Amazon has been gaining ground
on Netflix as the most popular video streaming service in the U.S., and
now it is planning something that could see it overtake its rival.
According to a report in the New York Post,
the e-commerce giant is preparing a free video service. Supported by
advertising, it would sit alongside – not replace — the company’s
existing video offering that is bundled into its $99/year Prime
membership.
Does this sound familiar? It should.
In March,
the WSJ had a similar report describing an Amazon free, ad-supported
video service. At the time the company flat-out denied that this
was happening.
“We’re often experimenting with new things, but we have no plans to
offer a free streaming-media service,” an Amazon spokeswoman told Variety in response to the WSJ report.
In the interim, the company actually kicked off an ad-supported
free-video offering of sorts: it lets users stream first episodes of
select TV shows for free (with ads), as a way of enticing viewers to pay
for more. Launched in June,
this covers hundreds of TV shows, and comes on the heels of smaller
versions of this program for Amazon services delivered through specific
devices like the Kindle Fire and Roku.
The limited free service could be the company dipping its toes into
the water, trying out the format to see how well it works and how many
people are using it to watch videos. I’d suspect that Amazon has seen
good take-up, hence the plan to offer a bigger version of it.
The NYP report notes that the ad-based service is “a definite go”
but does not specify a launch date. We have reached out to Amazon for a
comment for this story (or another denial). We will update when and if
we hear more. But in the meantime there are a lot of reasons why it
would make sense for Amazon to launch an ad-supported video service:
It would give Amazon a very obvious way of growing its existing advertising network.
The Amazon Media Group,
as the company’s effort is called, already sells advertising across a
range of Amazon properties — Amazon.com, Quidsy, Imdb.com (planting
seeds for film and video-related ads?), and photography site DPReview.
It also runs mobile ads and ads specifically for Amazon’s Kindle
devices.
Adding a video ad service would give Amazon more inventory for its
ads, and a free video service could be one more way that Amazon could
promote sales of its devices — don’t forget that the Kindle Fire tablet
has long been marketed as a video/media consumption device.
And it could be another way for Amazon to market services to that
portion of the population who have not been won over by the company’s
all-in Prime membership scheme, which this year saw the price go up for
the first time ever, to $99/year from $79.
More generally, video ads have become a very coveted space of late.
Advertisers love them because consumers love video, and so the ads
are served to a more captive audience; and because they are a much
catchier way of getting a message across than banner and search ads.
Ad businesses love them because they represent a premium on banner ads in terms of pricing, hence better margins.
Amazon will be wanting to tap into this same business model, too —
and may well already be getting requests from clients to add video ad
units into its existing mix.
Currently, the company only lists one video format
in its list of ad units. That is for an in-stream video, which it only
serves on non-Amazon sites, and only in the U.S. and Canada.
A move to expand its video offerings would come at the same time that companies like Google (which sees Amazon as its biggest competitor in another form of advertising: search) and Yahoo are also beefing up their video plays.
While Google’s YouTube has built its audience on ad-supported free video, it also has paid channels and is now launching a paid subscription for music videos, Music Key.
While Yahoo has long been working on ways to have a to more
comprehensive video play in the form of content, it’s also been beefing
up in video ads, recently acquiring BrightRoll.
Netflix has long dominated the subscription-based streaming market in
the U.S., and a report out from network optimization company Sandvine
yesterday noted that it now accounts for 34.9% of all downstream
traffic, in peak evening hours.
“Amazon Instant Video is now the second largest paid streaming video
service in North America, accounting for 2.6% of downstream traffic,”
Sandvine notes. It’s also seeing the most growth, with traffic more than
doubling in the last 18 months.
While an ad-supported, free video service would be a departure from a
paid tier, it could help Amazon introduce more users to its video
features and potentially upsell them to the more lucrative, longer-term
contracts — a tactic that the company has been well known to use in the
past.
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