On a Disney earnings call Tuesday, CEO Bob Iger praised the growth of ESPN’s over-the-top streaming service, ESPN+. Launching last April, Iger said the network already has 2 million paid subscribers.

Via CNBC:

The company said in its fiscal first-quarter earnings report on Tuesday that ESPN+, which launched last year, has 2 million paying subscribers, double the number from five months ago. For $5 a month, customers get a selection of live baseball, soccer and hockey games as well as UFC fights and original content like “30 for 30” documentaries. “We expect the expansion of combat sports content on the streaming service to drive continued growth in the months ahead,” Disney CEO Bob Iger said on the earnings call with analysts.

As Patrick Crakes noted on Twitter, that makes ESPN stand out in the subscription video on demand landscape:

Aside from the WWE, I'm hard pressed to find another segmented SVOD subscription service with as many subs. Heck, in the whole SVOD product universe – to include mega giant Netflix – there's not many with 2M+ paying subs. https://t.co/AqiLpbORqr — Patrick Crakes (@Aquinas82nd) February 5, 2019

After the first UFC event on ESPN+ in January, ESPN said they’d added 500,000 subscribers just for that event, which is a pretty staggering figure. Of course, the company was also offering a one-month trial promotion for new signups. In the long haul, ESPN+ is going to have to keep adding subscribers to pay for content, and it’s going to have to keep adding content to attract subscribers, until it finds an equilibrium where it can sit profitably while retaining a customer base.

To that end, the impending launch of the Disney+ streaming service (featuring original Disney content and a large portion of Disney’s existing library) might offer another opportunity for good old fashioned corporate synergy. Iger mentioned that if technical hurdles were overcome, he’d like to see a potential discount for people who subscribed to both ESPN+ and Disney+, maybe with Hulu thrown in as well:

“Ultimately our goal would be to use the same tech platform to make it easier for people to sign up to all three should they want to use the same credit card, same username, same password, etc.,” Iger said on the call. In buying all three, the company “would give them an opportunity potentially at a discount or two for that matter,” he said.

Hulu is the main loser right now for Disney’s streaming division, with their losses somewhat inflated since they took on Fox’s stake in the company. But if ESPN+ has a sustainable user base of 2 million subscribers in less than a year, that bodes well for their streaming division’s future.

[CNBC]