Amazon is studying what most legacy media corporations already knew: present biz is hard.
The ecommerce big is reducing lots of of workers from its streaming and film divisious, in keeping with an inside memo seen by Fortune. The cuts will have an effect on Amazon MGM Studios, Prime Video, and the streaming service Twitch, an impartial subsidiary that’s nonetheless unprofitable 9 years on from its acquisition.
That is the second 12 months in a row that the corporate is launching the brand new 12 months with job cuts. Final 12 months, Amazon had two rounds of layoffs that slashed a complete of 27,000 jobs throughout the corporate, together with in HR, its AWS cloud computing unit, and promoting enterprise.
This batch of adjustments at Amazon come as corporations throughout the streaming business are reckoning with the problem of a enterprise that has, to date, confirmed to have restricted income and excessive bills. Amazon spent huge cash to bolster its content material library, together with an $8.5 billion deal to accumulate the Hollywood studio MGM in 2022, and an 11-year, $11 billion broadcasting deal with the NFL that provides Amazon unique rights to broadcast Thursday Night time Soccer.
Throughout the media panorama, corporations are rethinking the technique for his or her streaming companies, which had beforehand prioritized gaining subscribers in any respect prices. Now, with borrowing prices excessive and inflation-strapped customers being extra picky about leisure, Amazon and its friends wish to trim down prices and develop into extra selective within the content material they make and distribute, all whereas contemplating new sources of revenues. Some have launched adverts, emboldened by business chief Netflix, which as soon as swore it might by no means have promoting, including it in 2022. Amazon itself will introduce adverts to Prime video exhibits on the finish of the month. Others, like Warner Bros. Discovery and NBCUniversal, have taken to licensing out content material that had beforehand been unique to their very own streaming companies in trade for some much-needed money.
Amazon, like lots of the legacy media corporations who additionally function streaming companies—Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, and Paramount—is realizing it might’t proceed to spend endlessly on streaming, a enterprise which has proved troublesome to scale profitably for all besides Netflix.
In asserting the layoffs, Amazon signaled it’s reducing headcount to spend on content material. “We’ve recognized alternatives to cut back or discontinue investments in sure areas whereas growing our funding and concentrate on content material and product initiatives that ship probably the most impression,” senior vp of Prime Video and Amazon MGM Studios Mike Hopkins informed workers in a message on Wednesday seen by Fortune.
Amazon spent $16.6 billion on content material in 2022, behind solely Netflix and Disney. The prices embrace Amazon’s NFL contract and a really expensive The Lord of the Rings present, which reportedly price $465 million for a single season. (Full 12 months figures for final 12 months’s content material spend aren’t accessible as a result of Amazon hasn’t reported its 2023 earnings but).
Different media corporations have opted to chop their content material spending this 12 months, with Disney slashing its content material spending for fiscal 2024 by $2 billion. In latest public statements Disney CEO Bob Iger mentioned the corporate made too many films and exhibits for its streaming service, usually on the expense of high quality. “In our zeal to principally develop our content material considerably to serve principally our streaming choices, we ended up taxing our folks, by way of their time and their focus, approach past the place that they had been,” Iger informed attendees on the Solar Valley Convention in November. Disney reported a $512 million loss on its streaming enterprise within the third quarter of 2023.
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy previously spoke optimistically of Prime Video, telling CNBC in June he was “very bullish” concerning the enterprise. Jassy mentioned it was each a powerful enterprise by itself and had a optimistic halo impact on the corporate’s core ecommerce enterprise.
Prime Video was initially launched as a glorified advertising device for the free delivery subscription Amazon Prime. “What we discover is that prospects who watch a film that they love, they purchase extra Tide,” former CEO of Amazon’s worldwide shopper enterprise Jeff Wilke informed Vox in 2019. “They store extra, they’re extra prone to renew their Prime subscription, they’re extra prone to convert a free trial right into a month-to-month or annual Prime subscription.”
However only a few weeks after Jassy sang Prime Video’s praises on CNBC, Bloomberg reported he was intently analyzing the funds of Amazon’s studio division. Regardless of its huge budgets and buzzy programming it may be troublesome to really gauge the success of Amazon’s leisure enterprise as a result of it doesn’t report separate monetary outcomes for the division. Secrecy apart, promoting executives are sure Amazon’s upcoming introduction of adverts will probably be a “twister” that upsets the streaming business, as it’s set to develop into the most important ad-supported streamer in a single day.