With All Respect To Reed Hastings, The Netflix-Qwikster Split Bad For Customers

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We have nothing but respect for Netflix CEO Reed Hastings, who has demonstrated again and again a willingness to take the long view instead of an easier short-term one--making tough decisions that cause near-term pain in order to improve the company long-term.

In the middle of last decade, for example, Reed decided to cut Netflix's pricing to neutralize a competitive threat from Blockbuster. Hastings and Netflix were scorned at the time for this decision--Netflix would obviously go broke--and Netflix's stock collapsed.

Well, we know how that one turned out: Netflix won the battle, and its stock blasted off for the moon. Blockbuster, meanwhile, went bust.

And now Hastings has gone and made another earth-shaking decision--enacting a major price increase for DVDs-by-mail and splitting Netflix into two companies. And the market has responded by chopping Netflix's stock price in half.

We suspect, eventually, that Reed Hastings will once again be proven right about the price increase and that those who have written the company off for dead will once again have to hang their heads in shame.

And we can also certainly understand why, from the company's perspective, it makes sense to split the DVD and streaming businesses into two separate companies: They're different businesses, with different cost structures and different delivery, marketing, licensing, and management challenges, and they will be easier to run better if they're managed separately.

But what's better for the company, in this case, is worse for most of the company's customers.

One of the big advantages of Netflix's current service is that it's a one-stop shop. Subscribe to Netflix, and you know that you'll be able to watch basically any movie or TV show ever made. You may not be able to watch it instantly, via streaming, but if you can't watch it instantly, then you can order the DVDs. And you can go to a single web site, Netflix, to figure out what your options are.

This is very different offering than most of Netflix competitors have, which is access to some TV shows and movies, but not all.

Subscribing to a service that has access to some shows and movies, is very different (and distinctly worse for the customer) than subscribing to one that has access to all of them.

Searching a database that contains some shows and movies is very different (and distinctly worse for the customer) than searching one that has access to all of them.

And subscribing to two different services, with two different brands, bills, and customer support, is much more of a pain in the ass than subscribing to one.