The Future. Amazon announced Prime will get limited ads starting in early 2024 — “meaningfully fewer” than linear TV, stresses the company. The new ad tier is part of an industry-wide shift toward ad-supported services. But for Amazon, the model could be extra lucrative. Amazon’s ad business is not only one of the company’s fastest-growing sectors, but users may also be able to navigate right from an ad to a product listing — all within the Amazon ecosystem.
New normalAmazon Prime Video is getting commercial breaks.
The ads will be default for Prime Video moving forward. If you want an ad-free experience, you’ll need to pay an extra $2.99 per month for your subscription.
Amazon says the ads are meant to help the streamer “keep investing in programming over the long term, including original series and live sports,” per THR (Amazon already has ads on Thursday Night Football).
While we can quibble on Amazon needing more money to invest in content (it has a $1.33 trillion market cap), the move is a microcosm for how important advertising has become to streaming (and how much pressure new CEO Andy Jassy is putting on Prime to justify costs).
In the quest to chase Netflix, Hollywood realized streaming isn’t as profitable as traditional TV or theatrical releases (hello, strikes). So, every streamer from Disney+ to Max is nudging users toward their cheaper, ad-supported tiers. The average revenue per user (ARPU) is simply higher when advertisers subsidize content.
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