Blockbuster Inc.

views updated Jun 27 2018

Blockbuster Inc.

One Blockbuster Plaza
101 Elm Street
Dallas, Texas 75270
U.S.A.
Telephone: (214) 854-3000
Toll Free: (800) 224-2677
Fax: (214) 854-4848
Web site: http://www.blockbuster.com

Public Company
Incorporated:
1982 as Cook Data Services
Employees: 37,000
Sales: $2.1 billion (1998)
Stock Exchanges: New York London
Ticker Symbol: BBI
NAIC: 53223 Video Tape and Disc Rental

Blockbuster Inc. is a leader in the field of video and video disk rental. With approximately 27 percent of the U.S. market share, Blockbuster operates about 6,500 video stores, serving more than 87 million customers in the United States, its territories, and 25 other nations. Founded in the mid-1980s as an alternative to small, local operations with limited video rental selection, the company grew quickly into a nationwide chain, with other interests in the entertainment industry as well, including music retailing. In 1994, Blockbuster became a wholly owned subsidiary of Viacom Inc., allowing Viacom the financial resources to proceed with its bid for Paramount Communications. Viacom retained total control of Blockbuster until its 1999 initial public offering of 31 million shares (about 18 percent) of Blockbusters stock. In the late 1990s, Blockbuster faced challenges brought about by new ownership, increased competition, and a relatively soft market for videos. Nevertheless, the company has coped admirably by refocusing its efforts on its core video rental business. In 1999, Blockbuster boasted a store within a ten-minute drive of virtually every major neighborhood in the United States and strove to guarantee the availability of new video releases in most markets.

An Immediate Hit in the Mid-1980s

Blockbuster traces its history to the formation of Cook Data Services, Inc., in 1982. This company was founded by David Cook to supply computer software services to Texass oil and gas industry. When the industry went bust, the company was left without a strong customer base. Cook was searching for another source of revenue when his wife, Sandy, a movie fan, suggested entering the video rental business.

Cook learned that the video rental field was highly fragmented. Most stores were relatively modest family operations that carried a small selection of former big hit movies. Providing a large selection of movies required a large investment of capital, since distributors typically charged approximately $70 per tape. In addition, tapes were generally not displayed, but kept behind the counter to discourage theft, and had to be fetched and laboriously signed out to the customer. Cook saw that operations could be greatly streamlined by a computerized system for inventory control and check out, something his software background prepared him to develop.

After Sandy Cook conducted several months of research into the video rental industry, David Cook sold his oil and gas software business to its managers and entered the movie rental business. In October 1985, Cook opened the first Blockbuster Video outlet in Dallas. With 8,000 tapes covering 6,500 titles, it had an inventory many times larger than that of its nearest competitor. In addition, tapes were displayed on shelves throughout the store, as in a bookstore, so that customers could pick them up and carry them to the front desk for check out. A magnetic strip on each video and sensors at the door discouraged theft. Computers were used to keep track of inventory, and a laser scanning system, which used barcodes on the tapes and on members cards, simplified and reduced the time involved in conducting transactions.

The first Blockbuster store was an immediate hit. The Cooks discovered that the public had a much greater appetite for renting video movies than anyone had previously suspected. People were interested not just in seeing hit movies they had missed in the theaters but also in a broad variety of other features.

By summer 1986, Cook had expanded the Blockbuster concept to three additional stores. To reflect the different nature of the company, Cook Data Services became Blockbuster Entertainment Corporation in June 1986. In September, the company set out to raise money for further expansion with an initial stock offering. However, days before the sale was to take place, a financial columnist wrote a damaging article citing Cooks background in the oil industry and questioning the companys know-how in the video field. The article caused the equity offering to be canceled, and without this infusion of cash, Blockbuster began to run out of money. The company finished 1986 with a loss of $3.2 million.

In February 1987, however, Cook sold one-third of Blockbuster to a group of three investors, who were all former associates at another company, Waste Management, Inc. Wayne Huizenga had in 1972 co-founded Waste Management, which grew to be the largest garbage disposal business in the world, and served as its president and chief operating officer until 1984, when he retired. John Melk, the president of Waste Managements international division, was first to invest in a Blockbuster franchise. Joined by Donald Flynn, the chief financial officer of Waste Management, the group invested $18.6 million in Blockbuster stock.

New Management and Aggressive Expansion in the Late 1980s

With this move, Cook surrendered future control of Blockbuster, and Huizenga became the dominant voice in determining the companys future. Where Cook had envisioned growth through franchising, selling Blockbusters name and computer system to individual entrepreneurs, Huizenga foresaw growth through company ownership of stores. In April 1987, two months after the men from Waste Management bought into Blockbuster, Cook left the company. Soon thereafter, the companys headquarters were moved to Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

By June 1987, Blockbuster owned 15 stores and franchised 20 others. With this base, Huizenga set out to transform Blockbuster into the industrys dominant player. He kept most of Cooks policies, such as store hours from ten a.m. to midnight every day; a three-day rental policy, which encouraged customers to rent more than one tape at once; and a broad selection of titles. Despite conventional wisdom that the video tape rental business was heavily dependent on hits, 70 percent of Blockbusters rental revenues came from non-hit movies, which had the added benefit of being less expensive to purchase from distributors. In addition, Blockbusters management decided to eschew revenue from X-rated adult films, opting instead for a family environment.

With these policies in place, Blockbuster set out on a program of aggressive expansion. The company began to buy back franchised operations with the goal of 60 percent company-owned Blockbuster outlets. In addition, Wayne Huizenga began to buy up chains of video stores that already dominated their local markets, using this as a shortcut to quick expansion. In March 1987, Blockbuster bought Southern Video Partnership as part of this policy. Two months later, it purchased Movies To Go, Inc., of St. Louis, for $14.5 million.

To support its expansion, Blockbuster established six regional offices, including a distribution center in Dallas that prepared tapes to be placed in stores. By the end of 1987, Blockbuster was operating 133 stores, and had become the countrys fifth-largest video chain in terms of revenue. Sales rose from $7.4 million in 1986 to $43.2 million that year.

Blockbuster continued its ambitious expansion program in 1988. In March, the company purchased Video Library, Inc., for $6.4 million plus stock. The following month, Blockbuster made a deal with the United Cable Television Corporation (UCTC) to open 100 franchised stores over the next two-and-a-half years. In addition, UCTC purchased five percent of Blockbusters stock for $12.25 million. By November, this stake had risen to 20 percent. With 200 stores, Blockbuster had become the largest video rental chain in the country. At the end of the year, the companys number of stores had risen to 415.

In January 1989, Blockbuster finalized its purchase of Las Vegas-based Major Video, Inc., the countrys fourth-largest video rental chain, for $92.5 million. It also purchased Oklahoma Entertainment, Inc. The following month brought the purchase of Vector Video, Inc., and Video Superstores Master Limited Partnership, which, with 106 stores, had been Blockbusters largest franchisee. By June 1989, two years after Huizengas takeover, the company ran 700 stores. Sales had tripled, profits nearly quadrupled, and the value of the companys stock had risen sevenfold.

Despite these gains, in April 1989, Blockbusters efforts to buy up other chains with stock suffered a setback when an analyst at a large stock brokerage issued a report condemning what he considered to be the companys misleading accounting practices. In calculating its earnings, Blockbuster spread out the costs of purchasing video store chains and building new stores over a forty-year period, and also spread out the cost of buying large numbers of hit tapes over three years, much longer than tapes retained their value. In addition, the company relied on one-time-only franchise fees for 28 percent of its revenue. Despite this criticism, Blockbuster declined to change its accounting practices, and the companys stock price eventually regained its former level.

Company Perspectives:

The Blockbuster business model provides an advantage over other large home video chains and significant advantage over single store competitors. The key elements of this business model are to: provide a large number of copies and broad selection of movie titles; operate conveniently located and highly visible stores; offer superior and consistent customer service; optimize our pricing to local market conditions; nationally advertise and market our Blockbuster brand name and the differences between us and our competitors; use our extensive customer transaction database to effectively operate and market our business; and improve our efficiency and lower our costs through self distribution.

In November 1989, Blockbusters largest shareholder, the United Artists Entertainment Company, announced that it would sell its 12 percent holding in the company, having previously sold its 28 franchised Blockbuster stores, in an effort to streamline its own business holdings. Worries that the video rental industry was reaching a saturation point cast doubts on Blockbusters ability to keep opening stores indefinitely.

Foreign Expansion and Diversification in the Early 1990s

One response to this concern was to look to markets outside the United States for growth. Accordingly, original investor John Melk was dispatched to start up a British subsidiary, with the companys first foreign store to be opened in South London called the Ritz. Blockbusters management continued to maintain that since the video superstore concept was open for anyone to copy, it needed to grab market share as fast as possible in order to exploit its ground-breaking concept. Carrying out this philosophy, the company opened its 1,000th store before the end of 1989.

To increase business, Blockbuster embarked on a $25 million ad campaign, and also undertook joint promotions with such fast food outlets as Dominos Pizza and McDonalds. In addition, the company accelerated foreign expansion, augmenting its operations in Britain and planning for operations in Australia and the rest of Western Europe. In the United States, the chain had opened its 1,200th store by June 1990; new outlets opened at a rate of one a day.

In October 1990, Blockbuster announced plans to cooperate with Den Fujita, the company that ran McDonalds franchises in Japan, in the development and franchising of video rental stores in that country. The following month, Blockbuster made its largest acquisition to date, when it acquired Erols, a video store chain with 200 outlets on the East Coast and in the Midwest, for $30 million, including cash, notes, and debt assumption.

Although Blockbuster continued its strong pace of new store openings in 1990, the slowing growth of the video rental industry was becoming evident. Though the companys earnings grew an astronomical 114 percent in 1988, they contracted to a still-impressive 93 percent rate of growth in 1989, followed by a rate of 48 percent in 1990. In keeping with this trend, first quarter financial results for 1991 were disappointing. Huizenga blamed the Gulf War for keeping people interested in television news instead of rented videos. In early May, Cox Communications, one of the companys franchisers, announced that it would sell all 82 of its Blockbuster stores.

Faced with a rapidly maturing industry, Blockbuster began to expand its offerings to maintain profitability. The company began to offer video game equipment and Sega Genesis video games at some of its stores. The company considered selling audio cassettes and compact disks. Blockbuster also acquired the right to market tapes of the 1992 Olympic games.

In a further effort to encourage rentals, the company launched an advertising campaign themed Win in a Flash, and made an agreement with the Showtime cable network for a joint promotion. In August 1991, Blockbuster dropped its rental price for hit movies for the first three months after their release and shortened the time they were taken out, as a further step to raise earnings. In an effort to ensure that the company would be just as good at running video stores over the long haul as it was at opening them, Blockbuster hired more senior executives with long-term experience in the retail field.

In addition to these efforts to increase earnings in the United States, Blockbuster increased its foreign efforts. Along with its operations in the United Kingdom and Japan, the company found markets in Europe, Australia, and Latin America. With 30 stores already established in Britain, Blockbuster announced in November 1991 a large expansion in that country, designed to make it the nations number one video rental chain. Further foreign involvement came later that month, when Philips Electronics N.V., a Dutch firm, agreed to invest $66 million in the company. As a result of this partnership, Blockbuster said that it would market Philipss newly introduced interactive compact disk systems and software in its stores. Five months later, Philips purchased an additional six million shares to raise its investment to $149 million.

To streamline its corporate management, Blockbuster bought a large office building in Florida and consolidated the companys five regional offices. As Wall Street pundits continued to predict that Blockbusters success was short-lived, and that the video rental industry would be made obsolete by new technologies, Blockbusters systemwide sales of $1.5 billion in 1991 earned $89 million. By the end of the year, the company had opened stores in Japan, Chile, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Spain, Australia, New Zealand, and Guam.

In further overseas expansion, Blockbuster bought Citivision plc, the largest video rental chain in Britain, for $135 million in January 1992, anticipating that this property would provide valuable exposure in the United Kingdom, and a jump-ing-off point for further European growth. The company hoped that, through joint ventures, international operations would contribute a quarter of revenues by 1995. With 952 stores in nine foreign countries, Blockbuster began to intensify its efforts to expand both in products and geographically.

Key Dates:

1985:
The first Blockbuster video store opens in Dallas.
1986:
Blockbuster goes public.
1987:
Founder David Cook leaves the company; company headquarters move to Fort Lauderdale.
1989:
Blockbuster opens its first stores in London and in Canada.
1992:
Blockbuster acquires Sound Warehouse and Music Plus chains to create Blockbuster Music stores.
1994:
Media giant Viacom Inc. acquires Blockbuster.
1996:
Company headquarters move to Dallas.
1999:
Viacom holds an initial public offering of Blockbuster shares on the New York stock exchange.

In October 1992, Blockbuster embarked on a series of agreements that were designed to expand the companys operations beyond its core movie rental business. Blockbuster bought Music Plus and Sound Warehouse from Shamrock Holdings, a California company, for $185 million. One month later, Blockbuster entered into an agreement with the British conglomerate Virgin Group plc to set up megastores in the United States, Europe, and Australia, In December 1992, the first such store in the United States opened in Los Angeles, the precursor to a network of stores which Huizenga envisioned not only renting videos, but also selling and renting music, computer programs, and games, and containing high-tech virtual reality entertainment arcades. The company also hoped to improve on the traditionally low profits of music retailing by adding other, more profitable products.

By 1993, the distinctive bright blue and yellow Blockbuster logo adorned more than 3,400 video stores worldwide, about one-third of them overseas. Late in January of that year, Blockbuster branched out further, paying $25 million for a one-third, controlling share in Republic pictures, a movie and television production and distribution company based in Hollywood. Republics most valuable asset was its film library of television shows and films, including several John Wayne movies and the hit television series Bonanza. In March 1993, Blockbuster also purchased 48.2 percent of Spelling Entertainment, a producer of popular television shows with a large library of past programs. Moreover, Blockbuster began construction of a prototype family entertainment center in Florida.

The Controversial Viacom Merger: 1994

With its ever-growing number of corporate activities, Blockbuster was committed to diversification as a means of ensuring its future in the entertainment industry in the face of the potential onslaught of new formatsvideo-on-demand and satellite TVand the shift from rentals to lower-priced tapes. In September 1993, Huizengas Blockbuster makeover hit full stride when the company proposed a $4.7 billion merger with media giant Viacom Inc..

Toward that end, Blockbuster invested heavily in Viacom, reportedly to help strengthen Viacoms bid to purchase Paramount Communications against rival QVC Network Inc. Viacom did win the war for Paramount, but the merger talks with Blockbuster stalled, and the move cost Blockbuster a great deal as Blockbuster shareholders lost confidence in the company and wondered if its investment in Viacom would pay off. By April 1994, Blockbusters and Viacoms stock had tumbled dramatically.

Blockbusters glory days appeared to be over. Insiders assessed that the company was suffering from dramatic changes in the industry. Specifically, with competition stiffening due to newly emerging formats, the video industrys meteoric growth began to level off. Moreover, there was trouble internally. The merger between Blockbuster and Viacom, though eventually effected, had been rough, and Viacom was reportedly depending heavily upon Blockbusters cash to help pay its debts and have money for future investments.

In addition, leadership at Blockbuster seemed unstable. Wayne Huizenga ceded his leadership role in the company in September 1994 and was replaced as president by Steven Ber-rard, who focused on rapidly expanding the company during his year-and-a-half on the job. Amid legal enablements involving earlier business dealings, however, Berrard left to be succeeded by Bill Fields in March 1996. Soon thereafter, Fields was named CEO as well and during his brief tenure attempted to revitalize the companys image. Specifically, he set about transforming Blockbusters video rental stores into whole entertainment centers, selling t-shirts, toys, snacks, books, magazines, and CDs as well as selling and renting videos. Fields also oversaw the companys move from Fort Lauderdale to Dallas to be closer to its new, centralized distribution center. He also downsized the companys workforce, paring back about one-third of its senior staff and two-thirds of its overall staff before he left for a position at Wal-Mart. In 1996, in the wake of slipping sales, Blockbusters worth was estimated at $4.6 billion with its stock worth only 50 percent of its 1993 price. Parent Viacoms stock price was 60 percent off its former high.

New Leadership and Independence in the Late 1990s

By the time John Antioco took over in the summer of 1997, Blockbuster was floundering. New releases werent making it to stores by their street date, and the loss of so many key people with the companys move left it stumbling in basic store operations. Cash flow for the second quarter of 1997 at Blockbuster dropped a precipitous 70 percent. As a result, the chain scaled back on expansion and moved to refocus on its core business, video rentals. In late 1997, it exited the computer business, closing its PC Upgrades stores only months after acquiring the business.

Under Antioco, the company revived its old tag line Make it a Blockbuster Night, and sought to smooth out the problems with its state-of-the-art distribution system, which allowed it to use a customer database to determine store sites and inventory based on consumer preferences. Although the company had fallen on hard times, it still controlled 25 percent of the $16 billion a year home video market. Under Antioco, the company signed revenue sharing agreements with the major Hollywood studios, making them financial partners. Now instead of paying $65 for new tapes, Blockbuster paid $4 and turned over 30 to 40 percent of the rental income to the studio. In 1998, the company boasted that it had served nearly 60 million people who rented more than 970 million movies and video games. In early 1999, it continued to expand overseas, purchasing a Hong Kong video chain, and at home with the acquisition of Denver-based Video Visions and Videoland in Oregon and Washington. The chain was making money again, and its share of the home video retail market increased to 31 percent. Still the video market was shrinking, dropping 2.6 percent in 1998 and 8.4 percent in the first half of 1999. While revenues at Blockbuster were increasing, the company was still reporting losses, of $336.6 million in 1998, for example, compared with a $318.2 million loss in 1997.

Nevertheless, Blockbuster seemed to be effecting a turnaround, when in August 1999 Viacom made an initial public offering of around 18 percent of its stock in Blockbuster, with intentions of divesting it completely. The offering raised only $465 million; clearly, investors did not take the future of Blockbuster for granted and the company needed to search for a viable business model. Toward that end, management worked on increasing Blockbusters market share in the growing VHA/DVD tape and disk rental category. Moreover, it also made a commitment to exploring new distribution channels, such as those offered by e-commerce.

Principal Competitors

Hollywood Entertainment Corporation; Movie Gallery Inc.

Further Reading

Chakravarty, Subrata N., Give Em Variety, Forbes, May 2, 1988, pp. 5456.

Calonius, Erik, Meet the King of Video, Fortune, June 4, 1990, p. 208.

Castle, Steven, Waynes World, Robb Report, February 1993.

Carlson, Gus, The Next Disney, Miami Herald, March 14, 1993, p. 1K.

DeGeorge, Gail, Blockbusters Grainy picture, Business Week, May 20, 1991, pp. 4041.

, Call It Blockbummer, Business Week, May 9, 1994, p. 31.

, The Video King Who Wont Hit Pause, Business Week, January 22, 1990, pp. 4748.

, They Dont Call It Blockbuster for Nothing, Business Week, October 19, 1992.

Engardio, Pete, and Antonio N. Fine, Will This Video Chain Stay on Fast Forward? Business Week, June 12, 1989, pp. 7274.

Feare, Tom, High-Tech DC; Just the Right Ticket for Blockbuster Video, Modern Materials Handling, October 31, 1998, p. 34.

Forest, Stephanie Anderson, The Script Doctor Is in at Blockbuster Again, Business Week, July 28, 1997, p. 101.

Govoni, Stephen J., Blockbuster Battles the Shorts, CFO, December 1991.

, Hot Ticket, Information Week, August 30, 1993, p. 28.

Katel, Peter, New Kid on the Block, Buster, Newsweek, January 11, 1993.

Kirchdoerffer, Ed, Blockbuster Set to Rebuild, Kidscreen, October 1, 1997, p. R7.

Miller, Michael, Coming Soon to Your Local Video Store: Big Brother, Wall Street Journal, December 26, 1990, p. 9.

Not a Blockbuster Debut, Ottawa Citizen, August 12, 1999, p. F3.

Roberts, Johnnie L., Chips Off the Block, Newsweek, February 20, 1995, p. 42.

, Hit the Eject Button, Newsweek, August 18, 1997, p. 50.

Savitz, Eric J., An End to Fast Forward?, Barrons, December 11, 1989, pp. 13, 4346.

Siklos, Richard, Blockbuster Finally Gets It Right, Business Week, March 8, 1999, p. 64.

Silverman, Edward R., Global Go-Getters, International Business, October 1992.

USA/UK Blockbuster Strikes from Home Base, Sunday Times, November 10, 1991.

Walsh, Matt, Rent Things, Florida Trend, March 1993.

Whitford, David, The Predators Ball Club, M, June 1992, pp. 8085.

Elizabeth Rourke

updated by Carrie Rothburd

Blockbuster Inc.

views updated May 11 2018

Blockbuster Inc.

1201 Elm Street
Dallas, Texas 75270
U.S.A.
Telephone: (214) 854-3000
Fax: (214) 854-4848
Web site: http://www.blockbuster.com
Wew

Public Company
Incorporated:
1982 as Cook Data Services
Employees: 84,300
Sales: $6 billion (2004)
Stock Exchanges: New York London
Ticker Symbol: BBI
NAIC: 532230 Video Tape and Disc Rental

Blockbuster Inc. is the largest video rental chain in the world providing in-home rental, retail movie, and game entertainment. Blockbuster operates about 9,100 video stores, serving approximately three million customers each day in the United States, its territories, and 24 other nations. Founded in the mid-1980s as an alternative to small, local operations with limited video rental selection, the company grew quickly into a global chain, offering videos, DVDs, and video games in its stores as well as through an online subscription program. Viacom sold off a minority stake in the company in 1999 and sold its remaining interest in 2004. The company appeared to be in a state of flux during 2005 due to litigation surrounding its "no late fees" policy, lost income from extended viewing fees, a failed attempt to merge with competitor Hollywood Entertainment Corporation, and corporate raider Carl Icahn's efforts to oust CEO John Antioco.

An Immediate Hit in the Mid-1980s

Blockbuster traces its history to the formation of Cook Data Services, Inc., in 1982. This company was founded by David Cook to supply computer software services to Texas's oil and gas industry. When the industry went bust, the company was left without a strong customer base. Cook was searching for another source of revenue when his wife, Sandy, a movie fan, suggested entering the video rental business.

Cook learned that the video rental field was highly fragmented. Most stores were relatively modest family operations that carried a small selection of former big hit movies. Providing a large selection of movies required a large investment of capital, since distributors typically charged approximately $70 per tape. In addition, tapes were generally not displayed, but kept behind the counter to discourage theft, and had to be fetched and laboriously signed out to the customer. Cook saw that operations could be greatly streamlined by a computerized system for inventory control and checkout, something his software background prepared him to develop.

After Sandy Cook conducted several months of research into the video rental industry, David Cook sold his oil and gas software business to its managers and entered the movie rental business. In October 1985, Cook opened the first Blockbuster Video outlet in Dallas. With 8,000 tapes covering 6,500 titles, it had an inventory many times larger than that of its nearest competitor. In addition, tapes were displayed on shelves throughout the store, as in a bookstore, so that customers could pick them up and carry them to the front desk for checkout. A magnetic strip on each video and sensors at the door discouraged theft. Computers were used to keep track of inventory, and a laser scanning system, which used barcodes on the tapes and on members' cards, simplified and reduced the time involved in conducting transactions.

The first Blockbuster store was an immediate hit. The Cooks discovered that the public had a much greater appetite for renting video movies than anyone had previously suspected. People were interested not just in seeing hit movies they had missed in the theaters but also in a broad variety of other features.

By summer 1986, Cook had expanded the Blockbuster concept to three additional stores. To reflect the different nature of the company, Cook Data Services became Blockbuster Entertainment Corporation in June 1986. In September, the company set out to raise money for further expansion with an initial stock offering. Days before the sale was to take place, however, a financial columnist wrote a damaging article citing Cook's background in the oil industry and questioning the company's know-how in the video field. The article caused the equity offering to be canceled, and without this infusion of cash, Blockbuster began to run out of money. The company finished 1986 with a loss of $3.2 million.

In February 1987, however, Cook sold one-third of Blockbuster to a group of three investors, who were all former associates at another company, Waste Management, Inc. Wayne Huizenga had in 1972 cofounded Waste Management, which grew to be the largest garbage disposal business in the world, and served as its president and chief operating officer until 1984, when he retired. John Melk, the president of Waste Management's international division, was first to invest in a Blockbuster franchise. Joined by Donald Flynn, the chief financial officer of Waste Management, the group invested $18.6 million in Blockbuster stock.

New Management and Aggressive Expansion in the Late 1980s

With this move, Cook surrendered future control of Blockbuster, and Huizenga became the dominant voice in determining the company's future. Where Cook had envisioned growth through franchising, selling Blockbuster's name and computer system to individual entrepreneurs, Huizenga foresaw growth through company ownership of stores. In April 1987, two months after the men from Waste Management bought into Blockbuster, Cook left the company. Soon thereafter, the company's headquarters were moved to Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

By June 1987, Blockbuster owned 15 stores and franchised 20 others. With this base, Huizenga set out to transform Blockbuster into the industry's dominant player. He kept most of Cook's policies, such as store hours from 10:00 a.m. to midnight every day; a three-day rental policy, which encouraged customers to rent more than one tape at once; and a broad selection of titles. Despite conventional wisdom that the videotape rental business was heavily dependent on hits, 70 percent of Blockbuster's rental revenues came from non-hit movies, which had the added benefit of being less expensive to purchase from distributors. In addition, Blockbuster's management decided to eschew revenue from X-rated adult films, opting instead for a family environment.

With these policies in place, Blockbuster set out on a program of aggressive expansion. The company began to buy back franchised operations with the goal of 60 percent company-owned Blockbuster outlets. In addition, Wayne Huizenga began to buy up chains of video stores that already dominated their local markets, using this as a shortcut to quick expansion. In March 1987, Blockbuster bought Southern Video Partnership as part of this policy. Two months later, it purchased Movies To Go, Inc., of St. Louis, for $14.5 million.

To support its expansion, Blockbuster established six regional offices, including a distribution center in Dallas that prepared tapes to be placed in stores. By the end of 1987, Blockbuster was operating 133 stores and had become the country's fifth largest video chain in terms of revenue. Sales rose from $7.4 million in 1986 to $43.2 million that year.

Blockbuster continued its ambitious expansion program in 1988. In March, the company purchased Video Library, Inc., for $6.4 million plus stock. The following month, Blockbuster made a deal with the United Cable Television Corporation (UCTC) to open 100 franchised stores over the next two-and-a-half years. In addition, UCTC purchased 5 percent of Blockbuster's stock for $12.25 million. By November, this stake had risen to 20 percent. With 200 stores, Blockbuster had become the largest video rental chain in the country. At the end of the year, the company's number of stores had risen to 415.

In January 1989, Blockbuster finalized its purchase of Las Vegas-based Major Video, Inc., the country's fourth largest video rental chain, for $92.5 million. It also purchased Oklahoma Entertainment, Inc. The following month brought the purchase of Vector Video, Inc., and Video Superstores Master LP, which, with 106 stores, had been Blockbuster's largest franchisee. By June 1989, two years after Huizenga's takeover, the company ran 700 stores. Sales had tripled, profits nearly quadrupled, and the value of the company's stock had risen seven-fold.

Despite these gains, in April 1989, Blockbuster's efforts to buy up other chains with stock suffered a setback when an analyst at a large stock brokerage issued a report condemning what he considered to be the company's misleading accounting practices. In calculating its earnings, Blockbuster spread out the costs of purchasing video store chains and building new stores over a 40-year period, and also spread out the cost of buying large numbers of hit tapes over three years, much longer than tapes retained their value. In addition, the company relied on one-time-only franchise fees for 28 percent of its revenue. Despite this criticism, Blockbuster declined to change its accounting practices, and the company's stock price eventually regained its former level.

In November 1989, Blockbuster's largest shareholder, the United Artists Entertainment Company, announced that it would sell its 12 percent holding in the company, having previously sold its 28 franchised Blockbuster stores, in an effort to streamline its own business holdings. Worries that the video rental industry was reaching a saturation point cast doubts on Blockbuster's ability to keep opening stores indefinitely.

Company Perspectives:

We help people transform ordinary nights into BLOCKBUSTER nights by being their complete source for movies and games.

Foreign Expansion and Diversification in the Early 1990s

One response to this concern was to look to markets outside the United States for growth. Accordingly, original investor John Melk was dispatched to start up a British subsidiary, with the company's first foreign store to be opened in South London called the Ritz. Blockbuster's management continued to maintain that since the video "superstore" concept was open for anyone to copy, it needed to grab market share as fast as possible in order to exploit its ground-breaking concept. Carry-ing out this philosophy, the company opened its 1,000th store before the end of 1989.

To increase business, Blockbuster embarked on a $25 million ad campaign, and also undertook joint promotions with fast-food outlets such as Domino's Pizza and McDonald's. In addition, the company accelerated foreign expansion, augmenting its operations in Britain and planning for operations in Australia and the rest of Western Europe. In the United States, the chain had opened its 1,200th store by June 1990; new outlets opened at a rate of one a day.

In October 1990, Blockbuster announced plans to cooperate with Den Fujita, the company that ran McDonald's franchises in Japan, in the development and franchising of video rental stores in that country. The following month, Blockbuster made its largest acquisition to date, when it acquired Erol's, a video store chain with 200 outlets on the East Coast and in the Midwest, for $30 million, including cash, notes, and debt assumption.

Although Blockbuster continued its strong pace of new store openings in 1990, the slowing growth of the video rental industry was becoming evident. Even though the company's earnings grew an astronomical 114 percent in 1988, they contracted to a still-impressive 93 percent rate of growth in 1989, followed by a rate of 48 percent in 1990. In keeping with this trend, first quarter financial results for 1991 were disappointing. Huizenga blamed the Gulf War for keeping people interested in television news instead of rented videos. In early May, Cox Communications, one of the company's franchisers, announced that it would sell all 82 of its Blockbuster stores.

Faced with a rapidly maturing industry, Blockbuster began to expand its offerings to maintain profitability. The company began to offer video game equipment and Sega Genesis video games at some of its stores. The company considered selling audio cassettes and compact disks. Blockbuster also acquired the right to market tapes of the 1992 Olympic games.

In a further effort to encourage rentals, the company launched an advertising campaign themed "Win in a Flash," and made an agreement with the Showtime cable network for a joint promotion. In August 1991, Blockbuster dropped its rental price for hit movies for the first three months after their release and shortened the time they were taken out, as a further step to raise earnings. In an effort to ensure that the company would be just as good at running video stores over the long haul as it was at opening them, Blockbuster hired more senior executives with long-term experience in the retail field.

In addition to these efforts to increase earnings in the United States, Blockbuster increased its foreign efforts. Along with its operations in the United Kingdom and Japan, the company found markets in Europe, Australia, and Latin America. With 30 stores already established in Britain, Blockbuster announced in November 1991 a large expansion in that country, designed to make it the nation's number one video rental chain. Further foreign involvement came later that month, when Philips Electronics N.V., a Dutch firm, agreed to invest $66 million in the company. As a result of this partnership, Blockbuster said that it would market Philips's newly introduced interactive compact disc systems and software in its stores. Five months later, Philips purchased an additional six million shares to raise its investment to $149 million.

To streamline its corporate management, Blockbuster bought a large office building in Florida and consolidated the company's five regional offices. As Wall Street pundits continued to predict that Blockbuster's success was short-lived, and that the video rental industry would be made obsolete by new technologies, Blockbuster's systemwide sales of $1.5 billion in 1991 earned $89 million. By the end of the year, the company had opened stores in Japan, Chile, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Spain, Australia, New Zealand, and Guam.

In further overseas expansion, Blockbuster bought Citivision PLC, the largest video rental chain in Britain, for $135 million in January 1992, anticipating that this property would provide valuable exposure in the United Kingdom, and a jumping-off point for further European growth. The company hoped that, through joint ventures, international operations would contribute a quarter of revenues by 1995. With 952 stores in nine foreign countries, Blockbuster began to intensify its efforts to expand both in products and geographically.

In October 1992, Blockbuster embarked on a series of agreements that were designed to expand the company's operations beyond its core movie rental business. Blockbuster bought Music Plus and Sound Warehouse from Shamrock Holdings, a California company, for $185 million. One month later, Blockbuster entered into an agreement with the British conglomerate Virgin Group plc to set up "megastores" in the United States, Europe, and Australia. In December 1992, the first such store in the United States opened in Los Angeles, the precursor to a network of stores that Huizenga envisioned not only renting videos, but also selling and renting music, computer programs, and games, and containing high-tech "virtual reality" entertainment arcades. The company also hoped to improve on the traditionally low profits of music retailing by adding other, more profitable products.

Key Dates:

1985:
The first Blockbuster video store opens in Dallas.
1986:
Blockbuster goes public.
1987:
Founder David Cook leaves the company; company headquarters move to Fort Lauderdale.
1989:
Blockbuster opens its first stores in London and in Canada.
1992:
Blockbuster acquires the Sound Warehouse and Music Plus chains to create Blockbuster Music stores.
1994:
Media giant Viacom Inc. acquires Blockbuster.
1996:
Company headquarters move to Dallas.
1999:
Viacom spins off a minority stake in Blockbuster.
2001:
Blockbuster debuts on the New York Stock Exchange.
2004:
Viacom sells its remaining interest in Blockbuster.
2005:
The company pays $630,000 to settle litigation related to its new "no late fees" policy.

By 1993, the distinctive bright blue and yellow Blockbuster logo adorned more than 3,400 video stores worldwide, about one-third of them overseas. Late in January of that year, Block-buster branched out further, paying $25 million for a one-third, controlling share in Republic Pictures, a movie and television production and distribution company based in Hollywood. Republic's most valuable asset was its film library of television shows and films, including several John Wayne movies and the hit television series Bonanza. In March 1993, Blockbuster also purchased 48.2 percent of Spelling Entertainment, a producer of popular television shows with a large library of past programs. Moreover, Blockbuster began construction of a prototype family entertainment center in Florida.

The Controversial Viacom Merger: 1994

With its ever-growing number of corporate activities, Blockbuster was committed to diversification as a means of ensuring its future in the entertainment industry in the face of the potential onslaught of new formatsvideo-on-demand and satellite TVand the shift from rentals to lower-priced tapes. In September 1993, Huizenga's Blockbuster makeover hit full stride when the company proposed a $4.7 billion merger with media giant Viacom Inc..

Toward that end, Blockbuster invested heavily in Viacom, reportedly to help strengthen Viacom's bid to purchase Paramount Communications against rival QVC Network Inc. Viacom did win the war for Paramount, but the merger talks with Blockbuster stalled, and the move cost Blockbuster a great deal as Blockbuster shareholders lost confidence in the company and wondered if its investment in Viacom would pay off. By April 1994, Blockbuster's and Viacom's stock had tumbled dramatically.

Blockbuster's glory days appeared to be over. Insiders assessed that the company was suffering from dramatic changes in the industry. Specifically, with competition stiffening due to newly emerging formats, the video industry's meteoric growth began to level off. Moreover, there was trouble internally. The merger between Blockbuster and Viacom, though eventually effected, had been rough, and Viacom was reportedly depending heavily upon Blockbuster's cash to help pay its debts and have money for future investments.

In addition, leadership at Blockbuster seemed unstable. Wayne Huizenga ceded his leadership role in the company in September 1994 and was replaced as president by Steven Berrard, who focused on rapidly expanding the company during his year-and-a-half on the job. Amid legal entanglements involving earlier business dealings, however, Berrard left to be succeeded by Bill Fields in March 1996. Soon thereafter, Fields was named CEO as well and during his brief tenure attempted to revitalize the company's image. Specifically, he set about transforming Blockbuster's video rental stores into whole entertainment centers, selling t-shirts, toys, snacks, books, magazines, and CDs as well as selling and renting videos. Fields also oversaw the company's move from Fort Lauderdale to Dallas to be closer to its new, centralized distribution center. He also downsized the company's workforce, paring back about one-third of its senior staff and two-thirds of its overall staff before he left for a position at Wal-Mart. In 1996, in the wake of slipping sales, Blockbuster's worth was estimated at $4.6 billion with its stock worth only 50 percent of its 1993 price. Parent Viacom's stock price was 60 percent off its former high.

New Leadership and Independence in the Late 1990s

By the time John Antioco took over in the summer of 1997, Blockbuster was floundering. New releases were not making it to stores by their "street date," and the loss of so many key people with the company's move left it stumbling in basic store operations. Cash flow for the second quarter of 1997 at Blockbuster dropped a precipitous 70 percent. As a result, the chain scaled back on expansion and moved to refocus on its core business, video rentals. In late 1997, it exited the computer business, closing its PC Upgrades stores only months after acquiring the business.

Under Antioco, the company revived its old tag line, "Make it a Blockbuster Night," and sought to smooth out the problems with its state-of-the-art distribution system, which allowed it to use a customer database to determine store sites and inventory based on consumer preferences. Although the company had fallen on hard times, it still controlled 25 percent of the $16 billion a year home video market. Under Antioco, the company signed "revenue sharing" agreements with the major Hollywood studios, making them financial partners. Now instead of paying $65 for new tapes, Blockbuster paid $4 and turned over 30 to 40 percent of the rental income to the studio. In 1998, the company boasted that it had served nearly 60 million people who rented more than 970 million movies and video games. In early 1999, it continued to expand overseas, purchasing a Hong Kong video chain, and at home with the acquisition of Denver-based Video Visions and Videoland in Oregon and Washington. The chain was making money again, and its share of the home video retail market increased to 31 percent. Still, the video market was shrinking, dropping 2.6 percent in 1998 and 8.4 percent in the first half of 1999. While revenues at Blockbuster were increasing, the company was still reporting losses, of $336.6 million in 1998, for example, compared with a $318.2 million loss in 1997.

Nevertheless, Blockbuster seemed to be effecting a turnaround, when in August 1999 Viacom made an initial public offering of around 18 percent of its stock in Blockbuster; it divested its remaining shares in 2004. The initial offering raised only $465 million; clearly, investors did not take the future of Blockbuster for granted and the company needed to search for a viable business model. Toward that end, management worked on increasing Blockbuster's market share in the growing VHA/DVD tape and disc rental category. Moreover, it also made a commitment to exploring new distribution channels, such as those offered by e-commerce.

Blockbuster in the New Millennium

During the early years of the new millennium, Blockbuster's competitors included cable and satellite companies offering video-on-demand movies, online movie rental firms offering mail-order rentals, and large retailers like Wal-Mart Stores that sold inexpensive movies and games. As such, Blockbuster continued to look for ways to remain competitive in the industry while shoring up sales and profits. In 2001, the company announced that it would reduce its VHS and video game inventory by 25 percent in order to give DVDs more shelf space. The company also created DEJ Productions, an independent film acquisition and distribution subsidiary, and signed a deal to distribute DIRECTV satellite systems through its stores. Blockbuster debuted on the New York Stock Exchange that year.

During 2003, the company began offering its customers an in-store subscription pass. This program was expanded in 2004 and enabled customers to rent unlimited movies for a monthly fee. The company also made several purchases, including Movie Trading Company and U.K.-based Gamestation. To compete with new online movie rental firms like NetFlix Inc., Blockbuster rolled out its Blockbuster Online subscription service, which offered DVDs delivered to customers' homes with no shipping charges. Chairman and CEO Antioco commented on Blockbuster's strategy in a July 2004 EQUIS release stating, "We realize the movie rental business alone won't give us the kind of growth we want in the future. That's why we're determined to transform Blockbuster from a place where you go to rent movies to a place where you go to rent, buy or trade movies and games, either in-store or online."

In December 2004, the company began running television ads touting its new "no late fees" policy. The new program, which eliminated daily late charges, was launched on January 1, 2005. Early that year, 47 states filed suit against the company for false advertising, claiming that customers had been charged fees for unreturned and late DVDs, videos, and games, despite the "no late fee" promotion. The suit claimed that in its advertising, Blockbuster had failed to reveal that customers who kept an item more than seven days would be charged the current selling price for the item. If the item was returned within 30 days, the customer would receive a refund, but would be charged a $1.25 restocking fee. In the end, Blockbuster agreed to pay $630,000 to settle the litigation.

At the same time, the company dropped its bid to buy its closest competitor, Hollywood Entertainment Corp., after the Federal Trade Commission delayed its ruling on the merger proposal. Corporate raider Carl IcahnBlockbuster's largest shareholderbegan to attack the company's strategy and made a play to oust several Blockbuster directors, including Antioco. In May, Blockbuster shareholders voted to appoint Icahn and two of his allies to the board. A new director's seat was created, allowing Antioco to remain chairman.

In the midst of the boardroom politics, Blockbuster's financial position came under fire when it announced in September 2005 that it would not pay a quarterly dividend for the first time since 1999. A major factor contributing to the company's financial woes was the elimination of late fees, which were responsible for approximately $250 million in operating income. Antioco stood behind the strategy, however, claiming it was crucial to Blockbuster's future success. Management expected that revenue from new and existing ventures would make up for lost income and leave Blockbuster well positioned for success in the years to come.

Principal Competitors

Hastings Entertainment Inc.; Movie Gallery Inc.; Netflix Inc.

Further Reading

Anderson, Stephanie, and Tom Lowry, "Blockbuster: The Sequel Revived," Business Week, September 16, 2002, p. 52.

"Big Blue Hastens Rollout of Online Subscriptions," Executive Quote and Information Service, July 26, 2004.

Calonius, Erik, "Meet the King of Video," Fortune, June 4, 1990, p. 208.

Castle, Steven, "Wayne's World," Robb Report, February 1993.

Carlson, Gus, "The Next Disney," Miami Herald, March 14, 1993, p. 1K.

Chakravarty, Subrata N., "Give 'Em Variety," Forbes, May 2, 1988, pp. 54-56.

DeGeorge, Gail, "Blockbuster's Grainy Picture," Business Week, May 20, 1991, pp. 40-41.

, "Call It Blockbummer," Business Week, May 9, 1994, p. 31.

, "The Video King Who Won't Hit Pause," Business Week, January 22, 1990, pp. 47-48.

, "They Don't Call It Blockbuster for Nothing," Business Week, October 19, 1992.

Desjardins, Doug, "Blockbuster Drops Bid to Buy Hollywood," DSN Retailing Today, April 11, 2005, pp. 3-5.

, "Blockbuster Shakes Up Board," DSN Retailing Today, May 23, 2005, pp. 5-7.

Engardio, Pete, and Antonio N. Fine, "Will This Video Chain Stay on Fast Forward?," Business Week, June 12, 1989, pp. 72-74.

Feare, Tom, "High-Tech DC; Just the Right Ticket for Blockbuster Video," Modern Materials Handling, October 31, 1998, p. 34.

Forest, Stephanie Anderson, "The Script Doctor Is In at BlockbusterAgain," Business Week, July 28, 1997, p. 101.

Govoni, Stephen J., "Blockbuster Battles the Shorts," CFO, December 1991.

, "Hot Ticket," Information Week, August 30, 1993, p. 28.

Katel, Peter, "New Kid on the Block, Buster," Newsweek, January 11, 1993.

Kirchdoerffer, Ed, "Blockbuster Set to Rebuild," Kidscreen, October 1, 1997, p. R7.

Miller, Michael, "Coming Soon to Your Local Video Store: Big Brother," Wall Street Journal, December 26, 1990, p. 9.

"Not a Blockbuster Debut," Ottawa Citizen, August 12, 1999, p. F3.

Roberts, Johnnie L., "Chips Off the Block," Newsweek, February 20, 1995, p. 42.

, "Hit the Eject Button," Newsweek, August 18, 1997, p. 50.

Peers, Martin, "Video Poker: At Blockbuster, New Strategies Raise Tensions Over Board Seats," Wall Street Journal, April 18, 2005, p. A1.

Savitz, Eric J., "An End to Fast Forward?," Barron's, December 11, 1989, pp. 13, 43-46.

Siklos, Richard, "Blockbuster Finally Gets It Right," Business Week, March 8, 1999, p. 64.

Silverman, Edward R., "Global Go-Getters," International Business, October 1992.

Sweeting, Paul, "B'buster Settles 'Late Fees' Claims," Video Business, April 4, 2005, p. 6.

"USA/UK Blockbuster Strikes from Home Base," Sunday Times, November 10, 1991.

Walsh, Matt, "Rent Things," Florida Trend, March 1993.

Whitford, David, "The Predator's Ball Club," M, June 1992, pp. 80-85.

"Will Big Blue Break Its Bank?," Home Media Retailing, September 2005, pp. 3-5.

                                        Elizabeth Rourke

     updates: Carrie Rothburd, Christina M. Stansell