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It’s hard to imagine a time before ‘Netflix and Chill,’ before you could have any movie at the touch of your fingers. In fact, before 2010, video rental stores were located in most cities across the United States. These video store companies, although there were many, were rapidly starting to go bankrupt. This can all be narrowed down to the beginning of one company: Netflix.

The President and founder of a company that created software products, Pure Software, had just finalized the process of selling the company to Rational Software.1 This man was Reed Hastings. Often described as the “Spock” of business, he was an earnest and business-driven man. After finalizing the selling of his company in 1997, Reed had several months of idle time at the company waiting for the merger to happen between both corporations.2

During the six months between the final merger of the companies, Reed Hastings and his Vice President of corporate marketing Marc Randolph (who was also soon to be out of a job) drove to work together each day. Marc Randolph, a geology major that somehow found his way into the VP position at the software company, took this time to use his entrepreneurial drive to bounce ideas off of Reed.3 Together they were trying to come up with an idea to base a new company on, in order to have a new job after their final days at Pure Software. The only limit on these ideas was that they knew they wanted to be a completely online company.4

Marc Randolph on the Topic of Netflix | April 20, 2017 | Gage Skidmore | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Marc would say an idea and Reed would shut it down, one after another. This process went on for weeks. One day, Marc spouted out an idea of shipping Video Home System (VHS) tapes. In the mid-nineties, VHS tapes were still very widely used. Reed was slightly intrigued by this idea since he had recently received a $40 late fee from Blockbuster for returning a late Apollo 13 VHS. But he passed on the idea. Marc’s other coworker Christine also disapproved of the idea because the shipping costs of an 8-inch by 4-inch tape would be far too expensive. After this, they moved on and continued trying to find new ideas.5

For several weeks this went on, one idea after another, until one day Reed heard about a new technology that was in the test markets in several cities in the United States. This new technology was the Digital Versatile Disc (DVD). Both Marc and Reed’s minds immediately went back to their VHS shipping idea. DVD’s were supposed to be small, compact, and very lightweight. Reed, who normally would shoot down every idea, realized this idea might work.

Reed and Marc had never actually seen a DVD at this point, since they weren’t widely available yet. Their next step was to determine if shipping a DVD was even plausible. Their concerns were the discs getting broken or lost in the mail. So, they did the only thing they could think of; they went to a local record store and purchased a CD. They put it in a small envelope with a 32-cent stamp, addressed it to Reed’s house, and placed it in the nearest public mailbox. The very next morning, Marc drove to the parking lot where he met Reed every day for their daily commute, and the first thing he saw while driving up was Reed standing there, holding the same envelope they had used to ship the CD. It had made it, in less than 24 hours, unbroken.6

Netflix DVD Packaging | December 1, 2010 | Victor D’Allant | Courtesy of Creative Commons

Since DVD’s weren’t yet available on the market, Mark and Reed were hoping that an early start could help them beat brick and mortar stores around the country. They began determining a course of action for how they could turn this idea into a reality. Within just a few weeks, they rented out office space at a local Best Western for $250 a week. They began searching for investors and working on a business plan. Reed invested $1.9 million of his own money into the idea, Marc’s mother invested another $25 thousand, and they managed to find roughly $70 thousand more from other various investors.7

Once having found the money to start the company, the process started accelerating. They bought their own private office space, they hired new designers and formulated a new course of action. They knew that they wanted to be an all-online company, so they had to have a proper website, along with all of the hardware needed. Since DVD’s were beginning to sell in the United States at the end of March 1998, they wanted to be prepared to launch the company in April 1998.8

They began working diligently to prepare the company for launch. There was only six months between the time they received the money from their investors and the day they were to go live. They needed inventory and a perfect website before the first day. They looked for journalists and interviewers to help them spread the word. The more publicity they got, the higher the chance of them becoming successful.

The day of launch was nerve wracking for everyone. They had 925 films on hand and ready for shipping. Their two servers went live at 9 AM on April 14, 1998. They had a bell hooked up to the desktop so that every time a purchase was made it would ding. After only fifteen minutes, they realized the bell wasn’t ringing anymore. After only fifteen minutes of being live, their servers had crashed.9 During that first day, their two servers crashed four times.10 This caused them to have to run back and forth to electronics stores to buy new computers. Crashed servers also introduced an issue that no one had even considered; they realized that their webpage didn’t have any type of ‘error’ page. So while some of the staff were trying to get servers back up and running, some were frantically trying to package product, and others were trying to design a crash page for the website. They started the day with two servers and ended with eight to maintain site traffic.11

While they were attempting to get all of their servers up and running, they encountered an entirely different issue. Their website promised same day shipping on all orders. This introduced a whole new stressor into their first day. All orders placed before the shipping deadline needed to make it packed, labeled, and driven to the post office by 3PM. The day was filled with jammed printers and countless setbacks. With only minutes to spare, they had forty-five more orders to pack, label, and ship. After a long and stressful day of crashed servers and shipping deadlines, they had managed to fill a whopping 137 orders.12

As tough as their first day was, things did not get any easier. The company struggled for several years. They managed to keep their head above water and even though they had their difficulties, they were still managing to put a dent in brick and mortar store’s incomes around the country. In the year 2000, Reed Hastings approached the CEO of Blockbuster, John Antioco, and offered to sell Netflix to them for $50 million. At the time, Netflix was losing money and Blockbuster was still the biggest name in movie rentals. Antioco quickly shot him down laughingly, and didn’t even offer a counteroffer. Antioco told Reed that the Dot Com industry was never going to last. The meeting ended abruptly and directly after leaving the meeting Marc knew the only thing they could do was either lose their company or beat out Blockbuster.13 

Closing down sale at Blockbuster Video, Bank Street, Galashiels | Photo © Walter Baxter (cc-by-sa/2.0)

After being turned down by the CEO of Blockbuster, Reed and Marc often thought about giving up. It wasn’t until the year 2002 that Netflix finally pulled in a positive revenue. And finally, in 2003, they managed to have a positive net income.14 Netflix constantly evolved to keep up with competitors eventually bringing their platform completely online. They even began creating ‘Netflix Originals’ in a Netflix-owned studio.

Throughout all of their hardships, Marc and Reed were persistent and determined to come out successful. Their revolutionary idea led brick and mortar video stores to close throughout the nation. By 2010, there were only a handful of Blockbuster stores left, leaving the company completely bankrupt by the end of the year. Currently, only one privately owned Blockbuster remains in the world.15 Netflix has now reached the top of its industry, worth $194 Billion, even higher than the Disney empire’s current worth.16 They’ve created In Studio major hits such as Stranger Things, Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness, Orange is the New Black, Peaky Blinders, and House of Cards. Marc and Reed managed to create their own empire where the name has become a verb in modern culture and changed the industry of entertainment forever.

  1. Reed Hastings How I did it: Reed Hastings, Netflix Inc Magazine Online (website) Dec 1 2005 https://www.inc.com/magazine/20051201/qa-hastings.html
  2. Marc Randolph, That Will Never Work (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2019), 4, 85.
  3. Stan Linhorst, “Netflix founder Marc Randolph: You learn leadership by doing it,” Syracuse.com (website), https://www.syracuse.com/news/2018/09/marc_randolph_leadership.html.
  4. Marc Randolph, That Will Never Work (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2019), 4.
  5. Marc Randolph, That Will Never Work (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2019), 18, 19.
  6. Marc Randolph, That Will Never Work (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2019), 24-30.
  7. Marc Randolph, That Will Never Work (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2019), 36-41.
  8. Marc Randolph, That Will Never Work (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2019), 40, 44.
  9. Marc Randolph, That Will Never Work (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2019), 113.
  10. Marc Randolph “That will Never Work – The Birth of Netflix and the Amazing Life of an Idea” YouTube Video 13:26 Posted by 5×15 Stories on Oct 2, 2019, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-2rS0BhukE&t=4s
  11. Marc Randolph, That Will Never Work (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2019), 115-118.
  12. Marc Randolph, That Will Never Work (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2019), 119.
  13. Marc Randolph, HE “WAS STRUGGLING NOT TO LAUGH”: INSIDE NETFLIX’S CRAZY, DOOMED MEETING WITH BLOCKBUSTER. Vanity Fair Online (website), Sep 17, 2019 https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2019/09/netflixs-crazy-doomed-meeting-with-blockbuster
  14. Amy Watson., “Netflix: Revenue 2002-2018,” Statista.com (blog), Jan 10, 2020 https://www.statista.com/statistics/272545/annual-revenue-of-netflix/
  15. Tiffany Hsu, “The World’s Last Blockbuster Has No Plans to Close,” The New York Times Online (website), March 6, 2019; https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/06/business/last-blockbuster-store.html
  16. Ariel Shapiro, “Netflix Stock Hits Record High, Is Now Worth More Than Disney,” Forbes Magazine Online (website), April 16, 2020; https://www.forbes.com/sites/arielshapiro/2020/04/16/netflix-stock-hits-record-high-is-now-worth-more-than-disney/#39ec00054b26

Amanda Shoemaker

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75 comments

  • Mia Hernandez

    Great Article! I love Netflix because it is so accessible especially right now during this pandemic. I never knew that they invested over one million dollars to start the company. I had not realized the hardships they faced in the beginning of their Netflix career. It is crazy how much it had changed throughout the years, from DVD to online. I love that Netflix is always being updated with new movies and shows. It must feel good to know that his idea became the biggest streaming platform. I think the Blockbuster owner regrets not taking his offer, but I believe that it what pushed him to succeed.

  • Erin Vento

    I think it’s so funny that they tried to sell Netflix to Blockbuster and Blockbuster shoot them down just for things to end up the way they are. I really liked this article! I never would have guessed that the idea of Netflix (their original plan) came to them before dvds were widely distributed, or that they had 900+ movies on their opening day.

  • Cailtin Egolf

    Reading this article opened my eyes on struggles that I wouldn’t have even imagined were going through Reed Hastings head. As a child, i was more of a tomboy and would play outside the majority vs now me enjoying staying inside more. However, i do remember being younger and renting red box movies to play at home. I, myself, watch netflix when I’m not busy and at home, it is very addicting.

  • Janaya Felder

    I would have never known Netflix had such a tough beginning because by the time I started using it they were well past their initial struggles. I do remember the Blockbuster’s me and my siblings would occasionally get movies from before they went out of business and seeing how limited their selections would be. Netflix has done an incredible job in providing content for everyone (more than what stores like Blockbuster provided, in my opinion) which set a great example for other streaming platforms we have today.

  • Alyssa Vasquez

    I believe that Netflix is very time consuming. I do myself spend a lot of my time on Netflix. I used to watch Hulu, amazon prime, and YouTube but now I spend mostly my whole day watching Netflix. Now I think because of all the success that Netflix has other apps are trying to follow in its path and be either as or more successful. Reading about the backstory of the app I use every day is very interesting to learn about.

  • Nicholas Burch

    This was a very fun article to read, thanks to the author’s wonderful storytelling. I like how she mentioned that it’s hard to imagine a time before Netflix because it’s so widely known around the world as the easiest way to access an array of movies and TV shows. I first heard about Netflix right around the time BlockBuster was going completely out of business because of online and easy access movie companies like Redbox and Netflix. I wasn’t aware of how Reed Hastings and Marc Randolph got Netflix got started or the hardships that came with it. All I knew, was that Blockbuster went Bye-Bye! It’s crazy to think that CEO of Blockbuster, John Antioco had laughed at Reed and Marc for asking him to buy their company. At the time they offered him the company, Blockbuster was worth over 4 billion dollars. John Antioco had the choice to make a wise investment in a small-time company with massive potential, but he chose to be arrogant without hardly giving them the time of day. I’m sure that after Blockbuster went out of business, it couldn’t have been more embarrassing for anybody than John Antioco, who shamelessly rejected Netflix. But hey, you live and you learn. I hope John Antioco isn’t still searching ” Netflix net-worth” 3 times a day. Hopefully, he’s trying to create something even better than Netflix! Never stop innovating.

  • Richard Gutierrez

    This article was very eye opening to me about a service I watch a lot of shows on and didn’t really know a thing about them. It’s very inspiring how this article shows people having a good idea that was ahead of their time, being persistent, and trying to and bring it to life. The article showed me how you have to be ahead of the times and be able to adapt to the times in order to keep going like Netflix. In addition, the fact that Blockbuster, who dominated the industry, just laughed at them and ultimately got lost in history and no longer exists while Netflix is thriving now is fascinating.

  • Reba Reyes

    I think it is pretty crazy how Blockbuster turned down Netflix because Netflix was not making profit but in the end Netflix was the reason Blockbuster went out of business. Personally, I love Netflix and their “Netflix Originals” and had never been to a Blockbuster so I can not really compare the two. I also had no idea the Netflix originated in 1998, when the entire time I thought it was more of a modern concept website.

  • Keily Hart

    Netflix is a megalith in the entertainment industry and represents what every company in every industry should strive for. Innovation. Netflix started by shipping DVDs and now they are at the forefront of online streaming companies. They are quick to change with the times and are unafraid of risk. Netflix originals are typically reboots of shows that other companies like ABC failed to make catch. Netflix makes those shows catch on with its viewers, and they have a gift for knowing what consumers will want next.

  • Yaniev Ibarra

    As a Netflix account holder, I am amazed on how little I previously knew about the company. I never really figured that a company this big and efficient would have started off so rough and would have even been through a breakage point. This is just another example of pushing through and staying determined, look at the company now. Netflix is so big and part of my daily life as for most of their subscribers. However, I do remember begging my parents to take me to Blockbuster. Nothing compared to the excitement that ran through me when I would go through the aisles of movies to finish off by getting a snack.

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