MIN-585: Supply Chain Management Tutorial - 1 (Case-Study) : The Demise of Blockbuster
MIN-585: Supply Chain Management Tutorial - 1 (Case-Study) : The Demise of Blockbuster
Tutorial – 1 (Case-study)
Instructions:
Read the following case study. Based on this reading and your understanding from the lecture
classes, answer the questions at the end of the case study.
Answers should be hand-written in plain A4 pages using black or blue pen, and submitted as a
single pdf file.
Suggested length: Two pdf pages.
Submission portal: On MS Teams “Assignment”. (any other means of submission will not be
considered.)
Submission deadline: 7 pm on August 21, 2021.
Netflix
Netflix was founded in 1997 by Reed Hastings as a pay-per-rental, mail-order video rental company. After experimenting
with both pay-per-rental and subscription, the company settled on a subscription-based strategy by the end of 1999. By
2010, Netflix had 13 million members and was the world’s largest subscription service, sending DVDs by mail and
streaming movies and television episodes over the Internet. For $8.99 a month, Netflix members could have any of more
than 100,000 DVD titles delivered to their homes and could instantly watch a smaller set of television episodes and movies
streamed to their televisions and computers. Netflix shipped some 2 million discs daily in the United States.
Netflix focused its strategy around offering a large variety of titles, helping customers navigate titles with a
sophisticated recommendation engine, and ensuring that titles reached customers quickly. Whereas a bricks-and-mortar
rental store typically carried about 3,000 titles, in 2010 Netflix offered its customers a selection of more than 100,000
DVD titles, most of which were old releases. In 2009, about 70 percent of the DVDs shipped by Netflix were titles with
release dates older than thirteen weeks.
In 2010, Netflix had about 60 regional distribution centers across the United States, with sophisticated systems
to track customers’ DVD queues. As the distribution center processes were linked to the recommendation software,
movies that were likely to be in stock were recommended to customers. When the distribution center received a watched
DVD back from a customer, a new one from the customer’s rental queue was shipped out. These distribution centers were
highly automated for rapid processing and were located within driving distance of several U.S. Postal Service processing
facilities. Netflix estimated that it would spend about $600 million in 2010 on shipping expenses.
Netflix’s ability to rent older titles was very appealing to studios that had historically seen little revenue from
this content. Netflix bought older DVDs from studios at cost and, in turn, provided them a percentage of the subscription
revenue based on utilization for rentals over a specified period (typically 6–12 months). For newer content, Netflix did
not attempt to serve the entire initial rush of rental demand. Given the higher initial cost of purchase, the company
purchased only a limited number of new release DVDs, preferring instead to wait a few weeks and buy the bulk of its
supply at lower cost. Customers could put new titles into their queues and receive them when the DVDs became available
in stock.
Between 2005 and 2009, Netflix delivered excellent financial results and grew revenues by 150 percent and
profits by about 175 percent. Despite the strong performance of its DVD rental business, however, the company was
focused on increasing the fraction of digital content it delivered. Its streaming service, launched in 2007, allowed
customers to watch select movies and content on the Netflix website via their PCs. By 2009, the Netflix service offered
more than 17,000 titles (although most new releases were not included in the selection) streamed through a variety of
devices. By 2013, the streaming service contributed majority of Netflix’s revenue, although most of the profits still came
from the DVD mailing business.
Redbox
The concept of Redbox originated in 2002 within McDonald’s Ventures, LLC, which was working to identify new ways
to drive traffic to its restaurants and provide added convenience and relevance to customers. Redbox’s first kiosk was
launched in 2004 in Denver. Coinstar, Inc. purchased Redbox in early 2009.
Redbox’s strategy was based on targeting the budget-conscious movie renter who wanted to quickly rent a DVD
for immediate use. Redbox met this need by placing its automated red kiosks at easily accessible locations, where
customers could rent movies for $1 per night. Movies could be returned to any Redbox machine and no membership was
required.
By early 2010, Redbox had approximately 23,000 kiosks nationwide, including in select McDonald’s
restaurants, leading grocery stores, and Walmart, Walgreens, and 7-Eleven stores. Redbox planned to more than double
the number of its kiosks by 2012. Retailers, who were struggling to keep people shopping, realized that having a DVD
kiosk in a store created foot traffic. In some cases, retailers even offered discounts that essentially made it free for Redbox
to install a kiosk. Each Redbox kiosk carried about 630 discs, comprising 200 of the newest movie titles. A Redbox kiosk
rented its average DVD 15 times at an average of $2 per transaction. After that, the used DVDs were made available for
sale to customers for $7.
By mid-2010, Redbox accounted for 25 percent of DVD rental volume, more than Blockbuster. The company
was on course to generate more than $1 billion in annual sales, faster than Netflix was able to achieve that milestone.
Table 1: Financial results of Blockbuster, Netflix, and Coinstar (Redbox) in 2009 (in millions of dollars).