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Disrupt yourself: Netflix co-founder Marc Randolph on why the fledgling startup walked away from 99% of its revenue

Startups have to be willing to disrupt themselves if they’re to have the best chance at long-term success, according to Netflix co-founder Marc Randolph.
Marc Randolph
Netflix co-founder and former chief executive Marc Randolph. Source: supplied.

Startups have to be willing to disrupt themselves if they’re to have the best chance at long-term success, according to Netflix co-founder Marc Randolph. And he should know.

Speaking at The Uncut Story of Netflix, an event hosted by StartCon at Melbourne Town Hall last week, Randolph talked about Netflixโ€™s infamous meeting with Blockbuster in 2000, which โ€œprofoundly changed my life as an entrepreneurโ€.

At that time, Netflix was two-and-a-half years old with 100 employees and was turning over $US2.5 million in revenue.

โ€œWe were also on track to lose $US50 millionโ€, Randolph said.

Blockbuster, on the other hand, had 60,000 employees and was turning over $US6 billion.

โ€œWe were nothing to them,โ€ Randolph said.

The Netflix team pitched the startup and were famously laughed out of the room. But ten years later, the video rental giant was bankrupt.

โ€œIn some ways, if youโ€™re an entrepreneur, itโ€™s a really inspiring story, because if just a handful of people with no experience in the video took down a $6 billion market leading organisation,โ€ Randolph told the crowd in Melbourne.

โ€œBut, it has a very different moral if youโ€™re working for the $6 billion market-leading organisation,โ€ he added.

โ€œYou never know whoโ€™s coming after you. They may well look nothing like you โ€ฆ and theyโ€™re going to come after you not by doing the things you do well, but by doing the things you donโ€™t do, or canโ€™t do, or are scared to do.โ€

Whether a company is big or small, it has to be able to disrupt itself, Randolph said.

โ€œIf you canโ€™t figure out how to disrupt yourself, youโ€™re leaving it wide open for someone else to disrupt your business for you.โ€

This is not just talk from Randolph. Netflix started life in 1998 as a DVD rental-by-post service that also sold DVDs on the side.

By the end of its first year in business, however, 99% of its revenue was coming from sales.

โ€œThat was bad news, because selling DVDs was a commodity business,โ€ Randolph said.

It was just a matter of time before other people started selling DVDs, he added.

โ€œPretty soon the margins would be driven down to zero, and out of business we’d go.โ€

It was the rental market that was promising, with the potential of much higher margins, but that wasnโ€™t what customers wanted. On the other hand, the DVD sales business, although popular at that time, had a shelf life.

โ€œIt would have taken years. It would have been this apparent success, but we knew we could not compete to that distance,โ€ Randolph said.

โ€œIf we were going to do one thing right we had to pick one thing and focus on it.

โ€œIn one day, we pulled the plug on selling DVDs and walked away from 99% of our revenue,โ€ย he added.

It was one of the most difficult decisions the founders ever made, Randolph said, but, of course, it turned out to be the right one.

โ€œIt was more important to us to take a long shot at a potentially huge business than to ride a sure thing into the groundโ€.

Netflix started testing ideas of how to make the rental business work, and eventually stumbled onto the subscription model.

They tested a model with no due dates or late fees for rental returns, and a monthly fee for as many movies as the customer wanted.

โ€œIt was magic. When we tested all three of those crazy ideas at once, it worked, and all of a sudden things took off,โ€ย Randolph said.

The company went from struggling to find a sustainable business model to struggling to maintain the growth.

But there came a point when the founders were faced with a similar predicament once again. Netflix was trying to get its online streaming business off the ground while also running the DVD subscription business.

This time, they didnโ€™t abandon the DVD business altogether, but โ€œwe were never going to compromiseโ€, Randolph says, and the business switched its focus entirely to streaming.

For Netflix, being able to change its model ultimately led to huge growth, Randolph said. And while he admitted โ€œthereโ€™s a big element of survival biasโ€, he maintains that determining one thing to focus onย โ€” and being brave enough to change that thingย โ€” is key.

โ€œI could never, ever have envisioned that Netflix could become what itโ€™s become,โ€ Randolph said.

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