Apple has announced that it will no longer rent TV show episodes for $0.99. Customers must purchase them for $1.99.
The rationale seems straight-forward: Apple’s competitors rent. By choosing to only sell, Apple sets its service apart… it’s a premium service. iTunes becomes the place true TV lovers go to build their collections. (It’s worth noting that with iCloud, a purchased episode will always be available to you on any iTunes-connected device.)
But here’s my question: Why $1.99?
The reports are that the price was set in order to appease the studios. $0.99 was too cheap for their tastes.
This seems reasonable at first glance. $1.99 for a 30 or 60 minute episode is cheap compared to buying a 90 minute movie for $20 or $30. But is that really the best comparison to make? Is $1.99 really a good deal? Or are we getting ripped off?
A more appropriate comparison would be to ask how much money is made per viewer when a show is aired on TV. For most channels, the only revenue is advertising. (For the sake of this discussion, I’m not going to take into account subscription channels like HBO.)
Math Time:
TV advertising rates are done on a cost-per-thousand (CPM… the M being “mille”) basis. I’m not an expert on media costs, so I’ve had to do a bit of searching. Estimates on average CPMs are a bit all over the place, but your average 30 second spot sells for $5 to $25 per one thousand viewers. Let’s go with $25.
If an hour-long TV show has about 18 minutes of commercial time, that’s about 36 commercials.
If each spot paid $25 per thousand viewers, that works out to $900 per thousand viewers. Meaning each viewer is worth about $0.90.
Now, iTunes is selling episodes for $1.99. After Apple’s 30% cut, that leaves the show with revenue of $1.39.
If customers purchase an episode and only watch it once, iTunes is generating 54% more revenue per episode per viewer than TV advertising does. However, if they watch the episode twice – the equivalent of watching it at least once on rerun – TV might provide revenues of $1.80 per viewer. Suddenly the iTunes sale is providing 23% less revenue. (Remember: iTunes sales are a one-time thing. No matter how many times you watch an episode, the company doesn’t make any more money. With TV, they get paid every time the show runs.)
It keeps going downhill from there, of course. We can start to see why the studios/networks (or whoever owns the shows) would be nervous about anything less than $1.99 per episode.
Conclusions:
- To date, we’ve seen $0.99 as the sweet spot for selling music and apps. It’s a magic number that makes purchases sky rocket. $1.99… not so much. If $1.99 is the best they can do, can digital downloads ever beat the TV subscription model?
- As I’ve said before, when you look at the true costs of media creation, we begin to see how much benefit we get from having TV subsidized by advertising. It’s estimated that the average American household watched 8 hours of TV per day, maybe more. If all of that was purchased on iTunes, they’d be spending $16 a day on TV alone. Even if we assume half of everything being watched was a rerun they’d already seen, that’s still $8 a day, $56 a week, $243.33 a month, and $2,920 a year. Anyone else feeling a tad bit appreciative of all those disruptive ads right about now?
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Some Caveats:
- There is a big difference between how much money an advertiser pays for a 30 second spot, and how much the studio that made the show actually gets. I’m not expert, but let’s assume that at the very least the network running the ads is taking a significant chunk. I don’t know the percentages, so I left that out of my calculations.
- A $25 CPM appears to be a premium rate. I don’t really know, but that’s what the interwebs tell me.
- All in all, the point of the math above was to get a basic sense of how the money works out, with wide margins of error.
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