Your data. Your choice.

If you select «Essential cookies only», we’ll use cookies and similar technologies to collect information about your device and how you use our website. We need this information to allow you to log in securely and use basic functions such as the shopping cart.

By accepting all cookies, you’re allowing us to use this data to show you personalised offers, improve our website, and display targeted adverts on our website and on other websites or apps. Some data may also be shared with third parties and advertising partners as part of this process.

News + Trends

"The Witcher" breaks records on Netflix, but...

Luca Fontana
23.1.2020
Translation: machine translated

Never before has a Netflix series been viewed as much in the first four weeks as "The Witcher", according to official figures from the streaming company, whose measurement method has changed.

However, this record must be put into perspective: in fact, Netflix has changed the method used to measure views.

New method closer to YouTube's

Previously, if a user viewed at least 70% of a title - an episode of a series or a film - then Netflix considered it to be "watched".

Now things are different: if at least two minutes of a piece of content have been viewed, it is then considered "watched". Netflix justifies the new accounting method on the grounds that watching two minutes is enough to say with certainty that viewers intentionally chose to watch the content. As a result, Netflix now interprets the term "viewing" much more in the sense of YouTube "views" than conventional TV channel "audiences".

According to Netflix's latest quarterly report, this equality is particularly important for interactive content such as "Black Mirror: Bandersnatch", which has no fixed length.

Viewer numbers: a question of marketing alone?

Maybe. But this tilt should get people talking: if a viewer stops the series after just one episode because they don't like it, Netflix's new measurement method treats them in the same way as a viewer who has watched the entire season of a series. These new figures would have no real informative content and would only be likely to be used for marketing purposes.

In fact, Netflix admits in its fourth-quarter report that the figures obtained using the new accounting method are around 35% higher than those that would have been obtained using the old method. In other words, using the old method, 'The Witcher', with an estimated 56.3million, would be the second most successful series behind the third season of "Stranger Things".

What do you think? Are you in favour of this change? Or are you one of those people who just want to know when the second season is coming out?

Are you in favour?

Ah yes: click here!

25 people like this article


User Avatar
User Avatar

I write about technology as if it were cinema, and about films as if they were real life. Between bits and blockbusters, I’m after stories that move people, not just generate clicks. And yes – sometimes I listen to film scores louder than I probably should.


News + Trends

From the latest iPhone to the return of 80s fashion. The editorial team will help you make sense of it all.

Show all