Disney+

Verizon Says Disney+ Deal Helped It Bring In 790K New Wireless Customers Last Quarter

When Disney+ launched in November, it did so with a deal: all existing and new Verizon customers with an unlimited wireless data plan, and new customers signing up for Verizon’s Fios home internet or 5G home internet, would get a free one-year subscription to the nascent streamer, which is normally priced at $6.99 per month.

Now, Verizon is crediting that partnership with helping it pull in nearly 800,000 new customers last quarter–its biggest gain in six years.

“We are extremely pleased with the early uptake on Disney+ and the ability to partner with an iconic consumer brand and content company to bring even greater value to our unlimited customers,” Matt Ellis, Verizon’s CEO, said in the company’s earnings call (per Variety).

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Verizon added a total of 790,000 new unlimited wireless customers last quarter, far surpassing projections of 525,000. Ellis didn’t say exactly how many Verizon customers have signed up for Disney+, but in a previous call said 17 million existing customers were eligible. In today’s call, he said around half of Verizon’s total wireless users are on unlimited plans.

As Variety notes, experts have proposed that 8 million

(34%) of Disney+’s first 24 million subscribers came from Verizon. (We don’t know how many subscribers Disney+ has at the moment; it hasn’t publicly released a count since launch day, when it netted more than 10 million subscribers in 24 hours.)

Verizon reported a 3.5% year-over-year growth in wireless revenue–perhaps again thanks in part to Disney–but its overall Q4 revenue came in at $25.3 billion, below analysts’ estimated $24.4 billion. Its strained content production arm, Verizon Media, brought in $2.1 billion, earnings that are “nearly flat” from Q4 2018 — but “a meaningful improvement from the decline reported at the beginning of the year,” Verizon said.

Verizon Media (comprising major digital brands like Yahoo, AOL, HuffPost, TechCrunch, Engadget, and formerly Tumblr) had a tough 2019, axing 950 staffers in two rounds of layoffs amid the revenue decline Verizon mentioned. Flat revenue may indicate things are looking up, and the division just hired a new CTO, former Gap exec Rathi Murthy, to revamp its global tech strategy, including 5G innovations, advertising, content, commerce, and subscriptions.

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Published by
James Hale

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