Log In  |  Register          
Advertisement
FirstLight
Subscribe to VB Magazine
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Movie Gallery launches subscription plan

'PowerPlay' program eliminates due dates, late fees

By Danny King -- Video Business, 3/18/2009

MARCH 18 | Movie Gallery is launching an in-store subscription plan that the company is touting as a cheaper and better alternative to online-based subscription plans from competitors. 

Movie Gallery's new PowerPlay program allows customers to rent movies and games at lower prices, generally with no due dates or late fees. The company is justifying the in-store only approach by quoting a company survey showing many customers prefer going to a store so they can rent a movie they want immediately, rather than waiting for whatever a DVD-by-mail service can send them from their queue.

The program offers customers the least expensive movie and game subscription rentals in the industry, the company said. Catalog titles, new releases, Blu-ray discs and videogame titles rent for $2, $3, $4 and $5, respectively, with four monthly rental plans ranging in price from $7.99, good for $8 worth of rentals, to $39.99 for unlimited rentals. 

The plans are based on a point system. PowerPlay members not on the unlimited-rental plan may carry over the unused portion of their monthly points to the following month.

Other conditions apply; for example, game rentals are for five days only. Customers who keep a rental beyond the limit will be charged for each additional day.

The company also touted the plan's advantages over inexpensive kiosk rentals in the form of wider selection. 

"Kiosks and online services have a place in our industry," said Clifford Torng, Movie Gallery's chief marketing officer. "But our new subscription service offers unprecedented pricing, convenience and selection that can only be delivered in-store."

The subscription plan is part of an effort to gain ground on both Blockbuster and Netflix as well as the growing kiosk business. 

Blockbuster eliminated late fees for store rentals in 2005 by giving customers a one-week grace period and then charging the customer the purchase price of the title unless they returned it. The company's Total Access online rental program, started in 2006, didn't have late fees, because rented titles were simply counted against whatever monthly allotment the customer had as part of a particular subscription plan.

Netflix, which started its subscription service a decade ago, has never had late fees either, instead counting a rented title against the customer's monthly allotment.

Hollywood Video has tried in-store subscriptions previously, and Movie Gallery earlier had announced a plan to begin offering an online rental plan similar to Blockbuster and Netflix. But the chain's financial problems prevented it from pursuing that strategy.

Earlier this month, Movie Gallery CEO C.J. ‘Gabe’ Gabriel stepped down 10 months after being tapped to replace co-founder Joe Malugen as the company emerged from bankruptcy last year. Gabriel was replaced by Sherif Mityas, who joined the company as its chief operating officer in June.

Weighed down by debt from its $1.25 billion acquisition of Hollywood Video in 2005, Movie Gallery, whose eponymous and Hollywood Video chains make it the No. 2 U.S. movie-rental store operator behind Blockbuster, filed chapter 11 in October 2007 and emerged last May.

Since then, the company has tried to cut costs and improve its financial performance by boosting exposure of the Hollywood Video brand, while overhauling much of its leadership. Mityas joined the company last June while Lucinda “Cindy” Baier replaced Thomas Johnson Jr. as Movie Gallery’s chief financial officer in July. The following month, Malugen, who co-founded Movie Gallery in 1985, resigned from the company’s board of directors.

In January, Movie Gallery reported a net loss of $38.9 million on $555.7 million in sales for the three-month period ended April 6, the last period under which the company was still operating in chapter 11. The results had been delayed due mainly to matters related to the chain's bankruptcy.

Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Related Content

Related Content

 

By This Author

There are no other articles written by this author.

Sponsored Links



 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Photos

Blogs

  • Marcy Magiera
    BETWEEN THE LINES

    April 3, 2009
    Seven weeks for Dwarfs' Blu-ray
    Take this, all you retailers who undercut Disney's efforts to build the Blu-ray audience by releasin...
    More
  • Samantha Clark
    DISC DISH

    April 2, 2009
    Seth MacFarlane's Cavalcade of Comedy DVD, Blu-ray
    Love Family Guy? American Dad? Want more? Seth MacFarlane, the creator of those two animated sitcom...
    More
  • » VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

Photos

  • Marley on tour
    To celebrate Fox’s release of Marley & Me, Marley and dog trainer Mark Forbes attended the film’s satellite media tour in Los Angeles on April 1. Fox’s film is now available on Blu-ray Disc and DVD.
  • Rona Barrett at Barnes & Noble
    Celebrity journalist Rona Barrett visited the Barnes & Noble at Los Angeles’ The Grove to promote her DVD, Rona Barrett’s Hollywood: Nothing But the Truth. Infinity’s DVD is now available.
  • Marley for Marley & Me
    Marley & Me’s Marley attended the 23rd Annual Genesis Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif., on March 28 to celebrate Fox’s DVD and Blu-ray Disc release.
Advertisements





NEWSLETTERS
VB Weekly Summary (Weekly)
VB Just Announced (Weekly)
VB+Content Agenda Green Report (Monthly)
©2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites