Amazon TV production
Amazon's recent move into original TV production mixes the tactics of traditional network TV with innovations from the online world. It does not sell a stand-alone video subscription service like Netflix - instead, it bundles streaming video with its Amazon Prime membership program, in which shoppers pay an annual fee of $79 for two-day shipping on most of their purchases from Amazon.com. They are creating pilots for about a dozen shows, anyone of which becoming a breakout hit would attract people to Amazon Prime, the only source…
Established TV and movie players seem unperturbed by Amazon's efforts, considering the company just another entrant, among many, in the quest for original content (!).
Streaming Tesco
Meanwhile down the block, having bought an 80% stake in the Blinkbox film and TV site in 2011, Tesco is preparing to launch two specialist ebook and music retail websites later this year. The three Blinkbox retail sites will sit separately from Tesco’s main online store and will only carry subtle Tesco branding. However, the supermarket will advertise the sites heavily in store and use them to ensure that customers in search of specialist online sites for books, music, films and TV box sets continue buying from Tesco.
The real breakthrough will be Tesco TV, a new television station that will be available to members of Tesco’s ClubCard loyalty scheme, free of charge, and will offer a mix of archive films and television shows.
Amazon and Tesco, in their different approaches to the market, are evolving ways of capitalising on their unique access to their tribes, deriving synergies which other retailers have already underestimated to their cost, and which traditional entertainment producers are not even dreaming about…
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