5 reasons you should offer Day Pass access
There are various benefits to offering Day Pass access to your video streaming service and content. Check out our top five and get an insight into how one of our partners used Day Pass offers for an exclusive digital event.
What is a Day Pass?
A Day Pass is a complimentary offer for subscription video streaming services. Use them to boost awareness and discovery by giving access to your streaming service (or particular content) for a predefined period. Day passes are particularly beneficial for campaigns, Pay-Per-View offers, or exclusive digital events.
What are the benefits?
- Entice new users to sign up
A Day Pass is a great way to get audiences who are interested but have not yet committed to a subscription to trial your streaming service. You can upsell a subscription within the service or communicate subscription offers later via email and other retargeting activities. - Get some insights
Trial exclusive premium content in your service as a Pay-Per-View event and offer Day Pass access to see whether there’s an appetite for it long term based on the uptake. - Expand reach with partner deals
Bolster your marketing efforts and boost awareness by running campaigns with relevant brand partners. For example, one of our clients partnered with a gift-focused website and included day passes within their movie-themed hampers, which were also promoted on the partner website and through digital channels. - Market creative campaigns
Use day passes to build creative marketing campaigns around the premium content available on your service. For example, create a themed page of content accessible via a Day Pass, such as romance for Valentine’s Day or horror for Halloween. - Host exclusive events
You can even host digital events on your streaming service, including film festivals, premieres or live events and offer access via Day Pass to wider audiences. For example, check out the case study below of how our partners at Draken Film hosted the Göteborg Film Festival.
Case Study: Draken Film & Göteborg Film Festival
Due to the pandemic, in 2021, the Nordic region’s largest film festival, Göteborg Film Festival, became an almost exclusively digital event, accessible through their online streaming service Draken Film, hosted on the Magine Pro platform. In 2022, the festival returned to cinemas but also offered the same digital experience.
The flexibility of a Day Pass meant that attendees weren’t required to be subscribers to Draken Film; anyone in Sweden could purchase an 11-day pass before the festival to access the online content.
The festival launched on a dedicated page across all devices within the Draken Film service, with a well-curated selection of over 50 films were available to stream. Online visitors also had access to exclusive interviews and digital meetings with filmmakers. And to recreate the atmosphere of a festival premiere for the audience watching from home, three new films premiered in parallel every day, both in the cinemas (16 screens around Gothenburg) and on Draken Film.
You can learn more about the Göteborg Film Festival’s digital screenings on Draken Film here.
How to set up a day pass offer in your Magine Pro service
Magine Pro partners who would like to configure a Day Pass offer for their users can find out more Day Pass offers and how they appear within their streaming service here.
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Want to talk more about how day passes can help drive awareness & service discoverability? Get in touch with the Magine Pro team and find out how we can help. You can also learn more about our branded OTT solutions and services here. And find out more about how Magine Pro enabled Draken Film to serve as a digital host for Göteborg Film Festival online here.
Draken Film to host the Göteborg Film Festival 2022 online
The Nordic region’s largest film festival, Göteborg Film Festival, is set to return this year between 28th January – 6th February in cinemas and online through their digital service, Draken Film, hosted on the Magine Pro platform.
Due to the pandemic, last year’s 2021 edition of the Film Festival became an almost exclusively digital event. At the time, we spoke with Olle Agebro, Head of Acquisition at Draken Film, about the pandemic’s impact on the annual Göteborg Film Festival and the challenges and opportunities they faced pivoting the festival from a traditional event to a digital one for the first time. You can get more insight into planning and project by reading our full interview with Olle here.
In this year’s announcement of the hybrid festival experience, Mirja Wester, CEO of Göteborg Film Festival, said, “After a shaky year, to say the least, it feels fantastic to be able to once again welcome the audience back into the cinemas. However, due to the enormous impact of last year’s digital edition on visitors in all Swedish municipalities, we will focus on developing both physical and digital meeting spaces between films and audiences in 2022. We are now designing the format of the film festival for the future”.
The flexibility of Magine Pro’s OTT platform has enabled Göteborg Film Festival to extend Draken Film’s capabilities to serve as a digital host in 2021 and again in 2022. The festival launches on a dedicated page across all devices within the Draken Film service, with a well-curated selection of over 50 films available to stream. Online visitors will also have access to exclusive interviews, festival atmosphere and digital meetings with filmmakers. And to recreate the atmosphere of a festival premiere for the audience watching from home, three new films will premiere in parallel every day, both in the cinemas (16 screens around Gothenburg) and on Draken Film.
As part of this year’s theme for the festival, Disorder, Göteborg Film Festival will also invite audiences during three exclusive screenings to be hypnotized. The Hypnotic Cinema is a unique experiment involving a hypnotist performing mass hypnosis to transform the audience’s state of mind according to the mood and theme of the specific film. After the screening, the hypnotist will break the hypnosis and examine what happens with the film experience if you dare to lose control over your consciousness by being hypnotized.
This isn’t the first time, Göteborg Film Festival has explored some unusual social experiments. For example, during last years festival, a Swedish nurse spent a week watching the festival isolated in a lighthouse in the North Sea. And in 2019, some audience members could participate in ‘coffin screenings‘, which involved watching films inside a locked sarcophagus.
To find out more about Göteborg Film Festival 2022 online and in-person festival, including details about The Hypnotic Cinema and Draken Film, head here. You can also learn more about how Magine Pro has enabled Draken Film to serve as a digital host for Göteborg Film Festival online here.
Q&A: Draken Film’s, Olle Agebro on operating during a pandemic & the future of OTT streaming
We recently caught up with Olle Agebro, Head of Acquisition at Draken Film, to learn more about the origins of Draken Film, the impact of Covid-19, and Olle’s thoughts on current OTT industry trends. We also discuss recent projects, including revenue share with Swedish Independent Cinemas and bringing the annual Göteborg Film Festival’s experience online through Draken Film.
Olle Agebro has a background in journalism and marketing and has worked with film festivals cinemas and distribution over the past 10 years. Since 2015 he’s been a programmer for the Göteborg Film Festival and Head of Acquisitions for the festival’s VOD platform, Draken Film.
What’s the origin of Draken Film? And what did you set out to achieve at the beginning?
Our mission at Draken Film mirrors Göteborg Film Festival’s, which is to bring niche films to as large an audience as possible. The festival itself is based in Göteborg and takes place every year over the course of a week. When Draken Film was founded in 2014, it was to bring those films screened at the festival to wider audiences in Sweden and the Nordics year-round. The film festival is now in its 44th year, and I think Draken Film is one of the few places where really niche films can actually find an audience.
Over the last couple of years, how have you seen your OTT offering develop? Have you shifted your content strategy in any way?
When we started, we had the idea of bringing really niche films to a wider audience, and we really focused on that.
We also have our own film fund, where we support films that wouldn’t have a chance of being produced otherwise. And when Draken Film was launched, we had fewer film titles, but all were unique and couldn’t be found anywhere else.
Over the last couple of years, we realised that to bring even those films to a wider audience, we also needed to offer more commercial films alongside. So we now have mixed our catalogue with both niche titles and award-winning commercial films and have found a good balance.
Do you think delivering niche content can be a viable OTT business model?
It’s taken a while to grow our monthly subscribers, and we’re a small team, but today we’re profitable. I think you can be profitable with small subscriber numbers; it’s actually more about finding ways to make small teams and organisations work. The Magine Pro product is a really great example of that, and I’m surprised we haven’t seen more niche platforms as it can be a great business model.
COVID has been extraordinarily challenging for the industry. What are your insights and takeaways over the past year? And how did you react to the changes?
We’ve seen significant growth in subscriber numbers since January 2020. When the pandemic hit last March, we launched initiatives to support Swedish Independent Cinemas that had to either operate with much smaller audiences or close entirely. We offered new subscribers to Draken Film to pick a cinema they would like to support, and we shared revenue from those new subscribers with the cinemas. That initiative became quite successful, and it led to press and PR that helped increase our subscriber numbers last spring.
What was really important was that all those independent cinemas had a really great relationship with their own local audiences. When they communicated to them that they had to close but could recommend subscribing to Draken Film, that really built trust. The audiences trusted that Draken Film would serve the same purpose as their local cinemas and supported them.
What impact has the pandemic had on the annual Göteborg Film Festival? How did COVID restrictions impact the planning and execution of the event?
Göteborg Film Festival is the largest film festival in the Nordics, and we typically have an audience of around 130,000 every year. We screen around 400 films at 20 cinemas in Göteborg. At the beginning of last year, we were scouting for films for this year’s festival (2021), but as more events and festivals cancelled, we realised we needed to plan for a hybrid or digital alternative. We set about trying to figure out a way to do a smaller physical event (700 seat cinema) that Draken Film supported with some digital screenings. However, as restrictions increased, we realised it would be tough to achieve, so we decided to bring the festival experience online through Draken Film entirely. That being said, we also screened every single film at the Draken cinema below our office for one person, so I guess it was a hybrid film festival. We also built a one-person cinema at a lighthouse in the Göteborg Archipelago, where a nurse was isolated for the entire week and watched all 70 films.
How much of a risk was it to pivot the festival from a traditional event to it being hosted digitally on Draken Film?
Yes, it was a risk. For a typical festival, we sell single tickets for each screening. Ticket sales are our most important revenue, and it happens for only one single week a year. So it’s essential for us, and when we risked selling those films in a package with a digital festival pass, we didn’t know what to expect. Fortunately, we sold more than we had anticipated, but we still had no idea how successful it would be – both the digital pass idea and the pricing. No one has sold a film festival in this way before, so it was a big risk.
What are your insights from working with the distributors on the digital film festival?
For distributors, it was actually quite risky to put their films on a digital platform. Many distributors were concerned they wouldn’t be able to get their films released in cinemas if they had already had their digital premiere. Typically a film premieres at cinemas for three or four months before it is released on VOD.
As we couldn’t offer a normal screening fee, we instead offered a revenue share where most distributors received a fee for every stream. This actually became quite interesting because some films suddenly had the potential to make money during a year when everyone’s expectations were zero.
We were also able to cap films with a 24-hour availability window, so every film had a fixed viewing time. A festival pass didn’t mean audiences were able to watch every film, whenever they wanted.
We had a few tough weeks of negotiating with distributors. Still, I think we ended up with a result everyone was quite happy with, both from the distributor and audience perspective.
We’re seeing a digital transition for cinemas and film festivals. Do you see this as a permanent shift or just temporary?
I believe it is a permanent shift. People will definitely go back to cinemas but will continue to stream more films at home than before.
Cinemas and film festivals that will be successful over the next couple of years will combine the digital experiences with the theatrical. And I think many cinemas could become better at programming films that respond to streaming trends rather than just following the release schedule set by distributors. I think if cinemas are smart, they can actually benefit from the increased interest in watching films at home.
Series/episodic content is beginning to take market share from movies when it comes to wider audience viewing. Do you think this trend will also take over the arthouse genre? And are we likely to see series content in the Draken Film service?
So I think that the arthouse community is a bit different from the general audience. And even though television series are popular, I think our audience appreciates that they have somewhere such as Draken Film focused solely on arthouse films.
But I believe there’s something about the episodic drama in that it’s really sticky and can make audiences stay around. I also think there are ways we and other film platforms can position and package content to make it stick in a very similar way. For example, audiences can get hooked on watching an entire category of South Korean thrillers in a similar way they would follow an entire season of Stranger Things.
Where do you see things moving for Draken Film in the next 12 months?
Since the film festival, distributors have realised that launching a film using a VOD platform can actually be beneficial to the theatrical release. I think more distributors will allow us to release films on day and date and do different TVOD (or versions of it) for their theatrical releases.
We will continue to test this and experiment to see if we can find a model where we share revenues with distributors and cinema. And also use Draken Film as a platform for other film festivals in future.
Our strategy is not to increase revenue but to find new areas for organic growth. After the film festival, we converted around 15% of the festival audience to Draken Film subscribers. And if we can do something similar with TVOD purchasers and other festival attendees, that’s an effective way to reach organic growth without investing in advertising.
What made you decide to switch Draken Film’s OTT platform provider to Magine Pro in 2018? And how has the platform enabled Draken Film to expand and evolve since then?
We had several reasons to change, and we understood from talking to our audience that it was necessary. We were also growing quite quickly, and we needed to have apps and support for more devices at the time.
We looked at different platform providers, and Magine Pro was the only one that delivered on compatibility with several platforms and offered us the possibility to launch apps on those platforms at quite a low cost. But the most important difference was that the Magine Pro model was based on user fee compared to a fixed fee.
The agreement we reached was very smart for the situation we were in back then, and it allowed us to scale quite quickly. It was a great fit.
We’ve been really happy with how the service has evolved and the new features you’ve launched and continue to add. I really hope in the future you’ll continue to deliver on that and keep developing the platform and apps in the way you have.
Most of our users can’t really differentiate the level of service between Draken Film and Netflix. Their experiences really are the same. And I think that’s quite exceptional for a platform the size of ours.
About Draken Film
Draken Film was founded in 2014 to serve as a digital film service for the annual Göteborg Film Festival. In 2018, Draken Film approached Magine Pro looking to change their OTT video platform provider, improve customer experience and quality as well as enhance their existing web-only streaming service and provide new high-quality apps on iOS and Android. Learn more about Draken Film and the project in our case study.
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If you want to find out more about Magine Pro OTT solutions and services, get in touch! We can help you enhance your existing OTT service and/or launch something entirely new. You can also check out our experience and more of our case studies here, including Draken Film and the Göteborg Film Festival project.
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Introducing Draken Film by Magine Pro
At Magine Pro we don’t just build OTT services for new businesses, we also work with existing OTT services that are looking to change their current platform provider. We pride ourselves in being able to improve services, tech and cost efficiency, without impacting the customer experience.
Earlier this year, we partnered with Göteborg Film Festival’s digital film service, Draken Film. Draken Film is home to more than 300 films from around the world with new movies released every week, alongside background material, interviews and inspiration. It’s simply a film festival all year round!
Draken Film sought our help to enhance their service, improve customer experience and provide better quality. Using Magine API’s we successfully integrated Draken Film’s existing web-only streaming service onto the Magine Pro platform, without downtime affecting their users. We also worked with them to build and launch new iOS and Android apps, enabling their subscribers to sign in and enjoy Draken Film on mobile devices.
Check out the case study to find out more about our partnership with Draken Film here.
Take a sneak peek at the new Draken Film app…
If you’re looking to change your OTT platform provider and want to find out more about Magine Pro solutions and services get in touch! We can help you enhance your existing services and/or launch something entirely new. You can take a closer look at our global OTT solutions and services here and check out our references.