Netflix’s Approach Shifts, Pushing Content That Can ‘Pop’
Netflix made sure viewers had ample opportunity to hear about “Wednesday,” its macabre hit starring Jenna Ortega.
They could come across it in an airport security line when plopping their belongings into a tray that asked, “What would Wednesday do?” Or see the title character in the Uber app when they ordered a ride. Or they could encounter it on TikTok, where seemingly everyone from Ukrainian soldiers to hip grannies was performing the title character’s arm-jolting, addictive dance set to the Lady Gaga song “Bloody Mary.”
Either way, the marketing resources that Netflix dedicated to the show helped make it a global sensation. The push included shifting Netflix’s social media resources from sites like Twitter and Instagram to TikTok after the amateur dance videos went viral. There was also a campaign in which local markets around the world adapted the slogan “What would Wednesday do?” to their country’s taste and culture. (Billboards in Los Angeles cheekily stated: “I read your screenplay. It’s time to rethink your writing career.”)
The show’s eight episodes were viewed 1.24 billion hours in the first 28 days they were available, Netflix said, making it the second-most-watched English-language series on the streaming service, just behind the fourth season of “Stranger Things.”
For the movie “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery,” there was a widely publicized (including TV commercials) one-week theatrical release on Thanksgiving that generated a reported $15 million in ticket sales. After that, a Los Angeles escape room and a handful of murder-mystery dinners across the country — and more commercials — helped keep the word of mouth alive until the expensive star-studded sequel debuted on the service at Christmastime. It racked up 279.7 million hours watched in the first 28 days, which Netflix said made it the fourth-most-watched English-language film on the service.
Netflix’s marketing tactics are indicative of an evolving strategy for a company that is facing a much more competitive streaming marketplace — and trying to serve an increasingly fickle audience. As it contends with a maturing U.S. market, Netflix has introduced an advertising tier and is cracking down on password sharing. It has also essentially replaced its original creative team, opting for executives with broader tastes to serve a global marketplace.
To sell this evolution of the world’s largest streaming service, the company is relying on Marian Lee, its third chief marketing officer in three years.
“I’m trying to enable creativity, because I want to bring all of this content to more people around the world,” Ms. Lee said in an interview at Netflix’s headquarters in Los Angeles. “I also want the rest of Netflix to understand what the marketing strategy is: We support the content organization.”
She had stayed up late the previous night to finish the reality show “Full Swing,” saying she cried in her bathroom when it was over.
“I’m watching everything, and I’m going to tell you where I think this is really going to pop,” she said.
For all of Netflix’s success over the years, the company has never quite found its footing in marketing. That is primarily because of its core tenet is that the streaming service itself is its greatest marketer, and that spending on expensive commercials or advertisements does not always improve viewer engagement.
In 2019, the marketing operation moved under Ted Sarandos, who was the head of content and is now a co-chief executive. He hired Jackie Lee-Joe from BBC Studios to be chief marketing officer. She departed after just 10 months, when Mr. Sarandos surprised many inside Netflix by appointing Bozoma Saint John as the new C.M.O.
Ms. Saint John used her formidable social media presence — she has 424,000 followers on Instagram — to host her own lifestyle events under the moniker @badassboz while running the Netflix marketing team, but her impact on Netflix’s shows and movies proved less fruitful.
Ms. Lee was the global co-head of music at Spotify when Ms. Saint John hired her in July 2021. She was promoted to chief marketing officer in March 2022 after Ms. Saint John left. In contrast with her predecessor, Ms. Lee’s Instagram account is private, and when she was offered Ms. Saint John’s office, she declined, opting to remain in the one she occupied, which was closer to her staff.
Netflix’s marketing budget has remained fairly consistent, increasing to $2.5 billion in 2022 from $2.2 billion in 2020. But Ms. Lee’s 400-plus global team has enacted a subtle change in strategy, in which many of those dollars have been shifted to focus on individual titles as opposed to the branding of the streaming service itself.
Still, the amount of money set aside for marketing remains relatively small, considering Netflix spends $17 billion a year on its programming. And when filmmakers and showrunners grouse about working with Netflix, the complaints are often aimed at the marketing department, which they feel can be limited by its budget. It is an issue that traditional studios have tried to capitalize on, arguing that they may pay less upfront for a project but will spend more in marketing to let people know when it’s coming out.
“The legacy studios spend more on marketing,” said Tripp Vinson, a producer of the Netflix “Murder Mystery” films, starring Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston. The first movie came out in 2019, and the second became available to Netflix subscribers on Friday.
“But as a producer, what do I care about?” he added. “You’re implying that the more you spend, the greater chance you have of getting your audience in that legacy, traditional marketing way. Well, I know from ‘Murder Mystery’ 1, whatever Netflix did to market this movie, the amount of viewers that I got, that’s what I care about. And they were astounding numbers.”
For “Murder Mystery 2,” the streaming service added a second premiere at the Eiffel Tower in Paris, international billboards and commercials during the National Football League’s divisional playoffs. It also teamed up with the social media star Mr. Beast to offer an unwitting couple a surprise trip to the Paris premiere. The first movie landed back on Netflix’s Top 10 list a week ahead of the release, and expectations inside the company for the sequel are high.
Netflix’s chief content officer, Bela Bajaria, pushes against the notion that the company did not aggressively market specific shows and movies in the past.
“I think the tension may be with people feeling like there is only the traditional way to do it, and they don’t realize we market in so many different ways,” she said, noting the service’s social media channels reach 800 million people globally.
Filmmakers, though, have noticed a difference with Ms. Lee.
“Right when she arrived, she came down to see what we were doing and visited the set often,” said Debbie Snyder, a producer of the $80 million sci-fi spectacle “Rebel Moon,” which is directed by her husband, Zack Snyder.
The plan is for the film, scheduled to debut on Dec. 22, to be the first in a trilogy. Did Ms. Snyder receive the same personalized attention when the film “Army of the Dead” debuted in 2021? “No,” she said. “Not really at all.”
Netflix’s film chairman, Scott Stuber, said the marketing department under Ms. Lee was more in tune with the content side of the company. He noted that he was particularly impressed by her nimble approach, like her ability to maintain buzz for “Glass Onion” after its theatrical release.
“I like someone who actually knows the old playbook, but also is very interested in how to rewrite the rules for the new playbook,” he said.
In February, members of Ms. Lee’s brand marketing team crammed themselves into a conference room to discuss, among other topics, “The Marquee,” a handful of high-tech billboards with pithy messages that rotate weekly and appear in strategic locations around the world like Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, Times Square in New York and Les Halles in Paris.
She listened intently to the presentation: The board at the Trevi Fountain will be moved to a different location in Rome, one that is less of a tourist spot and more of a place where local Netflix subscribers could connect with it; Times Square is going to get an innovative billboard that is easier to program yet looks like the physical one on Sunset Boulevard. A marquee is coming soon to Warsaw.
“The point of the board is to have fun, be edgy and push all the way to the edge,” Ms. Lee said.
“I know it’s a lot of pressure because they have to come up with a new message every week,” she added, “but if they’re just using it for something lame, I’d rather not do it.”
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