After only
18 months, Redbox Instant, the streaming video service jointly operated by
Outerwall (parent company of Redbox) and Verizon, is shutting down. The service
will officially call it quits tomorrow, Tuesday October 7, 2014. See below for
the official announcement on Redbox’s website.
Redbox
Instant officially launched in early 2013 with a Netflix-like hybrid model that
tried to tie subscription video streaming to physical disc rentals. For only
$9.99/month, subscribers got access to Redbox’s online streaming catalogue and
four free DVD rentals a month from Redbox physical kiosks. In theory, this gave
customers access to newer movies than streaming alone would allow, especially
since customers could go straight to the kiosk to rent the movie versus waiting
for it to arrive by mail.
Unfortunately,
Redbox Instant never really caught on. To begin with, its catalog of
subscription titles mostly focused on movies, as opposed to the TV-heavy
catalogues that have been a big factor in both Netflix’s and Hulu’s success.
Furthermore, Redbox Instant’s catalog was also significantly smaller than
Netflix’s or even Amazon Prime’s streaming video catalog, and the service never
really gained traction.
Earlier this
year, Outerwall CEO J. Scott Di Valerio publicly discussed subscription numbers,
stating, “We’re not pleased where the subscribers are to date.” Di Valerio also
confirmed that if Redbox Instant continues to stagnate, the company will be
forced to reevaluate whether they will continue to sink capital into the
venture. The final straw was the fact that the service had to disable sign-ups
for the past three months due to a credit card fraud issue. This not only
prevented Redbox Instant from acquiring new customers, but also resulted in
existing customers with expiring or revoked credit cards being booted from the
service because they weren’t able to add any new payment information.
The
bottom line is that Redbox Instant just couldn’t keep up with Netflix (and
Amazon and Hulu to a lesser extent). Good on Redbox for recognizing this; now
they are free to focus on growing and expanding their kiosk business.
Sources:
GigaOm, Redbox, Reuters, TechCrunch
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