Context
NOW is one of Europe’s biggest streaming platforms, available across mobile, tablet, web, consoles, smart TVs and set-top boxes. Like every subscription service, its hardest economics live in the first days of a membership. Early-life customers, those within their first three months and including returning subscribers, were around a quarter of the UK base but drove half of all cancellation attempts. Between 10 and 15% of cancellations happened on day zero, before a customer had really used the service at all.
The insight that anchored everything
One behavioural finding shaped the whole effort: customers who watch at least two different things in their first week are meaningfully less likely to cancel, and retention keeps climbing as that number rises toward five. The corollary mattered just as much. Customers who watch the best library content are stickier than those who only chase the newest releases, and returning members stay longest when they find a mix of the familiar and the new. The pattern behind the churn was a plain one: many people subscribed for a single tentpole title, watched it, and left. So the problem was not “show people more content.” It was “get the right second title in front of the right person, fast, on the device most likely to convert the habit.”
Framing the problem as measurable
Discovery is only useful if the team can act on it, so I tied the work to NOW’s product KPI hierarchy rather than to opinions. The primary metrics we believed we could move were total plays, frequency and repertoire; secondary signals included time to first play and visits without a play in the first seven days. From these I helped frame the OKRs the work should serve, including reducing the share of early-life customers who visit in their first week without ever pressing play, and lifting short-session visits where customers quickly find something worth watching. Naming the metrics up front meant every concept could be argued for or against on customer logic, not taste.
A catalogue built to be tested, not admired
I ran ideation against a set of “how might we” questions, the sharpest being how to make the homepage feel personal on the very first load, and how to get more customers streaming on their TV on day zero, the device that converts the habit best. The point was never to ship one feature. It was to generate, wireframe, prototype and test a corpus of concepts with customers, then RICE-score them so the squads inherited a ranked, defensible backlog rather than a pile of suggestions. The catalogue that resulted ran to 54 features and interactions, the concrete output of the discovery and the thing the squads actually built from.
That testing earned its keep by killing the idea I would have bet on. With almost no behavioural data on a first login, the tempting shortcut was to proxy personalisation from what we could infer: age, location, the cohort a customer belonged to. Recommendations built on who you resemble. Customers rejected it flatly. One person in their sixties told us they had a young spirit and no interest in what others their age were watching. Others did not want to be shown what their neighbours, or their city, were watching at all. Being told you are like the people around you turned out to be the opposite of personal.
So personalisation went content-led rather than identity-led, and the proximity concepts came off the board. Holding the catalogue loosely, with no favourite to defend, made it easier to let the evidence retire the concept that looked most attractive on paper and keep the ones customers actually responded to.
What the catalogue prioritised
Each surviving concept was tested, scored and ranked. The lead recommendations:
- Keyboardless TV sign-in, added across all big-screen devices and built into the sign-up and free-trial confirmation journeys, to remove the friction that keeps new customers off the device most likely to retain them
- A membership-aware first homepage, weighted toward the best library content a customer is actually entitled to rather than just the newest releases, and segmented for early-life customers
- Onboarding preference capture, asking light questions at sign-up to pre-populate a homepage that has almost no behavioural data to work with yet
- Connecting watched-content taste profiles to the marketing tools, so the first-week story stays consistent inside and outside the app
Keyboardless TV sign-in came out on top, and it did so without a contest. It was the most direct route into the behaviour the whole case was built on, getting customers watching on the big screen, where they were most likely to reach that second and third title. It also scored cleanly on RICE: high reach, low effort, and no dependency on data the platform did not yet have. The evidence made it an easy yes rather than a call anyone had to win.
Outcome
Discovery’s job is to de-risk what comes next, and this gave multiple NOW squads a shared, customer-grounded retention roadmap: a validated problem framing, the KPIs and OKRs to judge success against, and a ranked catalogue of 54 validated concepts, with keyboardless TV sign-in and homepage segmentation championed as immediate next steps. As the only designer on the discovery, the contribution that lasted was less any single screen than a way of reasoning about early life that the teams could keep using after the initiative closed.