Skip to content
BodhiProtocol

Episode 01

Netflix Doesn't Sell Movies

It monetizes habit.

Surya ยท 2026-07-16 ยท 1 min read

Netflix
Original Content
Recommendation Engine
UX
Personalization
Viewing History
Subscriptions
Higher Retention

The more you watch, the better it gets at keeping you watching.

The Big Idea

Netflix doesn't monetize movies. It monetizes habit.

Most people think Netflix sells movies. It doesn't. Movies attract attention. Habit creates revenue.

Netflix's real product isn't a film. It's increasing the probability that you'll still be a subscriber next month. Everything else supports that objective.

The Invisible Business

Imagine opening Netflix after dinner. Within seconds something interesting appears. You press play. An hour later you're still watching.

That experience isn't accidental. Behind it sits one invisible question: how do we reduce the chance that you cancel next month? That's the business.

Movies. Recommendations. Original content. Streaming quality. Skip Intro. Continue Watching. Every feature points toward a single outcome: retention.

Why Movies Aren't The Product

Netflix spends billions creating content. Most people assume content is what Netflix sells. Content is actually customer acquisition and retention.

The movie is valuable only if it gives you a reason to stay. Viewed that way, every Netflix investment suddenly makes sense.

The Flywheel

Subscribers
Recurring Revenue
Better Content
More Viewing
Better Recommendations
Higher Retention

Five Things Netflix Optimizes

Movies attract attention.

Recommendations create discovery.

Great UX removes friction.

Retention creates recurring revenue.

The flywheel compounds over time.

Bodhi Reflection

People think Netflix competes by creating better movies. Perhaps it competes by creating fewer reasons to leave. Once you see the invisible business, every decision Netflix makes begins to make sense.

See what companies really sell.

Next Episode

Apple Doesn't Sell Phones.

Read now