Netflix Home Page

It’s no more news that Netflix is coming to Nigeria. The announcement was made known to the general public during keynote speech presentation at the 2016 Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas, USA.

I wasn’t excited much about the news because despite what Jason Njoku, tells us about the success or otherwise and consumer demography patterns of iRoko Global, I think Netflix won’t make a huge difference in Nigeria. At least, for now.

Here are my major reasons:

  • Cost of data: Data is still a very expensive commodity and it doesn’t look like it is getting cheaper anytime soon.
  • Connection Speed: The average connection speed in Nigeria is about 2.9Mbps and this number is due to increasing usage of 4GLte networks. 3G networks which most people use are probably slower.
  • Attitude: Nigerian prefer to download things for free rather than pay for it so people will wait for the hacker/IT guy who can rip the video off while it is streaming and then share via hard drives and other media.

While there was an Ericsson ConsumerLab report that says Nigerian now watch more video on mobile, I don’t fully agree due to the same reason but like a friend of mine said – “if more Nigerians are watching videos online, then the next frontier for any serious company is video”. This means, even if the report is disproved due to the small sample size of just 1500 from 7 major cities from a large available data of about 80million people, it should still be considered.

Currently, from an in-house survey, majority of the videos being consumed by most Nigerians are short videos (mostly comic Instagram videos) which are not more than 10 minutes (music videos and prank videos) at most and are usually shared within friends using apps like Xender.

Even Jason Njoku whose business is more or less a direct competition to Netflix is not bothered because his major users are not based on the continent so what makes us suddenly think their coming will truly make a difference? If Jason has not been able to get the networks to create an exclusive iRoko TV package, why should we think Netflix will suddenly make an MTN create a specific VoD data plan? As of this moment, only etisalat has a video-only data plan and they have added Netflix to that but we’ll probably only be able to watch a single movie in an instance at a price of 400Naira for 2 hours streaming. DoBox does seem to have a partnership with all the networks but they definitely do not have Orange Is The New Black. The quality of the stream and the network is another issue entirely.

However, the reality is that we live in a country where opulent estates share borders with slums and billions of dollars disappear when people live on less than 2 dollars a day so in this same country, there are places where the speed is amazingly fast and where the cost of data is not even a concern.

They represent a very small fraction of the populace though so their combined 12USD may not be enough of a convincing argument. Don’t let’s even forget that we really can’t spend anyhow right now, with the restriction placed on Nigerian debit cards internationally.

We can speculate all we want as things get more interesting but we can only know what will eventually happen by chilling.

Credit: Techafri.ca

Photo Credit: Yahoo Finance

By gistyinka

About GYONLINENG. COM To Entertain and Celebrate African Dreams Both Home and Diaspora. Catch all the Latest trending News, Entertainment News, Celebrity Lifestyle and Society News on www.gyonlineng.com. Get All the Important and Interesting Gist & News in the Entertainment & Music Industry Daily into Your Mailbox Everyday at 10am (GMT + 1). You can subscribe to our list through the subscription box on the top bar of the site.. Follow Me Here Follow @gyonlineng</a

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

* Copy This Password *

* Type Or Paste Password Here *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.