Edmonton Journal

Netflix looks to Tollywood for long-sought India growth

- SHILPA JAMKHANDIK­AR

In southern India, devoted fans worship film and TV stars like gods, erecting huge statues of actors which are bathed in milk as part of prayer rituals for a movie's success.

This is the market Netflix Inc, a streaming laggard in India, is now eager to tap. It has a range of Indian films across various regions to showcase but for TV series — key to keeping viewers loyal to its platform — it only has a few hit shows in Hindi and no TV shows at all in regional languages.

The U. S. company has green-lighted at least six TV shows in southern Indian languages this year, aggressive­ly chasing deals in Tollywood as the Telugu film and TV industry is known, as well as in the Tamil film and TV industry, six people with knowledge of the company's plans told Reuters.

As prolific as Hindi-language Bollywood and known for flashy, action-packed content, the South Indian film industry is doing extremely well, dominating India's box office revenue so far this year.

Netflix has “had meetings with pretty much every producer and filmmaker here. You will see the results of those meetings by next year,” one of the people, a Tollywood producer, said. All sources spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing loss of work opportunit­ies.

Netflix has long positioned India, with its population of 1.4 billion, as a key market. In 2018, two years after it launched in the country, CEO Reed Hastings predicted its next 100 million subscriber­s would come from India. But so far it has just five to six million, according to analysts' estimates.

By Hastings's own admission, Netflix has been frustrated by its lack of success in India relative to its other markets.

This new push south also comes at a time when the search for growth has taken on new urgency.

The streaming giant stunned investors last month when it reported a quarterly net loss of subscriber­s globally for the first time in more than a decade, and predicted deeper losses ahead. Its stock lost almost half its value since then.

In India, Netflix outperform­s rivals in terms of revenue share of the subscripti­on video-on-demand market, commanding 39 per cent share in 2021 compared to nearest rival Disney+ Hotstar's 23 per cent, according to Media Partners Asia.

But analysts say its subscriber base is too small for comfort. Next to Netflix's five to six million, Disney+ Hotstar, which owns cricket streaming rights, has about 50 million. Local rival Zee5 has an estimated 20 million and analysts also gauge Amazon Prime and Sonyliv's subscriber figures to be well above Netflix's numbers.

Asked by Reuters about criticism of its performanc­e in India and its push into regional languages, Netflix said in a statement it was confident of what it called a “long-term winning strategy in India.”

A large part of Netflix's woes has been its much higher pricing in an extremely cost-conscious market. It slashed fees late last year, making it more competitiv­e but remains much pricier than rivals.

It charges 649 rupees, roughly US$8, per month for its highest quality streaming resolution plan that allows use on up to four devices. A similar plan from Disney costs 299 rupees. Netflix's mobile-only plan for one device is 149 rupees for one month, while Disney charges the same amount for three months.

Netflix's brand as a premium service may make it reluctant to cut prices further but that means its best, if not only, path to significan­t subscriber growth is expanding its slate of TV shows, analysts say.

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