A Netflix Community

Did everyone else get this e-mail from Netflix:

" We wanted to let you know we will be eliminating Profiles, the feature that allowed you to set up separate DVD Queues under one account, effective September 1, 2008."

Why?

"While it may be disappointing to see Profiles go away, this change will help us continue to improve the Netflix website for all our customers."

Okay, how does Profiles going away improve Netflix? Am I the only one in household with multiple people each of whom want a different queue for tracking, rating, reviews, etc. Furthermore, according to the FAQ, there's no way to even transfer a Profile to a new separate account. So that means if you spent time rating tons of movies under one profile, all of that is lost! This seems like a huge disruption of service. In what way is this good? And there's not even any way I can see to match the equivalent functionality once they go away.

This to me is a huge negative change to the service for no visible reason.

Ernie

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

So it does not effect performance, but effects the ease of use on multi disc watching families/customers...so instead of getting programmers who can fix things lets delete and start over and screw the customer...thats what adrian and the others are saying...We dont know how to program so blow it up??? FYI they do make programming for dummies books, netflix might looking in to starting a library...

Reply to This

I need to add my voice to the choir.

This is extremely disappointing.

Profiles are an excellent feature of the Netflix service. If only 1% use profiles, its is because users don't know about or understand the feature. I've turned a number of other families on to Netflix, and the strongest selling point is profiles.

I would suggest that they charge extra for the service, but in a way, they already do. We increased the number of movies per month on our account when we added a profile.

If profiles are causing system problems, fix the problems. Don't abandon one of your best feature.

Reply to This

I had no reason to look at any other option that Netflix before this. I'm now pissed enough to check out Blockbuster online. Customer service is not something you want to mess with, particularly in a business where other options are on the forefront (electronic delivery).

Reply to This

Hahaha! You don't want to deal with BB then.

Reply to This

Don't let the door hit you on the way out......
Seriously though, speak with your feet instead of fake community accounts and let the rest of us enjoy our Netflix Community.

Reply to This

This is awful news. Having multiple queues has been the feature I use more than any other on the site. It allows us to have a queue for movies (which we watch very rarely) and one for television shows (which we watch much more frequently). Going back to a single queue will force me to spend a lot more time managing my queue in order to keep one movie disc and three TV discs at home.

Reply to This

I really don't understand why the ability to move all my ratings/queue went away. When my husband and I merged accounts (and I became a profile on his account) I was able to move all my movies and ratings from my old account -- but now the reverse won't work? I can't move everything from a profile to a new account? That just doesn't make sense at all!

Programmers out there -- why would this be true??

Reply to This

There probably isn't a technical reason why they decided to be so brutal in the way they went about this and not provide migration facilities, etc. It's probably just that some PHB had the bright idea that they could save money by not implementing the migration facilities. There may be some non-technical reasons though. (Perhaps they want you to re-enter your ratings a second time in order to get data about how precise people are in their ratings by comparing your original rating and you completely new second rating. Probably not, but you never know.)

Reply to This

nah its all just personal. they just don't like you.

Reply to This

Laziness.

Reply to This

I think the thing that really gets me is that even if it is only 1% of the user base that uses this, taking away the feature is still extremely disruptive to that 1% user base. The time it takes to make the queues, rate movies, write reviews, etc. is not negligible, and to take all that away with absolutely no options for any form of transfer shows that they consider the forward progress of the company "at any price" more important than customer satisfaction. It means that any feature that they find not completely mainstream is expendable. It really discourages use of Netflix in other than its most bare-bones form. Probably Netflix could remove the entire Community section, the entire Reviews feature, and still only offend maybe 10% of its base. So is that okay? I guess they can get away with it, but if you truly care about customer satisfaction that means caring not just about the mass of casual Netflix users, but the power-users who make the most of the site. It is those users who made Netflix what it is today by trying it when it was unknown. It definitely narrows the ways in which Netflix once distinguished itself from once larger and more powerful companies such as Blockbuster.

Reply to This

One could bog down the site trying to make it cater to dozens of special interest 1% sized groups interested in one feature or another. I think there is a sense at netflix that a feature that negatively impacts the entire customer base, but positively impacts a fraction, is something that needs to be evaluated. I think 1% doesn't merit keeping. I think 10% certainly merits keeping. Somewhere inbetween is probably a line. I don't know where that is: 5%? 3%? 7%? Who knows. Maybe 3% and growing would be kept... but 7% and shrinking would be cut?

I do know that having the guts to cut features that are only used by a few folks is hard and (in spite of everyone anger) should be respected. If you don't, in 10 years you have a very complicated to use website that is slow to improve, hard to keep from being buggy, and not fun to develop for. (something perhaps like Microsoft Word. Watch David Pogues' TED talk poking at their absurd feature creep).

Reply to This

RSS

About

droidmaker droidmaker created this Ning Network.

Badge

Loading…

Photos

Loading…

Ning Stats...







© 2009   Created by droidmaker on Ning.   Create a Ning Network!

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service