Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-04-18 23:51:50| Engadget

Netflix will stop disclosing the number of people who signed up for its service, as well as the revenue it generates from each subscriber from next year, the company announced on Thursday. It will focus, instead, on highlighting revenue growth and the amount of time spent on its platform. In our early days, when we had little revenue or profit, membership growth was a strong indicator of our future potential, the company said in a letter to shareholders. But now were generating very substantial profit and free cash flow. Netflix revealed that the service added 9.33 million subscribers over the last few months, bringing the total number of paying households worldwide to nearly 270 million. Despite its decision to stop reporting user numbers each quarter, Netflix said that the company will announce major subscriber milestones as we cross them, which means well probably hear about it when it crosses 300 million. Netflix estimates that more than half a billion people around the world watch TV shows and movies through its service, an audience it is now figuring out how to squeeze even more money out of through new pricing tiers, a crackdown on password-sharing, and showing ads. Over the last few years, it has also steadily added games like the Grand Theft Auto trilogy, Hades, Dead Cells, Braid, and more, to its catalog. Subscriber metrics are an important signal to Wall Street because they show how quickly a company is growing. But Netflixs move to stop reporting these is something that weve seen from other companies before. In February, Meta announced that it would no longer break out the number of daily and monthly Facebook users each quarter but only reveal how many people collectively used Facebook, WhatsApp, Messenger, and Instagram. In 2018, Apple, too, stopped reporting the number of iPhones, iPads, and Macs it sold each quarter, choosing to focus, instead, on how much money it made in each category.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/netflix-is-done-telling-us-how-many-people-use-netflix-215149971.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

19.11Soccer league unveils blueprint for stadiums built around women, not men
18.11Retailers Black Friday codes appear when baking sheets hit the oven
18.11LinkedIns Advertising Business Is Surging
18.11How to Make Your Social Media Strategy Feel Organic [Infographic]
18.11How to Make Content Experimentation an Always-On, Low-Lift Part of Your Workflow
17.11Pumpkin introduces AI tool to forecast pet health costs before they hit
14.11AI Update, November 14, 2025: AI News and Views From the Past Week
14.11ARTIS becomes the worlds first dark sky zoo, restoring darkness in a light-flooded city
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

19.11Nvidia beats earnings forecasts amid Wall Street's AI jitters
19.11Tomorrow's Earnings/Economic Releases of Note; Market Movers
19.11Bull Radar
19.11Bear Radar
19.11Stocks Modestly Higher into Final Hour on Earnings Outlook Optimism, Diminished AI Infrastructure Build-Out Worries, Technical Buying, Tech/Power Sector Strength
19.11 What Makes This Trade Great A Clean Look at SGBX
19.11Mid-Day Market Internals
19.11Northwestern Medicine receives $25 million from Kent and Liz Dauten for behavioral health
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .