The news: Facing a congested landscape, streaming services are branching out widely to get themselves in front of increasingly sparse users. Streamers are breaking into new markets and features including live sports, ad-supported subscription tiers, and bundles that resemble the cable packages of old.
- Disney is reportedly considering a cheaper, ad-supported subscription tier for Disney+, per The Information.
- Verizon is also launching Plus Play, a free platform that bundles various services including Netflix, Disney+, Peloton, and more into a hub where users can keep track of, manage, and be alerted to new deals for subscription services, per The Verge.
How we got here: Things were bound to arrive here eventually. The number of major streaming competitors has exploded in recent years, and along with that increased volume has come a slowdown in subscribers and hesitancy to sign up for other services.
- This is what’s leading the push for streamers to diversify their businesses and pursue deals to get them in front of as many potential customers as possible.
- Yet with the increasing number of exclusivity deals that are seeing major sports leagues, popular intellectual properties, and blockbuster films get locked behind closed doors, caving in and subscribing to yet another service can feel like an inevitability for consumers—especially as streaming services increasingly become the dominant players in the entertainment industry.
- To reach these consumers, services like Disney+, Peacock, and others have invested in ad-supported video channels (some locked behind subscriptions and others available for free), which are rising in popularity among American viewers. Few viewers are loyal to just one streaming service: In 2021, Ampere Analysis found that a quarter of US internet users use a mix of advertising-based and subscription-based video-on-demand services.