JioHotstar’s 100 million subscriber milestone is impressive. But there’s a fundamental question lurking beneath the surface: how many of these users are here to stay?
The harsh reality of sports-driven OTT growth is that sports subscribers are fickle. They come when their favorite league is available, and they leave the moment it’s gone. The IPL on JioHotstar today could be on another platform tomorrow. And when that happens, a large chunk of these users will vanish overnight.
This is why sports as a USP is a dangerous game. It’s expensive, unpredictable, and most importantly, it doesn’t build a real moat. The platform that holds broadcasting rights holds the audience—there’s no loyalty beyond that. In contrast, platforms like Netflix and Prime Video have invested in content that people want to stay for. They don’t need billion-dollar sports rights to ensure retention. Instead, they create shows, movies, and originals that define their brand and build long-term subscriber loyalty.
Netflix didn’t become a streaming giant by chasing fleeting trends. It built a fortress of original content—series that became cultural phenomena, like Stranger Things, Money Heist, and Wednesday. Even when subscribers finish one series, they stick around because something else compelling is always around the corner.
Amazon’s Prime Video plays a different but equally effective game. It balances a mix of premium originals (Mirzapur, The Boys), regional content, and strategic acquisitions (MGM Studios). Plus, it ties subscriptions to Amazon’s larger ecosystem, making it sticky in a way that a sports-first OTT never can be.
JioHotstar, on the other hand, is banking on a model that has historically failed to ensure retention. We’ve seen this before. When SonyLIV lost the UEFA Champions League, football fans left. When Star India lost the IPL to Viacom18 for television, a chunk of Hotstar’s audience disappeared. Sports subscribers are transient customers, not loyal users.
The biggest risk JioHotstar faces is over-reliance on sports as an acquisition tool. The moment another player outbids them for the next big cricket tournament, the subscriber count will take a hit. And because the platform hasn’t aggressively built a must-watch entertainment library, it doesn’t have a strong enough safety net.
To sustain itself in the long run, JioHotstar needs to shift gears. It can’t just be a place to watch the match—it has to be a place to stay after the match. That means investing in originals, licensing compelling movies, and creating long-form entertainment that keeps users engaged.
Right now, JioHotstar’s success is built on borrowed time. The challenge ahead is simple: can it move beyond being a sports streaming service and build a platform that people wouldn’t dream of leaving?