The five biggest decisions WWE has made in recent times

The Chairman tries to hug his son, but Shane rejects the offer.
  1. WWE Network

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The WWE Network is the most major business move made by WWE in recent times

The biggest move since social media became top most priority has been bringing the WWE Network. It’s a platform where you get quintessentially everything throughout the history of company.

The idea was announced in 2011. After a series of will they, won’t they and a few aborted attempts to bringing this business model into place, they finally launched it in 2014. The subscription model had always been quite a hiccupy affair for the company with the problem of also getting distributors for its PPV events.

The Network has seen many roadblocks like, not having a million subscribers by end of 2014 as envisioned, delays in launching the Network to the rest of the world, stock freefalls and low subscription numbers. But it has managed to sail through it by giving free trials and continuing to expand it beyond borders.

Anything and everything you ever wanted to remember to see again and again is now just a subscription away. Sometimes they even give you a free month without subscribing, that’s why WrestleMania 32 was free to all new subscribers.

Additionally, they’ve also made many interesting shows, the diversity of which is quite remarkable given how great the production and post-production team are. Unique setups, concepts and styles have certainly added to the range of things the business can do. Be it Table for 3, Stone Cold’s podcast or Swerved! – WWE Network tries to offer a lot from legends to present day superstars- whether they’re eventually successful or not.

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Edited by Staff Editor
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