A lot of people sign up for a streaming service for a single month, watch what they want, and then cancel it. So, in your example, Crave would only get $20 from that customer.
But, if they convince you to sign up for the entire year, they have gotten $200 from you, regardless of if you finished watching all of the content that you’re interested in.
The basic concept is that businesses are willing to give a discount for guaranteed money to prevent the chance that you might cancel early.
Because having less money now is more valuable to them than having a little more money in the future. There are a few things that cause this.
First, as a rule in life, a fixed amount of money is worth more now than in the future due to inflation.
Second, if they have money now, they can reinvest it. For streaming services this can mean licensing new content or doing marketing campaigns to increase their subscriber count, leading to more money in the future than you paying a slightly higher subscription fee.
Both of those factors are part of an economic concept called the “time value of money” if you want to learn more.
There’s also swipe fees / swipe charges / interchange fees / whichever label you want to use. Those start as a percentage of the transaction but reach an upper limit, which means when the yearly subscription cost is broken down to 12 individual months then there is added hassle on the behind-the-scenes to handle 12 times as many payments per year and so on and so forth.
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