AI Insights · Timothy · October 2022
Top 5 Film & Television Apps Performance in the UK for Q3 2022
Explore the performance of the top 5 Film & Television apps in the UK during Q3 2022, including download trends, revenue, and active user metrics.
In the third quarter of 2022, the top 5 Film & Television apps in the United Kingdom saw varying performance trends across downloads, revenue, and active users. Here is an overview of how each app fared, based on data from Sensor Tower.
Disney+ experienced notable fluctuations in both revenue and downloads. Weekly revenue peaked at approximately $1.3M at the end of June, then saw a general decline before rising again to about $1.2M by late August. Downloads followed a rising trend, starting from around 90K in late June and reaching a high of nearly 188K by the end of September. Active users also showed an upward trajectory, increasing from around 3.6M in late June to approximately 3.8M by the end of September.
Netflix maintained a relatively stable revenue stream, hovering around $300K to $360K per week. Downloads were fairly steady, ranging from about 73K to 91K weekly, with a slight peak in late July. Active users also remained consistent, averaging around 6.7M throughout the quarter.
Amazon Prime Video showed a steady increase in weekly revenue, peaking at nearly $183K at the end of August. Weekly downloads varied, with a notable peak of approximately 94K in late August. Active users saw a rise from about 1.8M in late June to over 2M by the end of August, followed by a slight decline to 1.76M by late September.
Paramount+ had a more volatile quarter. Revenue started at around $173K at the end of June, dropped significantly to around $31K by mid-July, and then fluctuated before ending at about $89K in late September. Downloads mirrored this trend, starting at around 140K in late June and dipping to about 38K in mid-September before recovering to around 52K by the end of the quarter. Active users showed a gradual increase from approximately 172K in late June to 148K by the end of September.
Finally, BBC iPlayer saw no revenue but maintained a stable download rate, ranging from about 41K to 81K weekly, with a peak in late July. Active users fluctuated, starting at around 697K in late June, peaking at approximately 794K in early September, and ending at about 687K by the end of the quarter.
For more detailed insights and data, visit Sensor Tower.