Netflix Movies, Shows Struggle To Attract India Subscribers
NDTV
"Netflix underestimated the immense complexity and challenges India brings," says Vivek Couto.
Two-and-a-half years after it launched in India, Netflix Inc. had its first big hit. Based on a sprawling novel by Indian-American author Vikram Chandra, 2018's Sacred Games was a Hindi-language TV show exploring Mumbai's criminal underworld and one police officer's efforts to save the city. The drama stood out in a country best known for romantic musicals, which was the point. The New York Times named Sacred Games one of the best foreign-made shows of the last decade, and Netflix described it at the time as its most-watched locally produced show in the country.
The success seemed to indicate that the company's plan for India was coming together. Netflix's formula for international expansion, which has worked everywhere from Canada to Japan, starts by targeting wealthy, young consumers in large cities who'll pay to watch Stranger Things or Narcos. Then, to reach progressively larger audiences, the company hires a local team to commission projects from the country's biggest producers, offering them creative freedom they wouldn't get elsewhere.
Certain things about India were working in Netflix's favour. The country has a robust local film industry, a growing middle class, and rapidly expanding access to the internet. Several months before Sacred Games was released, Chief Executive Officer Reed Hastings told a group of Indian business leaders that Netflix would sign up 100 million customers in the country.
Almost four years later, it has only 5.5 million subscribers in India, according to the research firm Media Partners Asia. Netflix describes the second season of Sacred Games as a success, but hasn't announced a third season. Many of its other shows have been cancelled after just one season. In a call with investors in January, Hastings expressed frustration with the lack of progress in India, alarming employees who aren't used to their boss being so forthcoming about Netflix's failings.