Amazon's Thursday night football: Why it's a 'long-term play' for the tech giant

In This Article:

Amazon’s (AMZN) getting ready for kickoff.

The tech giant streams its first installation of "Thursday Night Football" on its Prime Video platform this week, marking the first-ever NFL game to be exclusively provided via streaming service. It’s a monumental moment for America’s largest professional sports league, for Amazon, and for sports streaming as a whole.

“It really portends the future of sports broadcasting,” Kansas City Chiefs Chairman and CEO Clark Hunt told Yahoo Finance.

Hunt’s Chiefs will play the Los Angeles Chargers for the inaugural broadcast and Amazon spent big to make it happen. To become the exclusive "Thursday Night Football" provider, the company has reportedly agreed to drop $1 billion annually throughout an 11-year deal.

For consumers, there’s a kicker. If you’re hoping to watch the game, you need an Amazon Prime account or a Prime Video membership, which start at $8.99. That’s not an accident or a bug. It’s a feature.

Sure, Amazon’s spending on sports for Prime has been on par with what traditional broadcasters like Comcast (CMCSA), Fox (FOX), and CBS (PARA) spent for rights to Big Ten football. However, Amazon has a different endgame in mind. Broadcasters like Fox are incentivized to keep spending lavishly on sports broadcast rights to hold onto market share, while Amazon’s efforts are fundamentally about finding growth. For Amazon, it’s about getting consumers to buy into its ecosystem permanently.

Sep 11, 2022; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Kansas City Chiefs guard Nick Allegretti (73) against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports
Sep 11, 2022; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Kansas City Chiefs guard Nick Allegretti (73) against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports · USA TODAY USPW / reuters

“Clearly, for Amazon this has to be a really long-term play,” said Mark Patricof, founder of athlete-focused private investment platform Patricof Co.

Laura Martin, analyst at Needham & Co., agrees. For Amazon, this isn’t just about getting NFL games on its platform, it’s about driving Prime subscriptions and more spending across the company’s entire ecosystem for years, even decades, to come.

“You’re going to go there and maybe you’ll stay longer to watch ‘Lord of the Rings,’ because on Prime you can’t escape the ‘Lord of the Rings’ advertising,” she said. “Then, that puts Amazon in a higher brand category in terms of relevance to your life and it takes on a bigger role in consumers’ value perception.”

To this end, Amazon has paid handsomely for its content. The latest case of this, of course, is the reported $465 million the company spent to make "Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power." This kind of content investment from Amazon isn’t anomalous, and is set to continue: This year, including sports, Amazon is projected to spend $15 billion on programming, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. Head of Amazon Studios, Jen Salke, has a $10 billion budget all her own. This all sounds like a lot (and it is), but it’s also important to note that last quarter alone, Amazon produced $121 billion in revenue.