Jeffrey Katzenberg's Quibi Shuts Down After 7 Months

Short-form video service failed to gain traction amid the pandemic

Quibi becomes the first causality of the streaming wars. The short-form streaming service founded by Jeffrey Katzenberg is shutting down its operations after only 7 months.

The streaming service will being a wind-down of its operations, which it says will take the next few months. Quibi adds its working to find a buyer or buyers for its content and technology assets.

“Quibi was founded to create the next generation of storytelling,” said Katzenberg in a statement. “We have assembled a world-class creative and engineering team that has created an original platform fueled by groundbreaking technology and IP, enabling consumers to view premium content in a whole new way. The world has changed dramatically since Quibi launched and our standalone business model is no longer viable. I am deeply grateful to our employees, investors, talent, studio partners and advertisers for their partnership in bringing Quibi to millions of mobile devices.”

In a separate open letter from Katzenberg and CEO Meg Whitman, the two partially blamed the pandemic for Quibi’s failures. “The circumstances of launching during a pandemic is something we could have never imagined but other businesses have faced these unprecedented challenges and have found their way through it. We were not able to do so.”

Quibi launched in April but has badly underperformed in gaining subscribers in the ultra-competitive streaming space. It was among five new entrants alongside Apple, Disney and WarnerMedia that launched within a 7-month span. CBS All Access is also rebranding as Paramount+ early next year.

The service raised nearly $2 billion to serve teenagers and young adults with short form entertainment, viewed primarily on their phones. But the Quibi, which also had to launch amid the pandemic, has never gotten traction. Instead, free apps like TikTok have taken off as the platform of choice for teens.

It debuted with a who’s who of stars connected to the service, including Steven Spielberg, Jennifer Lopez, Kevin Hart and LeBron James. The service managed to net two Emmy wins last month, but has otherwise struggled to gain a wide audience.

In June, Quibi was on pace to pull in 2 million subscribers by the end of the year — well below its own projection of 7.4 million subscribers. And in July, when the 90-day free trial Quibi had offered early users expired, most didn’t stick around to pay for their service. (Subscribers pay $4.99 per month for ad-supported streaming and $7.99 per month for ad-free streaming.)

Out of 910,000 people who downloaded Quibi in the three days following its April 6 launch, only 72,000 users converted to paying subscriptions, Sensor Tower reported in July.

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