$9 for True Video On Demand HD Movies?

Movie fans have a lot of choices when it comes to how they're going to access a film. Theaters, DVDs, Blu-ray, mail rentals, digital rentals, digital downloads and video on demand are all viable options depending on a consumer's patience level.

Apparently, though, video on demand services are suffering because of the immediacy of DVDs. Once a new DVD (or Blu-ray disc) goes on sale, video on demand fans typically wait a month to see it show up through their cable carrier.

That month-long window is so irritating that a new study from Oliver Wyman shows that consumers say they'd pay as much as $9 to get an HD movie on demand on the same day as the DVD is released. That's a high price for instant gratification. At least you get a physical disc that you can bring to your friends' houses when you buy a DVD. Video on demand offerings stay put, virtually.

Right now, a typical high-def VOD flick costs $5.99. If studios and carriers agree to an $8.99 price point, they could see $5 to $10 billion more in sales by 2010. Of course, that probably means DVD sales would see a dip, but industry executives can see that one coming from miles away, anyhow. -Rachel Rosmarin

Yahoo! Finance

X