How do we get hooked on a TV series? Netflix has the answer
Streaming service Netflix has mined viewer data from 16 countries to analyze what it takes to become hooked on a TV series.
Netflix, which is expected to launch in South Africa in 2016, said it analyzed its global streaming data across the inaugural seasons of some of its most popular shows – looking for signals that pointed to when viewers became hooked.
It found that when commercial breaks and appointment viewing are stripped away and consumers can watch an entire season as they choose, fandom emerges. “That is, 70% of viewers who watched the hooked episode went on to complete season one or more poetically, when members were hooked and there was no turning back,” it said.
“Given the precious nature of primetime slots on traditional TV, a series pilot is arguably the most important point in the life of the show,” said Ted Sarandos, chief content officer for Netflix.
“However, in our research of more than 20 shows across 16 markets, we found that no one was ever hooked on the pilot. This gives us confidence that giving our members all episodes at once is more aligned with how fans are made,” Sarandos said.
The data in this research was pulled from accounts who started watching season one of the selected series between January 2015 – July 2015 in Brazil, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Mexico, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, UK and US and between April 2015 – July 2015 for Australia and New Zealand.
A hooked episode was defined when 70% of viewers who watched that episode went on to complete season one.
While the hooked episode was relatively consistent in all areas, Netflix said that slight geographic differences did present themselves. The Dutch tended to fall in love with series the fastest, getting hooked one episode ahead of most countries irrespective of the show. Germans showed early fandom for Arrow whereas France fell first for How I Met Your Mother. In Better Call Saul, Jimmy McGill won Brazilians over one episode quicker than Mexicans.
And Down Under, viewers prove to hold out longer across the board, with members in Australia and New Zealand getting hooked one to two episodes later than the rest of the world on almost every show.
Despite these differences, the hooked moment had no correlation to audience size or attrition, regardless of show, episode number or country, Netflix said.
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