(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Six Reasons Why DVDs Still Make Money -- And Won't Die Anytime Soon - Forbes
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20140923051441/http://www.forbes.com:80/sites/dadehayes/2013/07/08/six-reasons-why-dvds-still-make-money-and-wont-die-anytime-soon/?commentId=comment_blogAndPostId/blog/comment/2648-462-27
| |

I help run the top trade publication covering the business of television as executive editor at Broadcasting & Cable magazine. Past editing and reporting posts in both New York and L.A. have been at Variety, Entertainment Weekly and the Los Angeles Times, and my writing has also appeared in The New York Times, the Boston Globe and TV Guide. My two books on the media business are Open Wide: How Hollywood Box Office Became a National Obsession (Miramax Books) and Anytime Playdate: Inside the Preschool Entertainment Boom, or, How Television Became My Baby’s Best Friend (Free Press/Simon & Schuster). I did fall off the wagon for three years and worked in PR at Rubenstein Communications, but representing Tribeca Enterprises, Paramount Pictures (among others) gave me valuable media insights. For example, I now wear only sensible shoes and breathable fabrics when in Doha, Qatar.

Contact Dade Hayes

The author is a Forbes contributor. The opinions expressed are those of the writer.

Loading...
Media & Entertainment 51,955 views

Six Reasons Why DVDs Still Make Money -- And Won't Die Anytime Soon

DVD collection

Pop quiz: How many of yours are still in shrinkwrap? (Photo credit: nickstone333).

During earnings season this spring, media company chiefs all touted quarterly growth in digital rentals and sales of movies and TV shows. They paused only briefly to shovel more dirt on the grave of the other part of the multi-billion-dollar home entertainment market: those so-last-decade little discs known as DVDs.

“It is definitely a more challenged business in terms of … the sell-through and rental of physical goods,” said Disney Chairman and CEO Bob Iger during a typical conference call with analysts in May. “But it’s been growing nicely on the digital front and I think that bodes well for the future.” Other executives simply ignored Wall Street’s questions about hard goods and rhapsodized about how the ones and zeroes were finally bringing in long-promised bucks.

Refreshingly forward-thinking for an industry not known for being so? Eminently logical given the explosion of digital platforms in recent years? Perhaps. But this stance is also disingenuous given that physical goods still make up about two-thirds of major studios’ total home entertainment revenue. Perhaps it’s simple human nature — few executives, especially those in an industry built on razzle-dazzle, enjoy dwelling on decaying parts of their business. They’d rather talk about the wave of tomorrow, regardless of how big or genuine the swell.

The decline of the DVD, let’s not sugarcoat it, has been significant. According to annual figures released in January by industry trade group the Digital Entertainment Group (note the name), overall home entertainment revenue grew 0.2% in 2012, surpassing $18 billion. Physical disc sales have fallen by about 30% since their 2004 peak, to some 700 million units, but the revenue picture has remained stable (with more than a decade of consecutive annual tallies of $18 billion-plus, the DEG says). The reason is diversification. Consumers remain hungry for content, but are finding more and more avenues to it — electronic sell-through (EST), subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) or transactional VOD has all amounted to the same pie, just sliced into more pieces. But the DVD is no more dead than the single-screen movie theatre or the network sitcom or the hardcover book — other former cash cows that now play a diminished but still vital role in the ecosystem.

LAS VEGAS, NV - JANUARY 10:  Mike Dunn Preside...

Mike Dunn President Fox Home Entertainment Worldwide, Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment at an UltraViolet press event in 2012. (Image credit: WireImage)

I am here to say it is premature to pen the obituary of the oft-maligned DVD, onetime redeemer of flops, makers of careers and buoy of Hollywood during a meteoric 1999-2004 heyday. This wafer-thin, pocket-sized, data-rich slice of entertainment defies the usual narrative of obsolescence. It does not compare with the fraying, un-uploadable VHS tape or the cartoonishly oversized laserdisc. Unhip as it may be to point out, the humble disc serves a useful — and, yes, lucrative –purpose. After checking in with a range of industry leaders (not all of whom wanted to be identified given how their bosses characterize the marketplace) and putting my own thoughts together after covering the industry since the boom began, I am prepared to now make the optimistic case for the DVD. Not a bullish case in the sense of growth, clearly, but a prediction that these little silver objects will continue to matter to media companies for many years to come.

“In any forecast, physical goods will remain the largest piece,” Bill Clark, president of Anchor Bay Entertainment, told me. “It’s a very important revenue stream. There is no indication that digital is going to surpass physical. We need to grow the entire pie.”

Here are a handful of reasons, nearly a decade after the peak of DVD sales, why the physical slice of the pie will stay substantial:

1) Kids need it — Summer vacation season is well under way, and millions of parents are relearning this basic early childhood precept. Until automakers figure out how to make vehicles rolling wi-fi hotspots, airlines open the throttle on in-flight bandwidth, and online outlets decrease download times, watching movie and TV content on disc will remain the best way to travel. Plus, even at home, bonus features add more value to kids titles, as does packaging. It may be true that mobile devices and tablets are being used by kids at younger and younger ages, and that Netflix streaming has eroded linear viewing of Nickelodeon and other kids channels. But when it comes to home entertainment and long-term usage, DVD is simply a better value. Having shelled out three times for my kids to watch Parental Guidance on a tablet and home screen, I say bring on the Blu-ray (and hope it doesn’t get scratched).

2) The industry’s own marketing says so – UltraViolet, a cloud technology embraced by a broad consortium of distributors (notable holdouts include Disney), is selling the concept of multi-platform content access. That means if you buy a disc, you also get to access the digital copy, a “combo-pack” strategy that is now an industry cornerstone. The tables could soon turn, but the disc will stay in the picture. “In the future, you’re going to buy a digital copy and then get the disc as another way to view the content,” predicts Victor Elizalde, head of VIVA Pictures and a former studio exec.

3) Specialization favors it — Beyond the DEG data there are myriad distributors trafficking in a range of areas from sports to music to fitness to spiritualism — vast realms where the marketing opportunities and venues may be greater for physical discs than digital files. It’s easier to sell an official championship team DVD at supermarkets, gas stations and other retail outlets, for example, than an official championship download.

4) Blu-ray still the best viewing experience – For cinephiles or even anyone inclined in that direction, HD content viewed on the finest Retina tablet display or LCD flat screen can’t come close to a Blu-ray. Gaming platforms, such as the upcoming PlayStation 4 or just-released X-box, will continue to drive significant Blu-ray business. The rollout of Blu-ray has been a bit of a New Coke experience for Hollywood but after the smoke and disappointment has cleared it remains a superior format attracting all of the top content producers. “Working closely with the DEG, we’ll be launching a consumer awareness campaign about the merits of Blu-ray and UltraViolet,” says Anchor Bay’s Clark. “A lot of consumers don’t fully understand it.”

5) It’s the collector’s choice – If you were baffled by the format wars of a decade ago pitting Sony’s Blu-ray against Toshiba’s HD-DVD, the confusion around cloud storage is exponentially greater. The notion of a “digital storage locker,” as easily managed as one’s iTunes music library or Netflix account, has long been promoted by Hollywood (hence, UltraViolet). But there are an array of factors that will keep this concept from taking over and dominating. One is bandwidth — cloud DVRs are just now rolling out from MSOs like Comcast, and already there are questions about the cost and feasibility of bandwidth and storage. Old-school DVD collecting, while it involved an initial pricetag, didn’t get progressively more expensive the more you bought. Also, many players are cashing in on the demand for popular shows by creating packaging that lures hardcore fans. AMC’s blockbuster series Walking Dead sold out its run of 35,000 packages designed by McFarlane Toys. The price of this boxed set: $100. That’s a couple extra million right off the top.

6) For a lot of Americans, it ain’t broke – The media/industry narrative around the death of DVD and supremacy of digital doesn’t match the reality of most U.S. markets outside of New York, L.A., San Francisco and a small handful of other enclaves. Battered by recession and indifferent to aesthetics or the futuristic potential of cloud storage, they are happy to rent cheap discs from Redbox (whose kiosks outnumber McDonald’s and Starbucks outlets combined). As one major studio home entertainment confided to me, “There are a lot of Topeka, Kansases out there. And that’s a business we still need to be in.”

Post Your Comment

Please or sign up to comment.

Forbes writers have the ability to call out member comments they find particularly interesting. Called-out comments are highlighted across the Forbes network. You'll be notified if your comment is called out.

  • I pegged the number at 10 (Reasons Why DVD Has Legs, http://www.giant-interactive.com/blog/?p=323), but I think we’re both talking about some of the same effects.

  • Dade Hayes Dade Hayes, Contributor 1 year ago

    Thanks, G.I. — hadn’t seen this but great minds!

  • Scott Mendelson Scott Mendelson, Contributor 1 year ago

    What’s most frustrating about this transition is that’s a case of being forced to give up a superior product in exchange for a thus-far inferior one. DVDs will (usually) play the film from beginning to end no matter what the whims of your Internet connection might be at a given place. They have multiple spoken languages and various subtitle options. They have special features. On-Demand options rarely have subtitles outside of Netflix (and kudos for them on that), and all-too-few have foreign languages and almost none have special features.

    The only “superior” component over the physical DVD is the whole ‘watch it from my Internet connection right now’ concept. That’s great, unless your Internet connection isn’t reliable or you need captions of some kind. And what’s problematic is that my choice of renting a physical copy of a film is being taken from me by the loss of Blockbuster stores and the holds of rental titles from most major studios. If I want to see a film as soon as it’s technically available for home viewing, I either have to hope I have a nearby Blockbuster or I have to download that film for a higher price in a less quality presentation and without the various special features than I would have on disc.

    What’s basically happening is that studios are removing the option of the physical DVD for rental in exchange for ‘On Demand’ which substitutes convenience for quality. And the result is having to choose between inferior quality or the now-incredible inconvenience of either waiting for that one disc to magically arrive in the mail or however long it takes for RedBox to stock a new title. And if you want an older title, well, it’s basically either On-Demand or bust.

  • grokpie grokpie 1 year ago

    Yeah, but then you have to sit through about 10 minutes of crap — warnings and previews — before you even hit the menu screen. The good news: Ripping DVDs takes out the crap. The bad news: The DMCA says it’s illegal to break a DVD’s protection.

    DVDs aren’t any better quality than streaming, though. Hulu’s best free option — at 480p — is no different than DVDs. Pay, and you get access to 720P, which surpasses any DVD. Netflix automatically adjusts the quality to your internet connection, so you may get 720p or 240p.

  • Scott Mendelson Scott Mendelson, Contributor 1 year ago

    Exactly. A Netflix stream may look pretty solid (720p is still a step down from 1080p) or it may look like a 20-year old VHS tape copied thrice over, all depending on the whims of your network strength at the time. I pop in a Blu Ray, and I know I’m getting a 1080p top-notch presentation every time.

  • Dade Hayes Dade Hayes, Contributor 1 year ago

    Great points all. One tip about Netflix’s view of the viewing experience is that when the third-gen. iPad launched, their app wasn’t even optimized for HD. Can’t argue with their success but their abandonment of DVD/BR and low-quality stream.

    I also agree with your note about older titles — and it isn’t just Netflix, but also iTunes, Amazon Prime, pretty much any other player in the online streaming/TVOD world. It is a film buff’s nightmare — much of it isn’t solely their fault, as the rights have been so tangled up and now that streaming is a multi-billion-dollar business no one wants to just rubber-stamp those deals. But still, it’s amazing that for anyone interested in a breadth of film/TV, there’s really no one-stop shop, despite the promise of the Internet bringing the full bounty of content to consumers anytime, anywhere.

  • Mark Rogowsky Mark Rogowsky, Contributor 1 year ago

    Of course, the flipside of this Scott is the whole, “I have to fast forward through your stupid trailers” nonsense. The whole “I have to load your disc” business… The nice part of streaming is the whole laziness and efficiency of the experience. And when done on Vudu HDX or at 1080p on iTunes, it’s near BluRay quality.

    Now, all that said, I rent from Redbox whenever possible. It’s $1.60 vs. $5-6 and it’s better. And I’d rather take the 1.5 mile round trip and >not< be lazy. But every time I see the stupid warnings about piracy or have to hit "skip" through 4 previews, I get a little angry.

  • Ryan Underdahl Ryan Underdahl 8 months ago

    Your point that there is no one-stop shop for anyone interested in a breadth of film/TV is true if you’re only considering streaming options. I personally think there are more negatives than positives to online streaming to justify spending the $8/month for Netflix Instant. I pay $12/month for two DVDs by mail at a time and I have access to every title imaginable. I dictate what I want to watch, I don’t let what is available to stream impact what I want, and that is of the utmost importance to someone who watches many indie and foreign films.

  • Jim Dawkins Jim Dawkins 1 year ago

    So many people are shelling out money for a big screen HDTV. Personally if I want to watch a good movie in all its glory I get a disc. Netflix does come in handy and I do find myself using streaming more and more. With that said, I find the streamed content a mixed bag AND if I want to see the latest releases via streaming its expensive as hell. Isn’t that a bit of irony. People rejected brick and mortar blockbuster because of the rising rental fees, but now the supposed darling (streaming) costs even more.

    How can it be that a rental at a redbox with all its enormous overhead costs can be cheaper to rent than a stream that is digital file sitting on a server farm. There is no handling overhead. Why is it more expensive? These are the things big media is blind to understand. I know why they do it, but its also one reason why streaming hasn’t really taken off.

  • Yes. Hi.
    My name is Paula B.
    Of Somerset MA.
    And I really don’t care all that much fore all this downloading and streaming.
    As far as cloud streaming services like ultraviolet go.
    I think it’s bull Shit and it’s a rip off.
    If I’m going to own a film .
    I want a Physical disc.!
    I agree with you that Physical discs are not going to go away any time soon/but I do think that Blu-Ray is the future of the disc market fore movies. And concerts especially.!