10 Principles
10 Principles
Improve
Decision-
Making
An Insider’s View of how Netflix
Makes Hard Decisions
By Gibson Biddle Jun 23, 2022
An Insider’s View of
how Netflix Makes
Hard Decisions
In recent years, I’ve given a talk called “Wicked Hard Decisions”
which has five “What would you do?” cases that provide an insider’s
view of how Netflix made tough product and business decisions. I
learned a lot while at Netflix and even more teaching these cases.
The skills can be learned. Below I list ten principles that will
improve your odds of making great decisions. I also outline how you
can practice decision-making everyday, whether you are CEO or
have just begun your career as a product manager.
Jeff Bezos gets at the first principle in his 2016 Annual Report :
One of the first questions to ask is: “Is this a high stakes or low
stakes decision?” If it’s a high stakes decision — like the launch of
streaming in early 2007— you’ll need a deliberate approach by a
cross-functional team composed of high judgment individuals.
But for low stakes decisions — like killing a feature used by only 2%
of our members — a small team, close to both the problem and
customers, can make a faster decision. And if they’re wrong, they
can reverse or adapt quickly.
We reversed course and all was well. But I’ll never get back the six
months I struggled with the decision. I would have been far better
off executing quickly, and then made adjustments based on member
response.
2. Embrace consumer
science
I define “consumer science” as the search for consumer insight
using a mix of data sources:
3. Obsess over
customers
4. Employ strategy,
tactics, and metrics
Do you have a well-articulated company and product strategy? If
you do, you’re in a good place to make great decisions.
5. Make decisions
quickly
Most decisions are low stakes and reversible, so your bias should be
to make them quickly. But what about the high stakes decisions?
What’s the right pace for these decisions?
You also learn that doing nothing — when flying into a cloud
without an instrument rating, for instance — is rarely the right
decision.
6. Debate, decide,
then do
Growing up, my parents would say to me, “Good fights make good
marriages.” (They’ve been married 55 years!)
This folksy, New England saying reinforces the idea that you need
good debates to make great big decisions together. And once the
decision is made, you need to quickly align to execute. Amazon calls
this behavior, “disagree and commit.”
Price was a big lever. We A/B tested pricing but there were many
debates as we interpreted the results: “How to balance Wall Street’s
expectation for profit against the growth that lower prices
delivered? How much debt should we take on in order to fund future
growth?” There were many other, potential long-term impacts of
price changes that we couldn’t evaluate via A/B tests.
And from time to time, Reed would ask participants to flip their
point of view and argue the opposite — an exercise that encourages
not just debate, but careful listening.
7. Learning is more
important than
knowing
For many tough decisions there is no right or wrong choice. What is
important is learning as much as you can about your customers,
business, and industry to improve the odds in future decisions.
Today, Netflix has a market cap of $80 billion and more than 221
million members worldwide.
9. Keep embracing
risk
Today’s leading consumer internet tech companies — Google,
Amazon, Facebook, and Netflix — are all about twenty years old.
“It is clear from the feedback over the past two months that many
members felt we lacked respect and humility in the way we
announced the separation of DVD and streaming and the price
changes. That was certainly not our intent, and I offer my sincere
apology.”
Putting decision-
making principles into
practice
Making great decisions — about product, people, and business —
requires practice. But how can you practice decision-making in your
everyday job?