On Netflix, movies such as Raat Akeli Hai (left) reach its 193 mn subscribers across 190 nations.
Where exactly does India fit in? There is no straight answer. India is a huge market in volumes – 662 million broadband users of which 395 million are streaming video, according to Comscore data. Last year, the Indian OTT market had revenues of Rs 8,000 crore. However, at about 3 million subscribers, over 35 million unique visitors and an estimated Rs 750 crore in revenues, Netflix India isn’t quite the powerhouse it is elsewhere. Google’s YouTube with 388 million unique users and an estimated Rs 3,000 crore in Indian revenues may not be a fair comparison. But Amazon Prime Video, which entered India the same year (2016) as Netflix is. It has done better with over 14 million subscribers and an estimated Rs 1,500 crore in revenue.
Those numbers, however, don’t capture the weird, kaleidoscopic relationship Netflix has with India. Think of it as a relationship that operates on three dimensions.
Indian matchmaking First, India presents an unprecedented opportunity across product and content, says Abhishek Nag, director, business development. For instance, the mobile only plan was made for India, as Todd Yellin, the global vice president for product, says. In India, a bulk of streaming video watching happens on mobiles, usually low-end ones. That led to a mobile plan at Rs 199 a month in addition to the usual Rs 499-Rs 799in 2019.Its success has meant that Netflix is now rolling it out in markets like Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines to ramp up access to Netflix. There are several other experiments – the 30-second trailer you see or interactive shows. India is an integral part of many such experiments.
Second, there’s the appetite for content. Indians love watching not just local shows such as Delhi Crime or Ghoul but much beyond. After English and local language content, Spanish, Korean and Japanese titles drive the highest viewing. The biggest reset Netflix has had to do on content is on films. India continues to have the highest viewing of films (80 per cent) as a percentage of the viewing of all content in the country. Srishti Arya, director, international original film, reels off all the films commissioned/bought from India - Ghost stories, Bulbul, Rajma Chawal – each an intriguingly different story. “The variety of material coming to us is huge. By the end of 2020, we would have introduced 10 new directors,” says Arya. “People in India love movies and it is a great source of some of the best storytellers. Two-third of the viewing for Sacred Games was outside of India,” says Yellin.
Sacred Games (2018), the first Indian original from Netflix, has been mentioned dozens of times in earning calls and conferences by everyone from CEO Reed Hastings downwards. Also, Mighty Little Bheem was viewed by over 27 million households across the world, including in Australia and Latin America.
That is the third and the most critical dimension of Netflix's India connect.