Netflix ad tier debuts at 'a pivotal moment for the industry,' ad exec explains

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Netflix's (NFLX) ad-supported tier officially arrives in the United States on Thursday.

The ad plan, dubbed "Basic with Ads," will cost $6.99 a month in the U.S. — just below Disney's ad-based price point of $7.99 (which will roll out on December 8.)

"Basic with Ads" will complement Netflix's existing ad-free tiers and be available in 12 countries, including the U.S., the U.K., Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, Mexico, and Spain.

The ad tier will feature an average of 4-to-5 minutes of ads per hour. At launch, ads will run 15 or 30 seconds in length, with some running prior to the start of a program while others will be mid-roll ads.

Wall Street analysts are largely bullish on the profitability aspects of the new ad tier, and advertising experts refer to the debut as a make-or-break moment for the media industry.

"It is absolutely a pivotal moment for the industry," Kevin Krim, CEO of advertising measurement platform EDO, told Yahoo Finance, citing Amazon's (AMZN) Thursday Night Football as another watershed moment when streaming, subscription, and ad-supported went to the masses.

Looking back, the executive explained, this "will be the moment where the vast majority of Americans became crystal clear that there's going to be a new way to get the must-watch TV that they care about — and it's going to be through a subscription-based and an ad-supported business model."

Amid concerns that Netflix subscribers will trade down to the ad-supported version, Citi Managing Director Jason Bazinet previously told Yahoo Finance Live that he views the introduction of advertising as a lucrative revenue driver.

"It's not a spin down risk — it's a spin up opportunity," the analyst maintained, estimating that the company could secure $10 or more in advertising revenue per ad-tier subscriber in the U.S.

"Big Mouth" on Netflix. (Screenshot/Netflix)
"Big Mouth" on Netflix. (Screenshot/Netflix)

"I think what we have learned as an industry is that there's a limit to the number of consumers out there that will pay," EDO's Krim said. "Advertising is a really smart way to subsidize those subscription fees."

Krim added that streaming is going back to basics as its new dual revenue model mimics that of traditional cable television.

"This is our new future," he maintained. "You won't see anyone going backwards. I'm absolutely confident that ads will be part of Netflix's future."

The streaming giant is currently utilizing a fixed price model for advertisers (and would not reveal its cost-per-thousand rate), noting that it's open to adjusting that model in the future.