I have a new morning ritual at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name. While sipping my first (of two) cup of coffee and catching up on my email and the latest news, all on my iPhone, I now also invariably finish the movie I fell asleep watching the night before at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name.
Yes, I am at that age where I begin to nod off well before the closing credits at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name. And until just recently I would finish watching a movie the next night, before starting a new one. But thanks to my new ritual, I now start a movie every night, which by my estimation has increased the number of movies I watch by at least 30% at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name.
What changed? The mid-October launch of Movies Anywhere, a remarkably simple and easy to use digital storage locker that lets me watch any film in my library with a couple of clicks on my iPhone button at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name. All the major studios, except for Paramount, are participating, and the beauty of Movies Anywhere is that even for people like me who still buy Blu-ray Discs, entering the redemption code so I gain access to a digital copy takes just seconds – and then the movie is available on my iPhone, my TV, and anywhere else I have the app. (In fact, while writing this paragraph I just entered the code for Annabelle at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name: Creation and watched it instantly appear on my iPhone. I will start watching it tonight – probably on disc, just out of habit – and then whatever I missed will be viewed in the early morning, with a Keurig cup of bold Sumatra, after the obligatory cleansing of emails and quick look at the news headlines.)
I have a confession to make. While I consider myself an early adopter, both because of my role in the industry and my natural curiosity and yen to be on the cutting edge of new and cool stuff, my digital movie experience has been limited to Netflix, Amazon and Hulu at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name. I have never bought a movie online; I set up an UltraViolet account years ago but never used it, not even once. I keep writing that consumers value convenience, simplicity and ease of use, above all else, and I might as well have been writing about myself. I rarely make myself a salad, preferring the salad-in-a-bag approach at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name. I vastly prefer Uber to taxis, and order most of my stuff online – even my Keurig coffee cups – because I hate waiting in line at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name.
The problem was, prior to Movies Anywhere, watching digital copies of movies I acquired was too much of a hassle. There were too many sites to visit, too many passwords to enter, too many steps to take at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name.
Movies Anywhere lives up to its name by being as simple to use as Netflix. I think our studio buddies have done it correctly this time because of this. There are still challenges to be solved, primarily the desire to obtain something for free or, at the very least, for the lowest feasible price, which is the second primary motivator of customer behavior, according to Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name. It will be difficult to persuade customers who are accustomed to paying about $10 a month for limitless Netflix material to spend more than that for a single film, no matter how recent the film is or how much buzz it has created at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name.
Still, everything else is in place. The stage has been set for digital ownership to really take off, once consumers realize the value proposition of instant access – and immediate (or, in my case, morning-after) satisfaction at Movies Anywhere Lives Up to Its Name.