A close read of the streamer’s data shows fewer episodes to start means less time spent with a given season – but the strategy can also help with the preferred view metric.
Netflix‘s decision to break up some of its scripted shows can translate to more series views even with less total time spent on some shows.
Season four of Netflix’s YA drama Outer Banks debuted at the top of the streamer’s TV charts for the week of Oct. 7, racking up 62.3 million hours of viewing worldwide. It was a strong showing — particularly considering it was only for half a season, in keeping with Netflix’s strategy of splitting some of its more popular scripted shows into two parts and releasing them about a month apart.
Here’s the rub, though: That 62.3 million hours of viewing for Outer Banks was about 60 percent less than the opening week for season three, which had just under 155 million hours for a full-season binge release. A similar pattern holds across several popular Netflix series whose most recent seasons were split into multiple parts: Fewer episodes to start means less time spent with a given season — even after the remaining episodes are released.
Conversely, of five prominent series that had split releases that The Hollywood Reporter studied, four of them (You season four, The Witcher season three, The Crown season six and Emily in Paris season four) spent longer in Netflix’s top 10 rankings than their most recent binge-released seasons. The fifth, season three of Bridgerton, equaled season two’s longevity of 11 weeks. Bridgerton was also an outlier in terms of viewing time, surpassing season two in both that measure (846.5 million hours over 13 weeks vs. 797.2 million hours for season two) and Netflix’s preferred view metric (total viewing time divided by running time), where season three ranks sixth all-time for Netflix English-language series and season two is 10th.
The longer term of viewer engagement, though, can translate into more views. The first half of Emily in Paris season four, with a run time of a little under three hours, accumulated 45.1 million views worldwide in four weeks, with an additional 27.5 million after the remainder of the season dropped (bringing the running time to about six hours). That beats the roughly 54.6 million views season three had over six weeks in the top 10, despite a slightly shorter run time and about 9 million more viewing hours.
It didn’t work as well for season three of The Witcher, which ended up with 57.8 million views over eight weeks in the top 10, down from 67.2 million over six weeks for the binge-released second season. The view count was down 17 percent, a smaller disparity than the drop in viewing hours (37 percent, based on top 10 weeks) from season two to three. Splitting the season helped some in terms of views, but with a gap that big, it couldn’t fully close the distance.
(One other wrinkle: In compiling the rankings of its all-time top 10, Netflix counts views over a title’s first 91 days (13 weeks) of release. In the case of split seasons, however, Netflix adds together the total viewing time for each part over its respective 91 days, then divides that by the full running time of the season to calculate the number of views.)
As of publication time, there’s only one week of data available for the second half of Outer Banks season four. Part one had 122.7 viewing hours over four weeks; the full season drew 77.1 million hours in the week part two was released — some of which which be portioned out to each half’s totals and view counts. All told, season four stands at just under 200 million hours of viewing, behind the 341.4 million over the same span for season three. But with both parts now accumulating watch time and views, the 13-week view count for season four stands a solid chance of being higher than that of season three. Since views are Netflix’s preferred metric, that’s what counts.
News
Meghan Markle threatens Prince Harry’s Royal reconciliation with firm demands
Meghan Markle puts forward her conditions in front of Prince Harry amid Royal reconciliation. Meghan Markle may become a huge obstacle in Prince Harry’s reunion with the members of the Royal family as Kate Middleton takes charge. According to a…
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle ‘need to make one big move’ to heal rift with William
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have been told they need to make a big move if they want to heal the rift with the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, according to a royal expert. A Royal commentator has indicated that…
Meghan Markle ‘doesn’t like to work’, says man in charge of Harry visa
Meghan Markle and Prince Harry are asked to brace themselves ahead of visa shakeup. Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s future in the US is deeply dependent on Donald Trump and his team. The new President of the United States is…
Samantha Markle’s Gaffe Over Prince Harry Title
Prince Harry was described as the “Prince of Wales”—his brother’s title—in a court filing by Samantha Markle’s attorney, Newsweek can reveal. The Duke of Sussex was born “Prince Henry of Wales” and is described as such by Meghan Markle’s lawyers in court…
Meghan Markle ‘feeling increasingly lonely’ as Duchess of Sussex ‘focusing on friendships’
The Sussexes have several A-list pals, with Oprah Winfrey, the Clooneys and the Beckhams attending their 2018 wedding. Meghan Markle is “feeling increasingly lonely” as the Duchess of Sussex is “focusing on friendships”, a royal insider has claimed. As Christmas…
Meghan Markle to put an end to cold war with Royal family: ‘Needs to swallow pride’
Meghan Markle ready to give the Royal family another chance after years-long feud. Meghan Markle has realized that in order to build a reputation in the US, she needs to rebuild relationships with the members of the Royal family. According…
End of content
No more pages to load