – I want to maybe just restate what we think the promise and the opportunity and sort of where we're at on ads business is. And so first of all, just starting off with – this is a $180 billion opportunity when you think about linear TV, you think about connected TV, not including YouTube, not including China and Russia. And we think we're in a great position to win some of those dollars. We've got great content. The brands want to be next to. We're a safe place for brands to exist. We got great engagement from our members. That's a really strong foundation to work with. But we got a lot of work, and we know we have a lot of work to fulfill that potential.
Among that work, we've said it many times, I'll say it probably many times going forward. But scale is the number one priority. We're making good progress there. This quarter, we grew our ad plan membership 70% sequentially, quarter-to-quarter. That's on top of the last quarter where we grew at 100% quarter-to-quarter. We now have 30% of our new sign-ups choosing our ads planned in our ads countries. And we've done it by making the ads offering more competitive. We've gotten to over 95% content period with our non-ads plans. We've improved features like a number of streams, the video resolution. We're going to keep doing that. We're adding downloads now. So we'll keep that good trajectory going and keep focusing on it.
Second big priority for us is delivering features and products that advertisers want. We've heard again and again, I've heard it this week, a week from advertisers. Top of that list is measurement. We've launched our measurement partnership with Nielsen in the United States this month in October. So we're excited about that. We've got a long list of other partners across other countries that we've got to deliver that same capability in. So we're excited about getting that out. We're also excited about new products. So we've rolled out our top 10 media buy. We're going to roll out our Binge ad product later this year. We're launching more ways to buy programmatically through Microsoft that gives more buyers, more ways to access our inventory. So we've got a lot of work to do here on all of those fronts, but we've always said this is a multi-year build to multi-year progress. We've got a lot that we've got going on, and we're excited about the future to come.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
So now that you've phased out basic for new subs and you're getting extra members or paid more per sub from password share and crackdown and you've introduced advertising in 12 countries. Could you talk about the outlook for ARM in 2024 and beyond?
Spencer Neumann
You guys want me to take that one?
Gregory Peters
Go ahead, Spencer.
Spencer Neumann
You wind it up for me. So I would say just generally, when we think about 2024 and beyond, think about it as our revenue growth profile in general. And we talked about this recently. We expect a more balanced mix of membership and ARM growth in 2024 and beyond 2024. So just looking at 2024 specifically, as Ted talked about, we expect to have a great slate to drive the business forward. And we expect to continue to do things like add extra members, grow our advertising revenue, as Greg discussed. And in addition to have some pricing adjustments, you saw that in our letter, all those things will drive ARM.
So 2023 was a pretty unusual year where essentially all of our growth came from member growth. And going forward, more broadly, not just 2024 and beyond, we'll grow our business by continuing to kind of improve our service, increasing engagement, increasingly satisfying current and future members. And now that, as Greg discussed, I know we've got an account sharing solution, we have a more clear path to more deeply penetrate that big addressable market of a half a billion connected TV households and growing. And with our continued plan evolution, pricing sophistication and all that hard work on our ads business, we'll keep getting better at monetizing that big and growing reach and engagement. So we believe – we've got a long runway for growth in both kind of more membership and higher ARM over time in a more balanced way than what you saw this year, which was again a pretty unusual year.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
And then you touched on, Greg touched on scale and advertising. How do you get to scale? Is it all through pricing, like pricing changes? And what would you consider scale?
Gregory Peters
Yes. I think it's important to note that scale isn't – it's not a binary condition, right? So it's not like you suddenly add one more member and you become a must buy situation. So we become increasingly competitive with increasing reach. It's also, I think, worth noting that it's different in different countries. And it's largely based on what's the competitive channels and what's that competitive dynamic. So having said that, though, we carry several relevancy targets on a per country basis, think about this as essentially a percentage of market penetration that helps us focus and drive the rate of growth that we desire. And we've got more work to do to get those. So I mean like we're not satisfied with the scale that we're at in any country that we're in. We want to be bigger, and we know we can be bigger.
I think there's a variety of techniques that we can employ to do that pricing and thinking about how do we factor in what's optimal pricing for ads, no ads. That's part of what we're doing and thinking about plan evolution. Part of it is what I mentioned before, which is feature set, right? These are the things that consumers want to sign up for. Part of it, too, is actually just educating consumers. I think what we are seeing is in some of our countries, consumers think about an ads experience mostly anchored in linear and what their expectation around ad load, frequency rates are. And to some degree, actually, some of our streaming competitors haven't done maybe as great a job in building an ad experience, which informs that expectation as well.
The part of it is just educating consumers about what the actual Netflix ads experience is so that they can think about what's the right choice for them. Do they want to lower price with ads and what we think is a great ads experience for consumers really, or do they want to pay more and skip ads. So it's all those things coming together that ultimately drive us to the several multiples of scale that we're at today that we'll be satisfied with.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
One last one maybe on advertising before we move on to margins. But you mentioned a lot of the innovative offerings that you plan on and some of it sponsors. It's very unique. It's different. When do we get to a point or when will you have a point where it's targeted, addressable, so it's really relevant for consumers. And so they would want to see the ads.
Gregory Peters
Yes. So we're working with Microsoft right now on targeting, so you'll see that roll out in the near future. And that, I think, is the first step of how we think about increasing targeting relevance through both a combination of product sets. So what are the types of ad products that brands can buy that yield increasing relevance as well as improving our sort of sophistication on what we might call targeting from a digital perspective, which is basically matching consumers who are most interested in that particular brand's message.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
Right. So Spence, I guess this one's for you on margins. But could you elaborate on areas like ad tech content spend? Well, you did talk about content spend in your letter, but any other meaningful investment areas, something that that maybe we're not thinking about?
Spencer Neumann
Sure. So let me step back a bit with some quick context. So first, Jessica, we set margin targets. They're our best judgment of how kind of best to grow the long-term value of Netflix, and we're trying to balance investment for future growth with near-term profits. So for instance, after investing heavily to launch Global in 2016, global Netflix, we wanted to take a disciplined approach to building profitability as we grew revenue because we felt, one, it was a good way to build that profit muscle across the company.
And two, we understood that investors were – they've been pretty patient with us, so we wanted to demonstrate the scalability and the health of the business model. And so that took us from – it was like 4% OI margin to operating income margin business in 2016 to our current roughly 20% margin. So we think a pretty good indicator that ad scale streaming can be a quite good business. Now stepping back, there's no change in our financial objectives and also no change in our long-term margin expectations, including the fact that we see a – and we don't think we're anywhere near a margin ceiling. We've got a long runway of margin growth.
So again, no change in our objectives, no change in our long-term margin expectations. But our current profitability and scale, we think it's prudent to balance that historical pace of margin improvement with growth investments. So you asked about growth investments. We think we've got a lot of places where we can continue to invest, plenty of room to invest further in our existing content categories, we're a small share of viewing in every country in which we operate. Plus building out those ads capabilities that Greg talked about our live offering and new content categories like games. So there's plenty to do.
But all that said, we'll continue to drive healthy margin expansion. We expect roughly 22% to 23% operating margin in 2024, assuming no material swings in FX. So that's up from our current expectation of 20% this year, which is at the high end of the range that we targeted in the beginning of the year.
So again, Jessica, just like we did in the past, going forward, we'll take a disciplined approach to balancing margin improvement with investing into our growth. We actually put a chart at the end of the letter that shows how we managed that balance historically, growing content investment, profit margins and cash flow. And you should expect that we'll carry that same discipline going forward as we invest and grow into that big opportunity ahead.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
How does licensing content from third parties play into your overall content strategy? It seems like you've had incredible success with third-party content in – I mean you always have, but in the last year, things like Suits or Band of Brothers, and you mentioned it in the letter. But if you could just talk about the third-party licenses?
Theodore Sarandos
Yes. Yes. Licensing third-party content has always been part of our strategy, and we've – something we've been really great at being able to do is match that audience. I think Suits is a great example of the impact of the Netflix effect that we can have because of our distribution footprint and our recommendation system, we were able to take Suits, which had played on cable and had played out in other streaming services and pop it right into the center of the culture in a huge way, not just in the U.S. but all over the world.
According to the Nielsen charts then, Suits was the number one watch streaming series for 13 straight weeks. That's like – that is a record for Nielsen. So this continues to be important for us to add a lot of breadth of storytelling to our consumers of a wide range of tests. And we can't make everything, but we can help you find just about anything. That's really the strength. And I do think that looking – you mentioned Band of Brothers, but in that HBO deal, we had Insecure, we had Ballers, that came out and they were very successful in Netflix, and they popped into the top 10 on their originating network for the first time.
So that was just on their streaming service, which is really powerful. And I think we have more to come with Six Feet Under and True Blood coming and not just on the TV side, but we're also proud to be able to bring movies like Super Mario Bros and Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse from our other suppliers. And in one way or another, we're in business with nearly every supplier, including our direct competitors.
And I think that we bring a ton of value to them. And I think when you think about what happens when that show runs in and becomes a huge success on Netflix, it has lasting value. I mean look at the value we created that still continues today for shows like Friends, and The office and Fuller House and Gilmore Girls and all these other shows that really found an audience on Netflix even after they have more or less played out through traditional models.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
Spence, one more on margins for you, but you said in September that long-term margins will be I think the way you said it was similar to other networks, which historically have been in the 40% to 50% range. Could you help us think through the ramp in margins over time?
Spencer Neumann
Jessica, I'll probably disappoint you as I have in the past on this. We're not going to put a long-term number out there. As I said, we don't see any ceiling – any near-term ceiling to our long-term margin potential. We've talked in the past about how we're going to feel our way through to those kind of long-term steady-state margins, but we think we have a lot of things working in our favor. We have a very scalable business model. You see that you see that play out over the last handful of years and continue to do so as we produce content all over the world for big local impact, but also with the ability for those stories to through great subs, dubs, discovery to reach more and more people and to be enjoyed around the world.
So it's a very scalable content model. It's a global network at scale that has, in many ways, has not been seen with legacy entertainment networks. So we think we've got a long way to go. As I just talked about, we want to balance those increasing profits in the near term with investing into that long-term opportunity. So still a lot of runway that's a set of benchmarks you can look at it. There's others as well. But suffice to say, we think we've got a long and healthy runway in terms of growing margins.
Spencer Wang
Only thing I would add to that, Jessica, also I totally agree with what Spence said, which is, again, a lot of opportunity to grow margins, but profit dollars also matter, too, right? So as we expand into big new addressable markets like advertising that Greg alluded to or gaming also, right? So those open up big new sort of areas for us to expand into. And then we intend to grow margins, too, but we also want a lot of profit dollars as well. So we're not narrowly optimizing just for a percentage margin.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
Right. Of course. You announced some price changes today in premium and basic in several countries and more to come. Can you provide a current view of price increase or timeframe for the standards here?
Gregory Peters
Yes. So as you know, our focus on planned evolution over the last 18 months has largely been about paid sharing. And now that we've rolled that out, we broadly see the benefits, as I outlined in the letter, that's become a normal part of our business, which then allows us to return to our core approach to pricing.
And that approach, that philosophy has not changed. We look to wisely invest the money that members pay us, deliver back to them more amazing stories, more entertainment value. And then when we think we're doing that, we'll occasionally ask them to pay a bit more to keep that virtuous circle spinning. So hence, the changes that you noted that we've announced in the letter.
I think it's also worth noting that we seek to have a wide and even wider over time range of price points with the corresponding set of features, of course, that allows entertainment fans from around the world that have different needs to be able to access the great storytelling that our creative partners are doing at a price point that works for them at a feature set that works for them.
Part of that widespread is the low entry price point. And that's why we're keeping that low entry price point static as it is. So we think that this $699 in the U.S., £499 in the UK, EUR 599 in France. It's just an incredible entertainment value. And if you think about the breadth and the variety of storytelling that we're offering, whether that's compared to our streaming competitors compared to traditional pay TV, certainly, even the price of a movie ticket, we think that's just an amazing offer. And our goal and plan; is to continue to be a great entertainment value. And beyond that, we're not going to comment on other price changes or other changes on tiers. We'll sort of find our way based on that philosophy and see when the right time to ask customers to pay a little bit more would be.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
One more question on the pricing, though. Would you – given the price increase for just premium and basic not standard, do you expect any – or advertising tier? Do you expect any movement between the tiers as a result of these price increases?
Gregory Peters
I think pricing always results in a bit of movement between the tiers. More of that movement is how people are signing up. So we see that as more what it influences. But also, it will influence plan changes as well. But generally, plan changes tend to be – our plans tend to be relatively sticky. So I would imagine that there is a – that momentum will continue.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
So your letter today says that you stated that you will spend $17 billion in 2024 on content spend, up from $13 billion in 2023. Obviously, that was somewhat strike impacted. That is how should we – how can you help us think through how content spend will grow beyond 2024? What is normalized growth?
Theodore Sarandos
Well, you see that we've done is we want to grow the content spend. Just about half a step ahead of the – ahead of revenue to create the value proposition for our members. So the more we put into it, and a lot of it is tied to the ability to create hits out of that pool. And I would say one thing, if I could, if you don't – this past quarter, we had this really remarkable story about something that we could do, but Spence talked a little bit about the kind of scale of the content spend, but this show one piece. One piece is something that is a very unique property to create 26 years ago by Eiichiro Oda, it is over 1,000 episodes of the animated series based on the Japanese Manga.
It's nearly sacred IP. And we were able to – with our Japanese creative teams and our American teams getting together, working with our partners at Tomorrow Studios and the showrunner, Steven Maeda to adapt this into a show that the world fell in love with. And what I say to that is we've got – this show is number one in 84 countries around the world, which is something that Stranger Things didn't do, that Wednesday didn't do.
And it's so rare for an English show to be that popular in Japan and Korea, Brazil and in the U.S. at the same time. And the other fun part of it is Iñaki Godoy, who stars in the show, it was one of the most difficult casting challenges in the history of our original programming was who's going to play Monkey Luffy and he was right under our nose, right in our talent family.
We discovered him a couple of years ago, and had him in this great show at our Mexican series called Who Killed Sara and then we were able to cast him in this and now he's a global superstar. So this is that kind of thing you could do well, thing that's hard to copy and gives us kind of competitive running room from our competitors being able to do that more and more.
I don't mean – when I say that, I don't mean making things more global, I think making things that really resonate for the core audience. And usually, local audiences want very local content. And in this case, the local audience is the fan of one piece, which was very discriminating, and we had to please them first, just like our original shows in Spain, I have to really please the Spanish customer first. So we can do this. We spend the money well. We have impact with the spend, and we grow it as we grow revenue.
Spencer Neumann
Maybe – sorry, Jessica. I was just going to build it a little bit on Ted's point on the kind of trajectory of content spend. So – and we talked about this a little bit in the past. So first, in the letter, we talk about the 2024, we hope to get cash content spend back up to at or near that $17 billion level.
The biggest swing factor is going to be when the SAG-AFTRA strike resolves. And so that will get us to a cash to P&L ratio kind of closer to 1:1.1x. And so we're not putting a specific number out there for free cash flow in 2024. What that gets us to, when you think about the combination of our revenue growth outlook, our margin guidance and target cash content spend, we'll deliver substantial free cash flow in 2024. And then going beyond that, we do expect to tick up our content investment over time as we also prove at sustained healthy revenue growth.
So assuming – we talked about, I think, in the last call, assuming no big expansions, we'd expect our cash to P&L ratio of content spend cash to content amort in the P&L to be roughly 1.1x. So that's kind of one way folks are thinking about how to model our growth in content spend. If we – as we grow our revenue, as we improve our profitability, we should see both increasing content spend but also free cash flow growing nicely over time.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
And then just one last, just a follow-up for Ted though. There's so much going on in content right now. Can you maybe talk about investment priorities? Like how do you think about whether it's local language film, TV, you've made a lot of deals with some third-party film companies, television companies. Could you give us some color on how you think about content spend?
Theodore Sarandos
Yes. We always have a lot of plate spinning because our members have got such different tastes and different desires. And we're trying to please them all – and like I say, trying to find that person who really fell in love with us for prestige TV and then discovered Love is blind. That's a pretty common household to be honest with you. So we've got to be able to be good at so many different things. And our partnerships, I'm assuming you're talking about Skydance in this case, really helps us find and keep up that scale as we grow. So we're really thrilled with our success in animated features. It's a very long cycle of development and production.
Sometimes it could take a decade to deliver a really great animated feature film. And as you know, we move pretty fast, and we've been moving pretty fast. And those single companies that were really successfully launched more than two animated features in a single year. So we wanted – that deal helps us to complement the work that we're doing, like you saw this year with Leo and Chicken Run coming out and Nimona that already came out.
So we've got a very – there's a ton of appetite – if you look at the top 10 animated features of since Nielsen has been tracking movie watching and seven of them are animated features. So there's a lot of appetite for animated features, and we're committed to that part of the business. And we do that through a combination of licensing partnerships and original production and original creation and not just in the U.S. but all over the world. So we have to find that right balance of invest finding the right product market fit, which helps us grow those territories and most importantly, helps create a value proposition for consumers, and they could say, "Hey, that what I pay for Netflix I can pay a little bit more because I get so much value there, and I'm spending so much of my time there. So if you think about the – for the last 37 of the last 38 weeks of this year, Netflix has had the number one streaming series on and all of streaming.
And for 31 of those 38 weeks, we've had the number one movie too. And in any given week, we might have had the number one, two and three. So we really – we've got a lot going on and we've got to stay focused on continuing to improve the value proposition to consumers, which drive the numbers that we've been talking about on this call.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
Spence, you announced a very significant increase in your buyback today. Should we think of the $2.5 billion buyback in the third quarter as sort of a run rate moving forward?
Spencer Neumann
I wouldn't kind of read through to that, Jessica. We had kind of slowed down as we – as the business slowed down, and we wanted to – we talked about the fact that we had less, less than typical forward visibility into our forecast over the past year or so as we were looking to reaccelerate the business and also roll out paid sharing. And now much of that is behind us, as we've said, and we've got a better view going forward. And so we ramped up our repurchase because we had built up some cash on the balance sheet as well. Our target minimum cash is roughly two months of revenue.
So plus or minus $6 billion of cash that we look to hold on our balance sheet, and we've gotten ahead of that, we're still a little ahead of that. So – but that's really what we're managing to is to: one, primarily drive the business forward, grow the business, expand our cash flow and then as cash – excess cash builds on the balance sheet to return it to shareholders. So we put a pretty specific target out there of roughly two months of revenue in the form of cash on the balance sheet, and that's the way I think you should think about what our pacing will be over time.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
Moving on to gaming. It feels like almost like the way you describe advertising, like a walk, crawl, run approach, what is the near and midterm strategy in gaming?
Gregory Peters
Well, let's start with the big prize. I think that's the better way to look at it, which is games is a huge entertainment opportunity. So we're talking about $140 billion worth of consumer spend on games outside of China and outside of Russia. And from a strategic perspective, we believe that we can build games into a strong content category, leveraging our current core film and series by connecting members, especially members that are fans of specific IPs with games that they will love.
I think it's worth noting that if we can make those connections and as we make those connections as we're seeing, we're essentially sidestepping the biggest issue that the mobile games market has today, which is how do you cost effectively acquire new players. So that's the real proposition. And we think if we deliver that, we give members great games, entertainment experiences that they love at sufficient scale. Then we leverage back into the core business.
We increased engagement. We increased retention. We increased value delivered. Those all drive our core business metrics. And I think it's actually just a very natural extension of what you were just talking with Ted about. If you think about the range of content that we're offering the variety of content and entertainment that we're offering, games just adds one extra layer to that variety and that depth. And we're also seeing, I would say, back moving it more to your short-term and mid-term. We're also seeing performance metrics that support that this fundamental strategic hypotheses are sound. So games engagement right now on our service drives core business metrics in a way which is incremental to movies and series.
But the main challenge ahead of us to get to your mid-term is that our current scale and frankly, our current investment level are both very, very, very small relative to our overall content spend and engagement. So now our job is to incrementally scale to the place where games have a material impact on the business. We've got ambitious plans there. We want to really grow our engagement by many multiples of where it is today over the next handful of years. And we can see how to get there. Looking a layer deeper at the title level.
Some titles are really working for our members, and they're working for our business. If we can do more of those, we know we can scale into that proposition. We've got to do that through better title selection based on everything that we're learning. We got to do it on better product features to maximize connection with the audience for any given title. And we have to do it by gradually improving consumer awareness, which as we've seen is when we launched other content categories, you can think about unscripted or you can think about film. That broadly lifts overall engagement metrics as consumers learn that we're a place to go to, to find games.
I'm excited about what we got going on in Q4. We're going to launch some big high-profile titles, which sort of keeps that drumbeat going. We got Dead Cells. We've got Football Manager 2024. We've got Money Heist. Think about connections with our IP that's coming in Q4 as well. That's Casa De Papel for folks who saw in that language.
We also have Virgin River coming in Q1. So as you pointed out, this trajectory is not dissimilar from what we've seen before, when we've launched a new region, think about Latin America or we launched a country like Japan where traditional Western media companies have struggled or we launched new genres like unscripted. We've got a crawl, walk, run and we build it, but we see a tremendous amount of opportunity to build a long-term center value of entertainment, more entertainment value for our members.
Theodore Sarandos
That's a great experience for the super fan to get themselves in the universe in between seasons of a show. It's really exciting. Jessica, we have time for about two last questions, please.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
Great. Okay, two. So the first of the two sports, you're creating the Netflix Cup tournament to be out next month. Is this a change in your sports strategy at all? Or how should we think about that?
Theodore Sarandos
Yes. I know this was kind of me, Jessica. Given we are in the sports business, but we're in the part of the sports business that we bring the most value to, which is the drama of sport. So look at the success we've had with Drive to Survive, look at the success we've had with Tour de France, quarter back, full swing, untold, most recently with Beckham. David Beckham is one of the biggest stars in the world and his documentary on Netflix brought him almost 0.5 million new social media followers in a week.
So we are having a big impact on sports through the things we're most great at, which is the drama of sport. The Netflix Cup as a live event that actually brings together the cast of Drive to Survive and full swing and puts them into a live golf term that we are going to stream live on Netflix on November 14. And it's – I think about it as a great way of extending those great drama of sport brands that we've created. But no core change in our live sport strategy or licensing and live sports. We are investing heavily in increasing our live capabilities so that as the demand grows for that and we find different ways the liveness can be part of the creative storytelling, we want to be able to do that at a big scale.
Jessica Reif Ehrlich
There was some news also today, I guess, on [indiscernible]. But my last question to stay with what Spencer asked – you've talked a little bit more recently about your ancillary businesses, including the Netflix House. Can you talk about what that looks like over time? And will it be a big investment area, but more importantly, will it be a contributor?
Theodore Sarandos
Yes. Look at the – this initiative is inside of our Consumer Products and Experiences Group. Today, they run these successful businesses where they travel these live experiences all over the world and fans engage in them in ways that would shock you. People love these things so much. They show up dozens of people have proposed marriage in the Breath of Bridgerton Ball.
It's really important in a way to kind of deepen fandom, a way to express fandom. You kind of see it on a large scale with theme parks, these build-outs are not going to be like a theme park, both in that they won't have that gigantic CapEx. And they also – we expect that fans will go multiple times a year, not just once every couple of years. And it's a way to take a business that's really good at growing our brands and strengthening our brands.
And today, it doesn't – has a big start-up and shutdown costs as they travel around and put them under one umbrella where we can add a little technology and make it a really phenomenal experience from being as part of the Money Heist, Escape Room or the Stranger Things experience or the Squid Game challenge all those different things that people can do live together and have a lot of fun. And they can also go to the NETFLIX BITES and have food experience with all the Netflix food brands.
So it really kind of strengthens the brands and strengthens the excitement about the things people are watching on Netflix and falling in love with and gives them a place to go and express it. It's not a material investment relative to the court to the big business that we're all in. But it's a great way of building it like our consumer products business.
Spencer Wang
Great. Well, Jessica, thank you very much for your questions, and we appreciate everybody tuning into our earnings call, and we're looking forward to chatting with you all next quarter, if not sooner. Thank you.
(Tips: This transcript is converted by recording, we will do our best, but cannot fully guarantee the accuracy of the conversion, it is for reference only.)
公司管理
格雷戈里·彼得斯——联席首席执行官 |
斯宾塞-诺伊曼——首席财务官 |
斯宾塞王——财务、投资者关系和企业发展副总裁
|
西奥多·萨兰多斯——联席首席执行官 |
分析人士
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
现在作家协会罢工已经结束,对你的业务有什么影响?
西奥多·萨兰多斯
首先让我说,我们只想解决这个问题,让所有人重返工作岗位。对于 Netflix 来说,情况确实如此。[NPTP] 的每个成员都是如此。这就是为什么我们的成员首席执行官将这些谈判置于我们正在做的所有其他事情之上的原因。在过去的几周里,我们在SAG-AFTRA工作了好几个小时,实际上我们对自己正在取得进展非常乐观。但是随后,在我们最后一次会议结束时,公会提出了这项新的需求,即每位订阅者征税,与观看或成功无关,不幸的是,这确实打破了我们的势头。但是你应该知道,我们坚定不移地致力于结束这次罢工。行业、我们的社区和经济都在受到损害。因此,我们需要尽快达成一项尊重各方的协议。
就影响力而言,现在是我很高兴我们有如此丰富、深入和广泛的节目选择的时候。节目成本本身几乎每年都在增加,这主要是由于竞争。人才竞争,节目和电影竞争。你可以看到,我们已经逐年成功地度过了那段时期。在COVID期间,情况也是如此,当时我们能够通过长时间且非常不可预测的生产中断来管理局面。但我真的认为,除了我们最大的机会,那就是继续提高名单的质量,我们并没有那么关注这个问题以及这会产生多大影响。我们专注于日复一日、日复一日、年复一年。我对 Bela 和团队以及他们正在取得的进展感到非常满意。
因此,如果你能让我沉迷一会儿,我只想提请你注意第四季度的名单就是一个例子,标题是《皇冠》最后一季的回归。这是电视史上最雄心勃勃的电视节目之一。我们有新一季的《Big Mouth》,历史——新一季 [Elite]、柏林的上线(这是我们的 La Casa de Papel 的衍生作品)、我们的《Money Heist》系列,以及肖恩·利维的 All the Light 我们看不见的全新限量剧集。太不可思议了还有来自英国的尸体。而这只是在电视方面。
在电影方面,这是我们有史以来最强劲的季度之一。我们有这部来自扎克·斯奈德的巨大科幻壮观、Rebel Moon、大卫·芬奇的新电影、《杀手》以及这些最近刚刚点亮秋季电影节的电影,比如托德·海恩斯和布拉德利·库珀的《大师》、《码头长片》、《美国交响乐团》中的五月、十二月。这一切都将在第四季度到来。对于全家观看,我们还有亚当·桑德勒的新动画长片,[难以辨认] 利奥,那太歇斯底里了,Chicken Run 2,这是有史以来最成功的定格动画电影的续集,还有一部来自 CocoMelon Lane 的新剧集,名为 CocoMelon Lane,导演 McG 的 Family Switch,对不起,是詹妮弗·加纳和埃德·赫尔姆斯。因此,这是一块令人难以置信的名单,既新颖又令人兴奋,适合所有品味、所有心情、所有年龄段,我们为这支团队感到非常自豪,因为他们能够管理好这一切,但仍然为我们的成员带来了如此多的欢乐。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
你在最近的一次会议上又讨论了与罢工相关的内容,比如后果,这为人才提供了更大的透明度。你能谈谈那是什么样子吗?人才将根据哪些新的指标获得报酬?它甚至在整个行业中都实现了标准化吗?
西奥多·萨兰多斯
是的。我所说的是走向一个我们正在流式传输数据的世界将更容易获得。请记住,直播本身不再那么异国情调了。我们已经这样做了 15 年了。因此,我们 —— 一开始,我们认为与收视率和直播相比,存在一种难以比喻的差异。而且我认为我们已经到了一个主要关注参与度的地方,这确实体现了观看的价值,而且事情将变得更加透明,就像电视一直有收视率一样,音乐一直有广告牌,戏剧一直有票房。因此,数据完全透明的情况要常见得多。
但我没有提到的是其中的一部分 —— 我们不提早出版的原因是我们对创作者的承诺的一部分。当我们开始创作原创节目时,我们的创作者觉得自己陷入了这种定义他们成功与失败的隔夜收视世界和周末票房世界中。众所周知,该节目可能会在未来取得巨大的成功,但开场票房却没有捕捉到它。因此,其中一部分是与人才的关系,而不仅仅是其中的商业方面。
而且我确实认为,随着时间的推移,人们对此越来越感兴趣。今天,我们正在研究发布多少数据。我认为我们一直在引领潮流,让所有人走上前十名的道路,发布我们的前十名名单和我们的年度总结名单以及所有能提高观看透明度的内容。而且我只是希望它会越来越透明。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
让我们继续分享页面。你是否已经确定了大部分借款人,你能否提供任何帮助,说明还有多少人需要帮助,以及完成打击工作所面临的挑战?
格雷戈里·彼得斯
当然。我来拿那个。首先,我要说的是,我们对进展感到非常满意。你可以从第二季度会员增长中看到进展。现在在第三季度,你可以看到它已嵌入第四季度的收入展望中。我认为付费共享是一项艰巨的挑战,我们需要在重要的相关消费者考虑因素与确保我们的业务在提供娱乐时获得合理报酬的重要性之间取得平衡。这是一个例子,我们利用了十多年来一直在建立的核心执行能力,比如你如何开发良好的产品体验,如何通过它们解决棘手的问题?你如何建立一个迭代模型,听取消费者的意见,告诉我们哪些有效,哪些无效?因此,我们对此感到非常兴奋。
但是,由于这是一个极具挑战性的问题,我们基本上是在改变消费者的期望以及他们对我们的期望。我们一直认为,应该以稳定、深思熟虑的方式做出这种改变。因此,我们的计划是分阶段推出这一计划。我们一直在根据该计划向不同的借款人群体提供我们的产品体验。因此,我认为,正如你所暗示的那样,有许多借款人群体,截至今天,他们尚未获得部分经验。
只是为了解释一下。我的意思是,分阶段推出的部分动机是基于技术考虑。因此,这是我们构建功能并随着时间的推移提高模型准确性的能力,从而使我们能够确保准确地开发和应用我们的干预措施,并为消费者提供尽可能有效和积极的方式。其中一部分只是根据借款人的行为进行分阶段处理。因此,我们希望在正确的时机展示正确的产品体验。这更有可能让借款人转换,而不是让他们分拆出来。因此,我们想从最大限度地提高长期收入的角度来考虑这个问题。
因此,我们将在接下来的几个季度继续推出。我想大家都想知道,我们还剩下多少资金。我想说的是,我们预计,在接下来的几个季度里,我们将有更多的收购,更多的增量。在过去的几个季度里,我们已经看到了这一点。我认为还值得注意的是,这是在非常健康的有机增长(即非付费分享驱动的增长)的基础上实现的。因此,我们预计未来几个季度都会看到这种情况。
然后退后一步,有一组借款人我们不打算转换。我们还没有转换。在接下来的几个季度中,我们不会进行转换。但这确实代表了我们对未来付费共享的看法,也就是说,付费共享现在已成为我们标准运营方式的一部分。而且我们有数亿个合格的家庭。我们希望在未来几年内赢得一些智能电视家庭的青睐。而那些我们在接下来的几个季度内不打算转换的借款人代表了同一个群体。因此,我们必须像争取那些从未注册过Netflix的人一样争取他们,Netflix拥有令人难以置信的内容和令人难以置信的价值,让他们非常兴奋,以至于他们只需要注册即可。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
对。接下来是最近的广告重组。你能否谈谈你为什么要进行管理层变动,以及你想取得什么成就?
格雷戈里·彼得斯
是的。首先,我想说的是,杰里米在使我们基本上从零到今天的状态方面做得非常出色。她为广告业务奠定了基础。她聘请并建立了一支由领导者组成的新兴团队,而这些领导者现在又在招聘将推动业务向前发展的团队和人员。但这是一个重要的时刻,我认为现在是艾米进来扩展这项出色工作的好时机,以便在此基础上再接再厉,将我们的广告业务推向一个新的水平。为什么我对艾米担任这个角色感到特别兴奋。首先,她是Netflix的高级长期员工。她在公司工作了七年多。她在多个不同的角色中都表现出了非常积极的影响力和出色的成绩,但最近她是作为工作室的一员,领导着一支规模非常、非常、非常迅速的大型全球团队,当你想到我们的广告业务要走向何方时,这听起来很熟悉。
其次,她拥有丰富的娱乐经验,包括内容许可、发行。她曾在 Netflix 担任过业务发展和财务战略,之前也曾担任过职务。因此,当你想到这些技能组合时,你会想到我们现有的广告领导团队,他们在广告和联网电视方面有着丰富而丰富的历史,特别是如果你想到像彼得·内勒这样的人,他开始在Hulu销售联网电视。这是一支强大的团队,可以将我们的广告业务提升到一个新的水平。
也许我只想重申一下我们认为的承诺、机会和我们在广告业务方面的现状。因此,首先,刚开始——当你想到线性电视时,你会想到联网电视,不包括YouTube,不包括中国和俄罗斯,这是一个1800亿美元的机会。而且我们认为我们完全有能力赢得其中的一些钱。我们有很棒的内容。这些品牌希望紧随其后。我们是品牌存在的安全场所。我们得到了会员的高度参与。这是一个非常坚实的合作基础。但是我们还有很多工作要做,而且我们知道要发挥这种潜力,我们还有很多工作要做。
在那部作品中,我们已经说过很多次了,以后我可能会说很多次。但是规模是第一要务。我们在这方面取得了不错的进展。本季度,我们的广告计划会员人数环比增长了70%。除此之外,上个季度我们的季度同比增长了100%。现在,我们有 30% 的新注册用户选择我们在广告国家/地区策划的广告。我们通过让提供的广告更具竞争力来做到这一点。我们的非广告计划已达到95%以上的内容周期。我们改进了诸如大量直播和视频分辨率之类的功能。我们会继续这样做。我们现在正在添加下载内容。因此,我们将继续保持良好的轨迹并继续专注于它。
我们的第二大优先事项是提供广告商想要的功能和产品。我们一次又一次地听到广告商的消息,本周我已经听到了。排在首位的是测量。本月,我们已于10月在美国启动了与尼尔森的测量合作伙伴关系。因此,我们对此感到兴奋。我们在其他国家还有一长串其他合作伙伴,我们必须在这些合作伙伴中提供同样的能力。因此,我们很高兴能把它拿出来。我们也对新产品感到兴奋。因此,我们推出了十大媒体购买量。我们将在今年晚些时候推出我们的Binge广告产品。我们正在推出更多通过 Microsoft 以编程方式购买的方式,为更多的买家提供更多访问我们库存的方式。因此,在所有这些方面,我们还有很多工作要做,但我们一直说这是多年进展的多年构建。我们还有很多事情要做,我们对未来的未来感到兴奋。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
因此,既然你已经逐步取消了新订阅的基本功能,你将获得额外的会员,或者从密码共享和打击中获得更多每笔订阅的报酬,而且你已经在12个国家/地区推出了广告。你能否谈谈ARM在2024年及以后的展望?
斯宾塞·诺伊曼
你们要我讲那个?
格雷戈里·彼得斯
来吧,斯宾塞。
斯宾塞·诺伊曼
你为我把它搞定了。因此,我想说的只是笼统地说,当我们考虑2024年及以后时,可以将其视为我们的总体收入增长概况。我们最近谈到了这个问题。我们预计,在2024年及以后,会员人数和ARM增长的组合将更加平衡。因此,正如泰德所说,具体来看2024年,我们预计将有很好的机会推动业务向前发展。正如格雷格所说,我们希望继续做一些事情,比如增加额外的会员,增加我们的广告收入。除了进行一些定价调整外,你还看到,在我们的信中,所有这些因素都将推动ARM。
因此,2023年是非常不寻常的一年,我们所有的增长基本上都来自会员增长。展望未来,更广泛地说,不仅仅是2024年及以后,我们将通过继续改善服务、提高参与度、提高当前和未来会员的满意度来发展我们的业务。现在,正如格雷格所说,我知道我们有账户共享解决方案,我们有了更明确的途径,可以更深入地渗透这个拥有5亿联网电视家庭且不断增长的庞大潜在市场。随着我们计划的持续演变、定价的复杂性以及广告业务的所有辛勤工作,我们将继续更好地利用庞大且不断增长的覆盖面和参与度获利。因此,我们相信,随着时间的推移,我们还有很长的路要走,即更多的会员人数和更高的ARM,这比你今年看到的要更加平衡,今年又是一个非常不寻常的一年。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
然后你接着说,格雷格谈到了规模和广告。你是如何扩大规模的?这一切都是通过定价,比如定价变化吗?那么你会考虑什么规模?
格雷戈里·彼得斯
是的。我认为值得注意的是,比例不是 —— 它不是二进制条件,对吧?因此,这并不是说你突然又添加了一个会员,你就会成为必买的局面。因此,随着覆盖范围的扩大,我们的竞争力越来越强。我认为,还值得注意的是,不同国家的情况有所不同。它在很大程度上取决于竞争渠道和竞争动态是什么。因此,话虽如此,我们按每个国家设定了几个相关目标,但可以将其视为市场渗透率的百分比,可以帮助我们集中精力并推动我们想要的增长率。要获得这些,我们还有更多工作要做。所以我的意思是,就像我们对所处任何国家的规模都不满意。我们想变得更大,我们知道我们可以做得更大。
我认为我们可以采用各种各样的技巧来进行定价,并思考如何考虑广告的最佳定价,没有广告。这是我们正在做的事情和对计划演变的思考的一部分。其中一部分是我之前提到的,那就是功能集,对吧?这些是消费者想要注册的东西。其中的一部分实际上也只是教育消费者。我认为我们所看到的是,在我们的一些国家,消费者会考虑一种主要以线性为基础的广告体验,以及他们对广告加载量、频率的期望。实际上,在某种程度上,我们的一些流媒体竞争对手在营造广告体验方面可能做得不那么出色,这也为这种期望提供了依据。
其中的一部分只是教育消费者了解Netflix广告的实际体验,这样他们就可以思考什么是正确的选择。他们是想降低广告价格,而我们认为这对消费者来说确实是很棒的广告体验,还是想多付钱然后跳过广告。因此,正是所有这些因素汇集在一起,最终将我们推向了我们今天所处的几倍规模,我们会对此感到满意。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
在我们继续讨论利润率之前,最后一个可能是关于广告的。但是你提到了你计划推出的许多创新产品以及其中一些赞助商。它非常独特。不一样。我们什么时候能达到一个地步,或者你什么时候才能达到一个有针对性、可寻址的地步,因此它与消费者息息相关。因此,他们会想看广告。
格雷戈里·彼得斯
是的。因此,我们目前正在与微软合作进行定位,因此你将在不久的将来看到它的推出。我认为,这是我们如何考虑通过两种产品组合来提高定位相关性的第一步。那么,品牌可以购买哪些类型的广告产品,这些产品可以提高相关性,并从数字角度提高我们所谓的定位的复杂性,这基本上是匹配对特定品牌信息最感兴趣的消费者。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
对。所以 Spence,我猜这个是为你准备的。但是你能否详细说明一下广告技术内容支出等领域?好吧,你确实在信中谈到了内容支出,但是还有其他有意义的投资领域,也许我们没有考虑过吗?
斯宾塞·诺伊曼
当然。因此,让我稍后退一步,简要介绍一下上下文。因此,首先,杰西卡,我们设定了利润目标。它们是我们对如何最好地提高Netflix长期价值的最佳判断,我们正在努力在未来增长的投资与短期利润之间取得平衡。因此,例如,在2016年投入巨资推出全球Netflix之后,我们想在增加收入的同时采取纪律严明的方法来提高盈利能力,因为我们认为,第一,这是在整个公司建立盈利能力的好方法。
第二,我们知道投资者确实如此 —— 他们对我们非常耐心,所以我们想证明商业模式的可扩展性和健康性。因此,这使我们从2016年营业收入利润率业务的OI利润率约为4%,变成了我们目前的大约20%的利润率。因此,我们认为这是一个很好的指标,表明广告规模直播可能是一项相当不错的业务。现在退一步,我们的财务目标没有变化,我们的长期利润预期也没有变化,包括我们看到利润率上限这一事实,而且我们认为利润率上限还差不多。我们的利润增长还有很长的路要走。
再说一遍,我们的目标没有变化,我们的长期利润预期也没有变化。但是,我们目前的盈利能力和规模,我们认为谨慎的做法是在利润率增长的历史步伐与增长型投资之间取得平衡。所以你询问了成长型投资。我们认为我们有很多地方可以继续投资,还有足够的空间可以进一步投资我们现有的内容类别,在我们运营的每个国家/地区,我们的观看比例都很小。此外,还要扩展 Greg 谈到我们的直播产品和游戏等新内容类别的广告功能。因此,有很多事情要做。
但综上所述,我们将继续推动利润率的健康增长。假设外汇没有重大波动,我们预计2024年的营业利润率约为22%至23%。因此,这比我们目前预期的今年20%有所上升,这是我们在年初设定的目标区间的最高水平。
因此,再说一遍,杰西卡,就像我们过去所做的那样,展望未来,我们将采取纪律严明的方法,在利润率提高与投资增长之间取得平衡。实际上,我们在信的末尾放了一张图表,显示了我们在历史上是如何管理这种平衡的,内容投资、利润率和现金流的增长。而且,你应该预计,在我们投资和成长为未来的巨大机遇的过程中,我们将坚持同样的纪律。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
来自第三方的许可内容如何影响您的整体内容策略?看来你在第三方内容方面取得了令人难以置信的成功 —— 我的意思是你一直如此,但是在去年,像 Suits 或 Band of Brothers 这样的东西,你在信中提到了这一点。但是你能不能只谈谈第三方许可证?
西奥多·萨兰多斯
是的。是的。许可第三方内容一直是我们战略的一部分,而我们确实如此 —— 我们真正擅长做的事情就是匹配受众。我认为 Suits 就是一个很好的例子,说明了Netflix效应的影响力,这要归功于我们的发行足迹和推荐系统,我们能够将曾在有线电视上播出并曾在其他流媒体服务中播出的《Suits》,并以巨大的方式将其直接推向文化的中心,不仅在美国,而且在世界各地。
根据当时的尼尔森排行榜,Suits连续13周成为排名第一的观看直播系列。就像——这是尼尔森的纪录。因此,对于我们来说,在各种测试中为消费者增加讲故事的广度仍然很重要。而且我们不可能把所有东西都做好,但我们可以帮你找到几乎任何东西。这才是真正的优势。而且我确实这么认为 —— 你提到了 Band of Brothers,但是在那笔HBO的交易中,我们有不安全,我们有Ballers,他们问世了,他们在Netflix上非常成功,他们首次进入了原创网络的前十名。
所以那只是在他们的流媒体服务上,它真的很强大。而且我认为,随着 Six Feet Under 和 True Blood 的上映,我们还有更多工作要做,不仅在电视方面,而且我们也很自豪能够从其他供应商那里推出《超级马里奥兄弟》和《蜘蛛侠:穿越平行宇宙》等电影。不管怎样,我们与几乎所有供应商都有业务往来,包括我们的直接竞争对手。
而且我认为我们为他们带来了很多价值。而且我认为,当你想一想该节目上映并在Netflix上大获成功时会发生什么时,它具有持久的价值。我的意思是看看我们为诸如《朋友》、《办公室》、《Fuller House》和《Gilmore Girls》等节目以及所有其他在Netflix上或多或少通过传统模式播出后仍能真正吸引观众的节目所创造的价值。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
Spence,还有一个关于利润率的话题,但你在9月份说过,我认为长期利润率将像你所说的那样与其他网络类似,后者历来在40%至50%之间。你能帮我们思考利润率随着时间的推移而上升吗?
斯宾塞·诺伊曼
杰西卡,我可能会像过去一样在这方面让你失望。我们不会给出一个长期的数字。正如我所说,我们看不到任何上限——我们的长期利润潜力有任何短期上限。我们过去曾谈过我们将如何看待实现这种长期稳态利润的道路,但我们认为我们有很多对我们有利的事情。我们有一个非常可扩展的商业模式。你会看到,在过去的几年中,这种情况仍在继续,因为我们在世界各地制作内容以产生巨大的本地影响力,但也能够让这些故事通过精彩的订阅、配音、发现来吸引越来越多的人,让世界各地的人欣赏。
因此,这是一个非常可扩展的内容模型。这是一个规模庞大的全球网络,在许多方面,传统娱乐网络是前所未有的。因此,我们认为我们还有很长的路要走。正如我刚才所说,我们希望在短期内增加的利润与对长期机会的投资之间取得平衡。所以还有很多跑道可以看看,这是一组基准。还有其他的。但可以说,我们认为在利润率增长方面,我们已经走了一条漫长而健康的道路。
王斯宾塞
除此之外,我唯一要补充的是,杰西卡,我也完全同意斯彭斯所说的话,那就是增加利润率的机会很多,但利润也很重要,对吧?因此,当我们向新的潜在市场扩张时,比如格雷格提到的广告或游戏,对吧?因此,这些开辟了新的领域供我们扩展。然后我们也打算提高利润率,但我们也想要大量的利润。因此,我们并不是仅仅为了一个百分比的利润率而进行狭隘的优化。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
对。当然。你今天宣布了一些国家的高级版和基本版价格变动,未来还会有更多。您能否在此处提供当前价格上涨的看法或标准的时间表?
格雷戈里·彼得斯
是的。因此,如你所知,在过去的18个月中,我们对计划演变的关注主要集中在付费共享上。现在我们已经将其推出,正如我在信中概述的那样,我们普遍看到了好处,这已成为我们业务的正常组成部分,这使我们能够恢复核心的定价方法。
而这种方法,这种理念并没有改变。我们希望明智地投资会员付给我们的钱,向他们传达更多精彩的故事,更多的娱乐价值。然后,当我们认为自己正在这样做时,我们偶尔会要求他们多付一点钱来保持良性循环的运转。因此,我们已经在信中宣布了你注意到的变化。
我认为还值得注意的是,随着时间的推移,我们力求提供更广泛甚至更广泛的价位范围,并提供相应的功能集,让来自世界各地有不同需求的娱乐迷能够以适合他们的功能集访问我们的创意合作伙伴以适合他们的价格所做的精彩故事讲述。
普遍存在的部分原因是低入场价位。这就是为什么我们保持低入场价位不变的原因。因此,我们认为美国为699美元,英国为499英镑,法国为599欧元。这简直是一种令人难以置信的娱乐价值。而且,如果你考虑一下我们提供的讲故事的广度和多样性,无论是与我们的流媒体竞争对手相比,还是与传统的付费电视相比,当然,甚至是电影票的价格,我们都认为这只是一个了不起的报价。而我们的目标和计划是继续成为一个巨大的娱乐价值。除此之外,我们不会对其他价格变化或其他等级变化发表评论。我们将根据这种理念找到自己的出路,看看什么时候才是要求客户多付一点钱的合适时机。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
不过,还有一个关于定价的问题。考虑到只有高级版和基本版的价格上涨,而不是标准版的价格上涨,你预计会有广告等级吗?您是否预计这些价格上涨会导致不同等级之间的波动?
格雷戈里·彼得斯
我认为定价总是会导致等级之间稍有波动。这场运动的更多内容是人们的报名方式。因此,我们认为这更多的是它所产生的影响。但是,它也会影响计划的变更。但总的来说,计划的变更往往是——我们的计划往往相对棘手。因此,我想有一个 —— 这种势头将继续下去。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
因此,你今天的信中说,你说你将在2024年在内容支出上花费170亿美元,高于2023年的130亿美元。显然,这在某种程度上受到了罢工的影响。我们应该这样做 —— 你如何帮助我们思考 2024 年之后内容支出将如何增长?什么是正常化增长?
西奥多·萨兰多斯
好吧,你会看到我们已经做到了,我们想增加内容支出。仅比收入领先约半步,为我们的会员创造价值主张。因此,我们投入的越多,其中很多都与从该池中创造命中率的能力有关。如果可以的话,我想说一件事,如果你不这样做 —— 在上个季度,我们有一个非常了不起的故事,讲述了我们可以做的事情,但是 Spence 稍微谈到了内容支出的规模,但这个节目只是一篇文章。《海贼王》是尾田荣一郎在26年前创作的非常独特的作品,它是根据日本漫画改编的动画系列的1,000多集。
这几乎是神圣的知识产权。而且,我们的日本创意团队和美国团队齐心协力,与Tomorrow Studios的合作伙伴和节目主持人Steven Maeda合作,将其改编成一部让全世界都爱不释手的节目。我要说的是,我们有 —— 这个节目在全球 84 个国家中排名第一,这是《怪奇物语》没有做的事情,那个星期三也没做过。
而且,英语节目同时在日本和韩国、巴西和美国如此受欢迎,这种情况非常罕见。另一个有趣的部分是出演该节目的伊纳基·戈多伊(Iñaki Godoy),这是我们原创节目历史上最困难的选角挑战之一,那就是谁来扮演 Monkey Luffy,而他就在我们的眼皮底下,就在我们的人才大家庭中。
几年前我们发现了他,并在我们的墨西哥系列节目《谁杀了萨拉》中让他出演了这个精彩的节目,然后我们得以让他出演这个节目,现在他是全球超级巨星。因此,这种事情你可以做得很好,很难模仿,这为我们提供了一种竞争空间,让我们的竞争对手能够越来越多地做到这一点。
我的意思不是——当我这么说时,我的意思不是让事情变得更加全球化,而是想让核心受众真正产生共鸣的东西。通常,本地受众想要非常本地化的内容。在这种情况下,当地观众是 one piece 的粉丝,这非常具有区别性,我们必须先取悦他们,就像我们在西班牙的原创节目一样,我必须首先真正取悦西班牙的顾客。因此,我们可以做到这一点。我们把钱花得好。我们对支出产生影响,随着收入的增长,我们会增加支出。
斯宾塞·诺伊曼
也许吧——对不起,杰西卡。我本来想稍微根据泰德关于内容支出轨迹的观点来构思一下。所以 —— 我们过去曾谈过这个问题。因此,首先,在信中,我们谈到了2024年,我们希望将现金内容支出恢复到或接近170亿美元的水平。
最大的波动因素将是 SAG-AFTRA 罢工何时解决。因此,这将使我们的现金与损益比率接近1:1.1 x。因此,我们没有给出2024年的自由现金流的具体数字。这给我们带来了什么,当你考虑我们的收入增长前景、利润指导和目标现金内容支出时,我们将在2024年提供可观的自由现金流。除此之外,我们确实希望随着时间的推移增加内容投资,正如我们所证明的那样,收入将持续健康增长。
因此,假设——我认为,我们在上次电话会议上谈过,假设没有大幅扩张,我们预计盈亏中内容支出现金与内容的现金与损益之比约为1.1倍。因此,这是人们思考如何模拟我们的内容支出增长的一种方式。如果我们 —— 随着收入的增长,盈利能力的提高,我们应该看到内容支出增加,而且自由现金流也随着时间的推移而大幅增长。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
然后只是最后一个,但只是 Ted 的后续作品。现在的内容太多了。你能谈谈投资优先事项吗?就像你如何看待是当地语言的电影、电视一样,你已经与一些第三方电影公司、电视公司达成了很多协议。你能否向我们介绍一下你对内容支出的看法?
西奥多·萨兰多斯
是的。我们总是有很多盘子在旋转,因为我们的会员有不同的品味和不同的愿望。我们正在努力取悦所有人 —— 就像我说的那样,想找到那个真正爱上我们看高档电视然后发现 Love is blind 的人。老实说,这是一个很普通的家庭。因此,我们必须能够擅长很多不同的事情。而且,我假设你在本例中谈论的是Skydance,我们的合作伙伴关系确实可以帮助我们在成长过程中找到并保持这种规模。因此,我们对我们在动画长片方面的成功感到非常兴奋。这是一个非常漫长的开发和生产周期。
有时候,制作一部非常棒的动画故事片可能需要十年时间。如你所知,我们的行动相当快,而且我们移动得相当快。而那些真正成功地在一年内推出了两部以上的动画长片的单一公司。所以我们想要 —— 这笔交易可以帮助我们补充我们正在做的工作,就像你今年看到的那样,Leo and Chicken Run 问世了,Nimona 已经问世了。
因此,如果你看看自尼尔森追踪电影观看情况以来排名前十的动画长片,其中七部是动画长片,我们有非常大的胃口。因此,人们对动画长片的胃口很大,我们致力于这部分业务。我们通过许可合作伙伴关系、原创制作和原创创作相结合来实现这一目标,不仅在美国,而且在世界各地。因此,我们必须找到合适的投资平衡,找到合适的产品市场契合,这有助于我们发展这些领域,最重要的是,有助于为消费者创造价值主张,他们可以说:“嘿,我为Netflix支付的费用可以多花一点,因为我在那里获得了很多价值,而且我花了很多时间在那里。因此,如果你考虑一下——在今年最后38周的最后37周中,Netflix的直播剧集排名第一,而且所有直播都是如此。
在这38周中,有31周我们也有排名第一的电影。在任何一周内,我们都可能排名第一、第二和第三。因此,我们真的 —— 我们还有很多事情要做,我们必须继续专注于继续改善对消费者的价值主张,这推动了我们在本次电话会议上一直在谈论的数字。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
Spence,你今天宣布大幅增加回购量。我们是否应该将第三季度的25亿美元回购视为未来的运行率?
斯宾塞·诺伊曼
我不会通读这个,杰西卡。我们有点放慢了脚步,因为随着业务放缓,我们想这样做,我们谈到了这样一个事实,即在过去一年左右的时间里,我们对预测的前瞻性不那么明显,因为我们希望重振业务并推出付费共享。正如我们已经说过的那样,现在其中大部分已经过去,我们对未来的看法有了更好的看法。因此,我们加大了回购力度,因为我们在资产负债表上也积累了一些现金。我们的目标最低现金是大约两个月的收入。
因此,加上或减去我们希望在资产负债表上持有的60亿美元现金,而且我们已经领先于此,我们还有一点领先优势。所以——但这实际上是我们设法实现的:第一,主要是推动业务向前发展,发展业务,扩大现金流,然后作为现金——多余的现金积累在资产负债表上,将其返还给股东。因此,我们设定了一个非常具体的目标,即资产负债表上以现金的形式实现大约两个月的收入,我认为你应该这样思考随着时间的推移我们的步伐会怎样。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
来谈游戏。感觉就像你描述广告的方式一样,比如一个爬行、走再到跑的过程,游戏中的近期和中期策略是什么?
格雷戈里·彼得斯
好吧,让我们从大奖开始。我认为这是更好的看法,那就是游戏是一个巨大的娱乐机会。因此,我们说的是消费者在中国以外和俄罗斯以外的游戏上花费了1400亿美元。从战略角度来看,我们相信我们可以将游戏打造成一个强大的内容类别,利用我们当前的核心电影和系列,将成员,尤其是特定IP的粉丝与他们会喜欢的游戏联系起来。
我认为值得注意的是,如果我们能够建立这些联系,并像我们所看到的那样建立这些联系,那么我们本质上是在回避当今手机游戏市场面临的最大问题,那就是如何以经济高效的方式吸引新玩家。所以这才是真正的主张。我们认为,如果我们做到这一点,我们就能为会员提供他们喜欢的精彩游戏和娱乐体验,规模足够大。然后,我们重新投入到核心业务中。
我们提高了参与度。我们提高了留存率。我们增加了交付的价值。这些都推动了我们的核心业务指标。而且我认为这实际上只是你刚才和泰德谈论的话的非常自然的延伸。如果你考虑一下我们提供的内容范围以及我们提供的各种内容和娱乐,那么游戏只会为这种多样性和深度再增加一层。我想说,我们还看到它更多地转向了你的短期和中期。我们还看到绩效指标支持这一基本战略假设是合理的。因此,目前我们服务上的游戏参与度推动了核心业务指标,这与电影和电视剧相比是递增的。
但是,要实现中期目标,我们面临的主要挑战是,与我们的整体内容支出和参与度相比,我们目前的规模,坦率地说,我们目前的投资水平都非常、非常、非常小。因此,现在我们的工作是逐步扩展到游戏对业务产生重大影响的地方。我们在那里有雄心勃勃的计划。我们希望在未来几年内,将参与度真正提高到今天水平的许多倍。我们可以看到如何到达那里。在标题级别上更深入地看一层。
有些游戏确实对我们的会员有用,它们对我们的业务有用。如果我们能做得更多,我们就知道我们可以扩展到这个主张。我们必须通过根据我们所学的一切进行更好的标题选择来做到这一点。我们必须在更好的产品功能上做到这一点,以最大限度地提高任何给定标题与受众的联系。我们必须通过逐步提高消费者的知名度来做到这一点,正如我们所看到的那样,当我们推出其他内容类别时,你可以考虑没有剧本,也可以考虑电影。随着消费者了解到我们是一个寻找游戏的地方,这大大提高了整体参与度指标。
我对我们在第四季度发生的事情感到兴奋。我们将推出一些备受瞩目的大型游戏,这在某种程度上可以让鼓点继续下去。我们有 Dead Cells 了我们有 2024 年《足球经理》。我们有 Money Heist。考虑一下第四季度即将推出的与我们的IP的连接。对于那些用这种语言看的人来说,那是 Casa De Papel。
我们还将在第一季度推出维尔京河。因此,正如你指出的那样,这个轨迹与我们以前看到的没有什么不同,当时我们推出了一个新地区,想想拉丁美洲,或者我们推出了像日本这样的国家,传统西方媒体公司陷入困境,或者我们推出了诸如无剧本之类的新类型。我们有爬行、散步、跑步和建造它的过程,但我们看到了巨大的机会,可以建立长期的娱乐中心价值,为我们的会员提供更多的娱乐价值。
西奥多·萨兰多斯
对于超级粉丝来说,在节目的两季之间进入宇宙是一次很棒的经历。真的很令人兴奋。杰西卡,我们有时间回答最后两个问题。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
太棒了。好吧,两个。因此,这两项运动中的第一项,你将创建将于下个月举行的Netflix杯锦标赛。这是否是你的运动策略的改变?或者我们应该如何考虑?
西奥多·萨兰多斯
是的。我知道这是我的意思,杰西卡。鉴于我们从事体育行业,但我们属于体育行业中我们带来最大价值的部分,那就是体育的戏剧性。因此,看看我们在 Drive to Survive 上取得的成功,看看我们在环法自行车赛上取得的成功,四分卫,全力以赴,不为人知,最近一次是在贝克汉姆。大卫·贝克汉姆是世界上最大的明星之一,他在Netflix上的纪录片在一周内为他带来了近50万新的社交媒体粉丝。
因此,我们通过我们最擅长的事情,即体育的戏剧性,对体育产生了重大影响。Netflix Cup 是一项直播活动,它实际上汇集了 Drive to Survive 的演员阵容和全力以赴的挥杆,并将他们带入了我们将于 11 月 14 日在 Netflix 上直播的高尔夫直播中。而且 —— 我认为这是延续我们创造的那些精彩体育品牌戏剧性的好方法。但是,我们的直播体育策略、许可和体育直播没有核心变化。我们正在投入大量资金来提高我们的直播能力,因此,随着对直播能力的需求增长以及我们找到不同的方式将活力融入到创意讲故事中,我们希望能够大规模地做到这一点。
杰西卡·里夫·埃利希
我猜今天还有一些关于 [难以辨认] 的新闻。但是我最后一个要问的问题还是斯宾塞所问的问题 —— 你最近谈到了你的辅助业务,包括Netflix House。你能谈谈随着时间的推移会是什么样子吗?它会是一个很大的投资领域吗,但更重要的是,它会做出贡献吗?
西奥多·萨兰多斯
是的。看看——该计划属于我们的消费品和体验小组。如今,他们经营着这些成功的企业,他们将这些现场体验带到世界各地,粉丝们以会让你震惊的方式参与其中。人们非常喜欢这些东西。他们在 Breath of Bridgerton Ball 上出现了数十人求婚。
从某种意义上说,这是一种深化同人圈的方式,一种表达同人圈的方式,这真的很重要。你有点像主题公园那样大规模地看待它,这些扩建不会像主题公园,两者都因为它们不会有那么大的资本支出。他们还有 —— 我们预计粉丝们每年会去多次,而不仅仅是每隔几年一次。这是经营一家真正擅长发展品牌和强化品牌的企业的一种方式。
而如今,情况并非如此 —— 他们四处走动,把它们放在一个保护伞下,在那里我们可以添加一些技术,让它成为一种非常了不起的体验,比如参与金钱大劫案、逃生室或怪奇物语体验或鱿鱼游戏挑战赛中的所有不同事情,人们可以一起生活并享受很多乐趣。他们还可以去 NETFLIX BITES,体验所有 Netflix 食品品牌的美食。
因此,它能真正强化品牌,增强人们对在 Netflix 上观看并爱上的事物的兴奋感,并为他们提供一个去表达的地方。相对于我们所从事的大业务而言,这并不是一项实质性的投资。但这是一种很好的方式,就像我们的消费品业务一样。
王斯宾塞
很好。杰西卡,非常感谢你的提问,我们也感谢大家收听我们的业绩电话会议,我们期待着下个季度,甚至更早,与大家进行交流。谢谢大家。
(提示:此笔录是通过录音转换的,我们会尽力而为,但不能完全保证转换的准确性,仅供参考。)