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Netflix, Inc.: The Mouse Strikes Back
In 2017, Disney announced that in 2019 it would launch Disney Plus, a subscription-based streaming video service that promised to rival Netflix, the dominant player in the market. This was the latest advancement in the history of movie rentals, which had first exploded in the 1980s with the advent of videotape and had gone through several technological transformations before reaching the age of streaming in the 2010s. At the time of Disney's announcement, Netflix dominated the market due to its ever-improving algorithmic recommendation system and its investment in original content. How would Netflix withstand the competition from Disney? What would be an appropriate measure of relative strength for a streaming service? This case offers a way in to discussions of customer lifetime value, market capitalization, and discounted cash flows, as well as the role of technological change in business models and firm valuation techniques. -
Netflix: The Customer Strikes Back
A financial analyst is asked to appraise the value of Netflix stock at a time of unprecedented turmoil for the company. This case introduces customer lifetime value (CLV) as a useful metric for subscription-based businesses.