Thursday, February 5, 2015

Module 5 Assignment: Increasing Returns

Increasing Returns: The Dwindling of DVD to VOD

One powerful force that can drive the emergence of technologies is the concept of
“increasing returns.”  The concept of “Increasing returns” is coined from a branch of mathematics called Chaos and Complexity Theory (Laureate Education, 2014e). David Thornburg (Laureate Education, 2014e) describes the “increasing return” model as two innovations hitting the market at the same time in which one of the technologies will get locked in and drives the other to extinction.

The current competition between DVD’s and video on-demand (VOD) are current examples of the force of “increasing returns.” It is more apparent now than before that the DVD-to-VOD window has reduced.The release dates of the DVD’s and the availability of VOD has had a tremendous widow collapse within recent years. Before it was typical to see at least a 30 day gap between the release of VOD from DVD’s. It is now common to see many films released on VOD the same day as DVD’s.

One reason I believe this window has started to close is due to the ease of accessibility to film through cable networks, such as Xfinity, and internet based providers such as Netflix. Consumers have shown less interest in purchasing physical media with the option now available online as well as cable networks. 

Richard Greenfield, a BTIG analyst, explains that Hollywood studios have begun to show more interest in protecting rental economics from services such as Netflix and Redbox than protecting DVD sales ().The dwindling interest in the purchase of DVD’s has supported the increasing economics of VOD rentals.

In regards to McLuhan’s tetradic model, DVD’s are befitting to dwell within the second quadrant as they are becoming obsolete by VOD.  VOD enhances consumer’s accessibility in the comfort of their own homes as well as increasing access through various mobile devices.  Although DVD sales have not completely plummeted, it makes sense that VOD will continue to be a prominent choice to consumers.

References:

Laureate Education (Producer). (2014e). David Thornburg: Increasing returns [Video file]. Baltimore, MD: Author.

Laureate Education (Producer). (2014g). David Thornburg: Red queens [Video file]. Baltimore, MD: Author.


Lawler, R. (2010, August 20). Studios giving up on DVD, pushing VOD instead. Retrieved from https://gigaom.com/2010/08/20/studios-giving-up-on-dvd-pushing-vod-instead/

2 comments:

  1. Great post. I think that Korea could be an example of one reason why studios support VOD over DVDs. In Korea, the bootleg market was very high in Korea a few years ago. You could find people selling bootleg DVDs at subway entrances, on street corners and even in street front stores. It was obvious. Now, I do not see them around as much, and do not see DVD players (or DVDs) for sale in retail stores anymore. It is harder to bootleg VOD since it is all running through the cable systems, and internet vendors.

    Thanks for getting me thinking.

    Charles

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  2. What's interesting is that the whole net neutrality debate is not really about tiered internet pricing, but content. Because of Moore's Law, the cost of some internet networking technology is dropping thus it is becoming cheaper to provide parts of the infrastructure. According to Nielsen (1998), only 10% of uses want high bandwidth connections. The average user is slow to pay for more speed they don't think they need. The problem for the Internet Service Providers (ISP) is that there is no real money in providing internet service, not like owning content because of copyright and royalty structures. The ISPs want to make money on the level of the content providers. If they control or own content like Comcast who bought NBC they can get revenue from the content and make money by making you pay extra for the bandwidth to view it.

    References

    FCC. (2015). Chairman Wheeler Proposes New Rules for Protecting the Open Internet |. Retrieved from http://www.fcc.gov/document/chairman-wheeler-proposes-new-rules-protecting-open-internet

    Nielsn, J. (1998). Nielsen’s Law of Internet Bandwidth. Retrieved February 08, 2015, from http://www.nngroup.com/articles/law-of-bandwidth/

    Takahashi, D. (2012). 10 predictions about networking and Moore’s Law from Andy Bechtolsheim. Retrieved from http://venturebeat.com/2012/10/11/bechtolsheims-10-predictions-about-networking-and-moores-law/

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