Blockbuster online going from $10 to $35

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May 2, 2002
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Blockbuster price hike will send customers packing
Posted Dec 21 2007, 06:15 AM by Kim Peterson


Blockbuster continues to struggle with balancing its online rental plans with its more profitable in-store business. The company said yesterday it's raising prices for its Total Access subscription plans, and Citigroup analyst Tony Wible said he thinks half of the subscriber base will ditch.

In a nutshell, the premium plan increases by a shocking $10 to $35 a month. That plan allows you to rent three DVDs at a time online with unlimited in-store trades.

If you rent one DVD at a time, the price increases by $2 to $12 a month. The most popular plan, which gets you three DVDs at a time, will cost $21 a month. These plans let you rent DVDs online or at stores. To ease the pain, Blockbuster is cutting the monthly price of some of its by-mail plans by $1.

Rival Netflix saw an immediate gain from the decision, with shares jumping nearly 10% yesterday to $27.24. Blockbuster shares barely moved and closed at $3.55. Blockbuster has 3.1 million online subscribers, compared with 7 million for Netflix.

I think Blockbuster is trying to drive online customers away -- and into its stores. Online rentals is a niche market, one that Netflix has successfully dominated. There just isn't room for another big competitor, and Blockbuster found that going toe-to-toe with Netflix was too expensive and distracting.

So Blockbuster's going to focus on its stores, paying the short-term price of customers jumping to Netflix. Blockbuster has an obvious brick-and-mortar advantage: You can get a movie right away, without having to wait for a DVD to arrive in the mail. (Netflix is offering streaming movies, which gives instant access, but that business isn't mature yet.) Also, Blockbuster can seize the in-person rental opportunity to sell other goodies, including used movies and video games as well as popcorn and candy.

It's really interesting to watch this company figure out its online business. Blockbuster acquired Movielink last year, so it's obviously keen on some sort of digital offering. The company just isn't moving forward with it, and that's OK for now. But Blockbuster can't ignore the Internet forever.
 
Dec 4, 2004
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all its gonna do is drive people from their service to netflix...the whole appeal of this service was it was the same price as netflix but they threw in a coupon for a free rental each month and you could exchange movies at their stores.... i read an article that said they are sinking fast and it looks like theyre gonna shut down within a year or so
 

Defy

Cannabis Connoisseur
Jan 23, 2006
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^yeah, that was the coo shit about it.....you can exchange movies plus you still get a discount if you're over your exchange limit I think
 
Nov 10, 2006
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Blockbuster used to make the majority of their money from late fees, not some of their money, but MOST of their money. A few years ago they would try and say I rented games and never returned them for video game systems I didn't even own. Also, they would say I didn't return a movie when it was on the shelf in their store; I made them look like the incompetent people they were with that one.

They were an awesome company back in the early 90's, but when they started doing shady practices they shot themselves in the foot.
 
Nov 20, 2005
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^yeah, that was the coo shit about it.....you can exchange movies plus you still get a discount if you're over your exchange limit I think
even worked for video games...

sigh.. goodbye blockbuster its been fun and i have to see u every day.

~k.
 

V

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
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  • V

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lmao @ corprate suicide...i mean basically you are asking people to switch to netflix...lmao@ 350% price jump...
 
May 2, 2002
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ya... block buster's shares dropped significantly after they announced this.. and of course netflix stocks soared.

blockbusters stocks are at like 3.50 a share. Pathetic (says a Sirius share holder).
 
May 2, 2002
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looks like tony is the only one who caught the mistake.
the price is increasing $10 to make it 35$ a month. (going from 25 to 35 a month)
not from 10 bucks to 35 bucks

netflix was always better anyway
I dont know anything about blockbusters pricing.. but I reread it.. and that can be read two different ways. "In a nutshell, the premium plan increases by a shocking $10 to $35 a month." See, you can read that two different ways and they both make sense.
 
May 2, 2002
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They both make sense to 5rd graders.

To those of us who walked in our 6th grade ceremony, we know the price went from $25 to $35.
so.. tell me, how many definitions does "to" have?

It makes sense both ways, you fucking inbred.

I think if you are unable to see how it can be read both ways, you shouldn't be opening your mouth.
 
May 17, 2004
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I dont know anything about blockbusters pricing.. but I reread it.. and that can be read two different ways. "In a nutshell, the premium plan increases by a shocking $10 to $35 a month." See, you can read that two different ways and they both make sense.
no actually it only makes sense the one way. it clearly says it increases by a shocking $10. not it increases shockingly FROM $10 to $35 a month.
its called reading comprehension. Reading words is pointless if you do not understand what they say.
 
May 2, 2002
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no actually it only makes sense the one way. it clearly says it increases by a shocking $10. not it increases shockingly FROM $10 to $35 a month.
its called reading comprehension. Reading words is pointless if you do not understand what they say.
first of all, this is a ridiculous argument.. BUT re-read that. It DOES make sense both ways. "by a shocking $10 to $35".. that can be read as "from 10 to 35", "10 more TO 35(which is evidently how it was meant)" OR "from 10-35".

See what Im sayin now?
 
May 30, 2006
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I don't even fuck with rentals. Either I buy I DVD/Video game or I don't fuck with it. 95% of the time my judgement iz on point so I'd rather take that risk. I'm collector so renting doesn't ork for me.