Netflix’s Major App Upgrade Met with Viewer Backlash – Is it Really ‘Worse’?

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New Netflix TV App Update: Easier Navigation and Bigger Title Cards

Netflix has given its TV app a makeover – its biggest update in 10 years. The streaming giant is testing a new-and-improved app with viewers, which it hopes will be easier to navigate and require less “eye gymnastics,” according to Netflix exec Pat Flemming.

Revamp for Ease of Use

Flemming told Reuters viewers eyes were flicking from “the row name to today’s top picks, to the box art, to the video, back to the synopsis”. “We really wanted to make that simpler, more intuitive, everything easier to navigate,” he explained.

Major Changes Rolled Out

The major revamp rolled out to a subset of Netflix’s total 270 million viewers on Thursday. It includes bigger title cards for shows, a fresh layout and highlighted tidbits such as ‘Oscar nominated’ or ‘spent 8 weeks in the top 10’.

Mixed Reactions from Viewers

But viewers say bosses have made the app “worse”. “I want the TV app to revert,” one onlooker wrote on X (formerly Twitter). A second person added: “Wow, they managed to make it worse.” Another said: “My muscle memory will need to adjust.”

Testing the Waters

Fortunately, the changes aren’t permanent – yet. Netflix is currently just testing the waters, seeking feedback from viewers. It’s possible the company makes even more changes – or dials back some updates that haven’t gelled well with customers.

Improving Engagement Time

The company has reportedly been hawk-eyed on improving engagement time, and will be making more effort to keep viewers on the app for longer. It comes just days after Netflix announced it will remove itself from second and third-generation Apple TVs on 31 July, 2024.

The Human Psyche Perspective

Every few years or so, apps go under the knife for a facelift, often changing color theme shades, fonts, and layouts. Then an executive comes out with a statement about how ‘contemporary’ the change is, and how it was ‘designed with users in mind’. But apps, and the folks behind them, need to wise up to one simple fact: people don’t like change. And there will almost always be backlash to the unveiling of a shiny new design.

Conclusion

Human psychology plays a big role in this. It’s obviously unreasonable to expect apps to fade into relics of their past. So what’s the remedy? Time – time for consumers to have a little kick and a scream before settling into the new norm.

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