How Alibaba Pictures is Disrupting Chinese Entertainment

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Two plus years into Alibaba’s push into entertainment, its movie arm, Alibaba Pictures, has a growing pipeline of produced and acquired content. It is regularly doing domestic and Hollywood deals in film production, financing and distribution. And it is making unconventional moves in cinema software, online videos, ticketing apps and film crowdfunding.

Putting it together, the game plan for Alibaba Pictures is becoming clear – and it is impressive.

Not only is the company laying the groundwork to be a major player in traditional entertainment, it is also using the collision of entertainment and technology to disrupt its industry. It is creating a unique and powerful direct connection between entertainment production and rapidly changing Chinese consumers. The company is putting in motion a faster and far more sweeping version of what Netflix and Amazon.com have been doing to Hollywood.

In traditional film distribution, Alibaba Pictures has at first glance been making fairly standard deals, both cross-border and domestically. It has about 190 people in its distribution division and it manages or owns over 5,000 theaters in China. That makes the company No. 2 in box-office market share and gives it significant influence in the market, especially in regard to the timing of film releases.

Alibaba Pictures’ cinemas naturally show a mix of the company’s own films and ones from other domestic and foreign studios. Cofinancing and equity partnerships can play a role in this, as seen in the company’s investment in Paramount Pictures’ last “Mission Impossible” movie. Such partnerships are important because getting to international levels of quality has proved to be more difficult for Chinese studios than expected.

Yet Alibaba Pictures is also making unconventional moves in distribution. With its Tao Piaopiao movie ticketing app, the company is subsidizing pre-release ticket purchases. This gives it a two-week advance window to gauge interest in specific films and insight into what Chinese consumers actually want to see. This ticketing app in turn is linked to Alibaba Pictures’ theater operations software, which is in use at some 70% of local cinemas for ticket sales, screen booking and other functions, further expanding the company’s data gathering.

Add to this the other distribution channels controlled by Alibaba Group, such as the Youku Tudou video streaming sites, the growing Alibaba Cloud computing service and UCWeb, a popular internet browser for mobile phones. Alibaba can increasingly see what hundreds of millions of Chinese consumers are buying and watching in real time. Compare that to a typical film studio, which spends 1-2 years making a movie based mostly on a gut feeling and then hopes it will do well if there is a large marketing budget behind it. Alibaba is attempting to create a new type of smart production that replaces “big bets” with “big data”.

Alibaba’s multiple platforms and their direct connections to Chinese consumers also give it a powerful marketing advantage. Using its parent’s network, Alibaba Pictures can, in theory, market and promote video programs across leading streaming sites, the country’s biggest e-commerce and retail sites, phone browsers and other channels. Their connection with Chinese consumers goes both directions.

The must-have partner in Chinese entertainment?

If Alibaba can use data analysis to solve the entertainment industry’s perennial problem in predicting what films consumers will like, it could become the “must have” partner for directors, producers, writers and both Hollywood and other Chinese studios.

It would be uniquely positioned as a direct connection to Chinese consumers in entertainment, able to both know what they like and market directly to them. Consider again Netflix and Amazon, which are also utilizing their data on viewership in drive decisions on buying and developing content. Alibaba’s could be a larger and more powerful version of this approach, using direct connections with consumers whose tastes are rapidly changing to enable smart production and direct marketing.

Additionally, Alibaba Pictures is steadily improving its own internal content and production capabilities and has recruited former talent agency staff. The company is building a development pipeline to support the goal of releasing 10 films a year and is buying rights to adapt characters and stories from video games, cartoons and other media. It also has deals with production companies giving it right of first refusal on new releases. It is on a long-term path to develop the capabilities required for creative excellence.

A final aspect to pay attention to is the linkages emerging between Alibaba’s various businesses. Such linkages are a common feature of most of the world’s successful entertainment companies. Theme parks and cable networks, for example, can provide stable cash flow to balance unpredictable revenues from new film releases. At the same time, the movies create a growing intellectual property library that can be leveraged into other linked businesses. These linkages improve the economics of each individual business and can be difficult for competitors to replicate. For example, you need movie characters to launch a theme park, but theme parks help fund the making of the movies.

Alibaba’s diverse operations hold similar advantages for Alibaba Pictures. For example, the film studio division can coordinate between IP rights holders like Marvel Entertainment and Walt Disney and top vendors on Alibaba’s Tmall and Taobao shopping platforms. The company can bring together product designers and other specialists to drive sales of film-related consumer products. These sorts of linkages will be very difficult for other Chinese studios to replicate.

Ultimately, the Chinese movie industry is struggling to understand consumers who are changing especially rapidly in their tastes and where and how they consume entertainment. They are also a notoriously fickle group. Alibaba Pictures’ growing connections with this group and its hold on data about their habits offers an excellent chance to address their unpredictability. It also offers the opportunity for Alibaba Pictures to capture a uniquely powerful position in the country’s entertainment industry.

Thanks for reading, jeff

(reprinted from Asian Nikkei Review, located here)

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I write, speak and consult about how to win (and not lose) in digital strategy and transformation.

I am the founder of TechMoat Consulting, a boutique consulting firm that helps retailers, brands, and technology companies exploit digital change to grow faster, innovate better and build digital moats. Get in touch here.

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Note: This content (articles, podcasts, website info) is not investment advice. The information and opinions from me and any guests may be incorrect. The numbers and information may be wrong. The views expressed may no longer be relevant or accurate. Investing is risky. Do your own research.

Photo by Ming Jun Tan on Unsplash

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