The Elite
BOSS
Canada. It is like Netflix but worse.
"Think of it like Netflix, but as an actual TV channel!"
"That sounds great, Maggle!"
Canada. It is like Netflix but worse.
There's some info about WWE Films' numbers in the link in the OP (on my phone now).Is WWE Films profitable?
they have already been firing people left and right...
I don't understand, it hasn't been six months since launch yet, how could every addition not be a net addition for now?
Some more:
Digital assets? So is Rogers going to make sure you can only get the online Network with Roger's internet? Could that even work?
The press release stated that the Network will be available on all cable, satellite and IPTV providers across Canada.
Daniel Bryan biggest bust as WWE Champion of all the times then?
But like the first day estimates, its hard to know what that means. Some were saying that after only six weeks, they were already two-thirds of the way toward their year-end goal. But they were those not really understanding the pro wrestling business. The single biggest lure of the network until the end of the year, by far, is WrestleMania for $9.99. While there will be trickling in new subscribers between now and the end of the year, and if you are a serious fan, the service is easily worth the money, at least at first, are there 333,000 people who did not feel WrestleMania for $9.99 is worth it that are going to think the network is? There is no answer for sure until the end of the year.
Those we spoke with internally groaned when the number came out, and it was widely considered a disappointment even though it cant be publicly spun that way. In the end, the network is going to be a success. In time, there will be enough people who will buy new television sets better equipped for this, and there are things they can tweak. Given the supposed U.S. number of $9.99 per month orders is only slightly larger than the orders of last years WrestleMania on regular PPV (662,000 was the total North American number, but that includes roughly ten percent Canadian so the U.S. & Puerto Rico figure would be about 600,000), the question is asked how many new people out there, having turned it down for Mania, are now going to get it?
Another part of the situation is how many of the 667,282 subscribers are actually from the U.S. There were two first-day surveys that came up identical, one that we did, which came up that 17% of the first day orders came from outside the U.S. Some of them were shut down, but many were not. Another survey we did the day after Mania showed only 63% of subscribers to the WWE Network came from the U.S., (of the rest, 17% were from Canada and 12% from the United Kingdom), but that number sounds very low to the point I trust it only slightly more than the WWEs own survey about how half the homes in the U.S. have a pro wrestling fan. But even if we say that 15% of the number is not from the U.S., and that may be a conservative estimate, that leaves a 567,000 U.S. figure, which is very bad if its close to the mark. When the numbers were first estimated, the belief was they would only draw this year from the U.S. market, leading to major international growth in 2015.
That would also indicate that the growth next year from international may be far less than expected because the super hardcore WWE fans around the world have already figured out how to get it.
Still, in time, people will be less reluctant to purchase services like this. There will be people who will drop after six months, particularly since that will be September or October and the next big event, Royal Rumble, doesnt come until late January. Plus, its football season, and a solid percentage of casual wrestling fans lose interest that time of the year, but who knows what percentage of those casual fans even purchased the network. There will be others who trickle in and others who may get it and just figure that they dont have the time to watch all the programming. Eventually the number will be steady, and in the long run, who knows, as 24/7 Classics on Demand reached a certain level and then slowly declined from there, even as it expanded into new cable companies and international. If it is slow to hit break-even, or even if it is break-even, there are things that can be done to help turn a profit, such as increase the price (there have already been surveys aimed at the Canadian market for next year asking about an $11.99 price), or do the original idea, which is all PPVs except the big four, or all PPVs except WrestleMania, going forward, which may slightly lower network revenue but theyll pick it up with the $70 buys for WrestleMania.
But the WWE Network was not sold to Wall Street, or anyone, as this idea to break even. It was to be a financial game changer, the first of its kind. As it turns out, Major League Baseball, with 3 million orders already, was the game changer. Nobody was watching more closely than UFC. As noted, if they came out and did huge numbers based on putting Mania on PPV, UFC would have been fools to ignore the message. The message, loud and clear, is that, at least now, and probably in the foreseeable future, they would be fools to put their PPVs on their own version of the network, Fight Pass. The idea that by pricing shows so much cheaper, they open up so many more people to buy, appears to be a fallacy. In 2014, WWE had the same, if not less people watching WrestleMania for $9.99 coming with months of programming, than they did the year before at six to seven times that price. More likely, that wont be the case next year. Some people, probably few, didnt order figuring the show would crash, which in the majority of cases, didnt happen. Some double-dipped, buying the network and the PPV, but the stream not crashing is likely to lead to that not happening for future PPV shows.
Internally, WWE has budgeted that they will receive $78.6 million in network revenue this year. According to one person with access to figures, out of the $9.99, with splits to carriers that can get 30% of the orders (those ordering directly through the WWE web site have no such splits), the estimate is WWE is getting about $8.75 per month off the average buy. Thats total revenue, not profit. Given that the service will be a paid service for nine months this year, it means they were expecting to average 1 million orders per month over the course of the year to meet budget. That is not going to happen. And with start-up costs, even if they got that average, the expectation was the profit from the entire company for the year would only be $9 million.
They were also budgeting that the pay-per-view business would be down to $47.1 million this year. In laymans terms, they are projecting a 40% drop in PPV revenue. Given they are expecting no drop internationally, the projection is they would maintain 47 percent of the North American PPV business, meaning WrestleMania, if projections are accurate and would have hit 630,000 domestic and 420,000 international buys this year for a non-Rock show based on the Mania name, that youd keep the 420,000 internationals (which is unlikely because a lot more international than expected have the network) but have 295,000 domestic buys. In other words, WWE is budgeting 715,000 worldwide buys for WrestleMania this year from traditional means.
Conversely, for other shows you would expect domestic PPV numbers to be between 40,000 and 70,000 for the B shows, and about 97,000 for SummerSlam. If the numbers end up higher, cannibalization is lower than expectations. If they are lower, then cannibalization for this year is higher.
For 2015, the network is budgeted for $154.9 million in gross revenue. This is for a network available worldwide. To hit that figure, they have to average 1.5 million worldwide subscribers per month, so the idea is they will start the year at 1 million and end it at 2 million. At that point, they are expecting the PPVs internationally to fall off greatly, and 70% total cannibalization in all the PPV markets.
I'm more talking about office, not TV talent. Like the stockholders calling for HHH's head, who is someone, that in a traditional sense, has no right having the position he has (ie, no actual experience running a big company).
Clipping from the Observer when the number was first announced back in March
Good Luck
This is a huge disaster.
The network is fine. If they went back to some dated model, I'd just never watch any wrestling again.This is really ugly. If I was Vince I would just scrap the whole entire thing... or bring raw/smackdown to the network and say fuck cable.
The network is fine. If they went back to some dated model, I'd just never watch any wrestling again.
It's the right idea, but the execution isn't there. Barely any original content, missing all of the actual things people would want it for outside of PPVs, and no added features at all in a goddamn half year. It also doesn't help that every PPV since Wrestlemania has been the drizzling shits.
I don't understand why they refuse to release the Attitude Era stuff. What's the point in a "slow rollout" for a service where you simply choose what you want to watch anytime? Are people actually watching the live streamed schedule and not fishing for the content they want to watch?
By not getting it done in the first 6 months, they've doomed themselves to mass cancelations from the first batch of subscribers here soon.
I don't have access to the network from work so I can't check on my own, but have they been blurring the old WWF logo from Attitude Era PPVs like they used to do for DVD releases? Having to blur logos from Raws would be the only major hold-up I can think of, otherwise I really don't get what they are thinking.
WWE Studios revenue decreased to $1.7 million from $2.1 million in the prior year quarter due primarily to the timing of results from the Company’s portfolio of movies. Revenue recognized in the current year quarter was primarily associated with our 2013 slate of film releases. WWE Studios' movie portfolio generated a loss of $0.2 million in the quarter compared to a loss of $0.4 million in the prior year quarter. Recent movies, such as Scooby Doo! WrestleMania Mystery (direct-to-DVD), Oculus (theatrical), and Road to Paloma (direct-to-DVD) released in March, April, and July 2014, respectively, have shown performances that are in-line with expectations.
The problem with the network is the lack of 24/7 coverage. It feels like a bunch of shows on shuffle mode with old segments and interviews. They need to go deeper. I'm talking about live shows where they talk about the world of wwe and other wrestling promotions (fuck competition). Add some movies like the classic No Holds Barred and just put on strength in the ppvs. How the hell the wwe wants people to subscribe when the damn ppvs feel like 3 hour raws with title shots?
100+ plus buys for Money in the bank?
Are these people afraid of the internet? why not get the network?
probably yes. this is the wrestling fanbase we're talking about here.
What is this from? Explanation?
100+ plus buys for Money in the bank?
Are these people afraid of the internet? why not get the network?
What is this from? Explanation?
The stock is up 7% today, which is incredible considering that the market is collapsing.33K is ghastly. They can't go back to their previous PPV model anymore, now that basically every provider has dumped them, and they are loosing money hand over fist.
If the next investor call (which would have the number from Summerslam included) isn't SIGNIFICANTLY higher (we are talking 150-200K increase), then I don't know what to say anymore. WWE isn't going to die, but there will be massive changes. Would not be surprised to see stockholders take dramatic steps.
Linda conceding her failed Senate race.
That look is the look of a man who's just blown $50 million on a 2nd failed political campaign for his wife, after spending roughly about the same first time around.
IT. IS. GLORIOUS.
That look is the look of a man who's just blown $50 million on a 2nd failed political campaign for his wife, after spending roughly about the same first time around.
IT. IS. GLORIOUS.
Some more:
Digital assets? So is Rogers going to make sure you can only get the online Network with Roger's internet? Could that even work?
33K is ghastly. They can't go back to their previous PPV model anymore, now that basically every provider has dumped them, and they are loosing money hand over fist.
If the next investor call (which would have the number from Summerslam included) isn't SIGNIFICANTLY higher (we are talking 150-200K increase), then I don't know what to say anymore. WWE isn't going to die, but there will be massive changes. Would not be surprised to see stockholders take dramatic steps.