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Faced with TikTok, Instagram and YouTube, the streaming giant is redesigning its mobile application with vertical videos and video podcasts to encourage daily engagement. At its quarterly results presentation on Tuesday, the company announced a major overhaul of its mobile application, which will borrow heavily from the codes of social networks to appeal to users used to scrolling through TikTok or Instagram.
The new version of the app, scheduled for the end of 2026, will feature a vertical video stream presenting short extracts from Netflix series and films. This is a format that the platform has been testing since May, and is reminiscent of Instagram Reels and TikTok’s For You.
“You can imagine that we will be integrating more clips based on new types of content, such as video podcasts”, said Greg Peters, co-CEO of Netflix, suggesting that these short videos will become a central tool for capturing attention and increasing time spent on the application.
This approach marks a strategic turning point for Netflix, which now recognises that the battle is with the entire mobile entertainment industry.
The company is also launching an offensive into video podcasts, a territory largely dominated by YouTube. This week, Netflix unveiled its first original video podcasts, hosted by the likes of Pete Davidson and Michael Irvin, while forging partnerships with Spotify and iHeartMedia to enrich its catalogue.
The aim, as with Disney+, is to turn Netflix into a daily destination rather than just an occasional viewing service. “Television is no longer what we grew up on. Today, television is everything,” said Ted Sarandos, the other co-CEO, pointing out that the Oscars and the NFL are watched on YouTube, while Apple competes at the Emmys and the Oscars.
Despite this obvious proximity to the mechanics of social networking, Netflix is keen to distance itself from mere imitation. At the TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 conference, CTO Elizabeth Stone insisted that the company was not looking to become TikTok, but rather to enhance content discovery with features designed for mobile.
This rhetorical caution has not prevented Netflix from acknowledging the reality of the market: the boundaries between streaming, cinema and social content are becoming blurred. The company has demonstrated this by announcing its intention to acquire Warner Bros and by adopting a hybrid distribution strategy between cinemas and the platform.
TikTok continues its push into long-form and hybrid formats. The platform has announced a strategic partnership with iHeartMedia, the US radio giant and the world’s largest podcast publisher, to produce a new wave of filmed podcasts hosted by TikTok creators. Up to 25 shows are expected to launch: recorded in studio, distributed in audio on…
TikTok and iHeartMedia have just announced a major multi-platform partnership. Together, the two companies will launch a complete ecosystem combining filmed podcasts, radio, video studios and live events. The agreement marks a strategic turning point: TikTok creators will become voices and storytellers at events, on radio and in podcasts. The “TikTok Podcast Network”: 25 new…
Disney+ is preparing for the arrival of vertical videos in its application. Their aim is to increase daily usage and catch up with social and video platforms that have established the scroll reflex. The announcement was made at Disney’s Tech + Data Showcase at CES in Las Vegas. It is part of a series of…
In the age of short-form dominance, Meta is doubling down on its video strategy.Facebook and Instagram are now fully centered around Reels — positioning short videos as the main lever for growth, engagement, and retention.Recent platform changes confirm the shift: everything points to a future built on Reels. What’s Changing on Facebook Meta has just…
Instagram boss Adam Mosseri continues hisweekly story Q&A session. This time, he talks about TV, the place of subscribers, carousels, Stories, advertising and the famous “shadowban”. Very concrete answers about how the platform really works. Instagram is coming to TV, but in beta version Adam Mosseri has confirmed the launch of an initial version of…
This week, Instagram director Adam Mosseri took advantage of his Q&A session to talk about important topics such as features in testing, sponsorship and creator compensation. As we do every week, we decipher his answers for you to help you stay on top of Instagram news. Can you link a Reel after posting? Yes. Open…