As part of Bond's 30th Anniversary celebrations, we're shining the spotlight on our alumni, to learn more about their amazing lives and careers...
Itâs the worldâs leading internet entertainment service, and a Bondy is at the centre of it. Caroline Morgan, Netflixâs Director of Product Research and Consumer Insights, speaks about the entertainment industry, Netflixâs place in the world, and working on Black Mirror: Bandersnatch.
In the lazy, hazy days between Christmas and New Year last December, Netflix released Black Mirror: Bandersnatch.
The drama allowed viewers to interact with the action on screen to choose what happened next, and was an instant worldwide smash.
At the heart of Netflixâs team working on the top-secret project was Caroline Morgan â but for the 38-year-old, making her way to one of the worldâs leading entertainment and media companies started with enrolling at Bond.
Los Gatos, California, where Netflixâs HQ is based, is a long way from Melbourne, where Belfast-born Morgan grew up after immigrating from Northern Ireland at the age of 6.
Her next big move was to Bond, on the Australia Day Scholarship.
âI remember a teacher walked me over to a notice board and showed me a flyer requesting applicants for Bond University scholarships. I didnât have internet at home and the two computers in the school library were on dial-up and completely booked up, so the glossy picture of the Bond University campus and a Queensland address were really the only information I had to go on.â
Morgan attended Bond from 1998 to 2001, completing a Bachelor of Communications and a Bachelor of Commerce. She has fond memories of her time here.
âI loved Bond. It really opened doors for me in so many ways. I left everything I knew in Melbourne and lived on campus for the majority of my time there, so Bond became my new world and it was a very immersive experience.
âI only ever had roommates from other countries and so developed friendships with people from all over the world and constantly overheard people speaking in foreign languages. I was so intrigued by the different life experiences everyone had, which made an indelible impression on me and started me on my path to considering the world as my future opportunity, versus returning back to Melbourne to slot into my old life.â
Now employed as Netflixâs Director of Product Research and Consumer Insights, Morganâs career began with stints at a media-focused market research consultancy in London, followed by more agency work and client-side positions with commercial giants Tesco, American Express and Samsung.
âTesco taught me how to develop a customer-first mindset, American Express surrounded me with seasoned leaders who taught me how to take the long view on things, and Samsung was constantly changing, so I learnt how to pivot quickly to respond to changing needs of the company and innovation.â
Returning to Australia in 2014 to take up the Samsung role and reconnect with friends and family, Morgan was phoned by a corporate headhunter in 2017. They were ringing on behalf of Netflix.
She took the call, and despite having no intentions to move, agreed to an interview, âfor the practiceâ. Five phone calls and two full days of interviews in San Francisco later, her life had changed again.
âAt the end of the second day I was offered the role, and I said âyes, Iâll need eight weeks to wrap up life in Australia.â I spent the flight home wondering how I was going to tell my parents that I was accidentally off again.â
These days, Morganâs focus is firmly on making the Netflix experience as enjoyable as it can be for its 139 million paid members, in over 190 countries.
âAt the heart of what I do is identifying where we should focus on improving the Netflix service for our global members so that they can get maximum enjoyment from the service. I do this by asking members to share their experience of interacting with our service. I then distil these interactions into insights for the product managers, engineers and designers.â
Netflixâs consumer insights team is spread across offices in the United States, Amsterdam and Singapore, and includes members who focus on markets in those regions, speak the local language and understand the nuances of the local culture.
That team gives Netflix valuable insights into the behaviour of customers across the globe, a task as complex as it is multi-faceted, according to Morgan.
âThere are so many trends at play all the time. Some are in the early stages and some are nearing maturity while others are ârebornâ again and manifest themselves differently in each country or after changing world events.â
Worldwide, more people are demanding content that fits their schedule, and their choice of platform, Morgan says.
âThe desire for on-demand entertainment continues to grow at the same time as increasing device diversity. This means that members can start watching something on TV in the evening and then seamlessly transition over to their mobile during the morning commute the next day.â
As Netflix has moved to meet that demand, itâs thrown up some surprising insights.
âWe noticed that members in some Asian markets had very long commute times and werenât able to enjoy titles without disruption to their signal. So we introduced the download feature on mobile phones to meet this need. After this feature was launched, it was fascinating to see that members across the world were using this feature, signalling that it was a universally relevant need. So while we had picked up the need in India, itâs a very real benefit for commuters on the tube in London too. This demonstrates that while trends can be picked-up in one part of the world, they can be just as relevant on the other side of the world.â
Much of Morganâs role is built around listening to feedback from people.
âA big part of my job is to listen to people talk about their impressions of products and brands and Iâve mostly worked for household names, so many dinner party conversations turn into unofficial focus groups about the company I work for.â
One thing Morgan wasnât able to discuss at dinner was Black Mirror: Bandersnatch, a project shrouded in secrecy until its surprise launch, but one which Morgan now rates as a career highlight.
âWorking on Black Mirror: Bandersnatch has been a career highlight for sure. It was a very top secret project, so I didnât tell anyone I was working on it until it came out. Itâs exciting to be part of bringing this whole category of entertainment to Netflix â and the world.â
Morgan finds meaning in her work through the opportunities it provides to connect Netflix customers with stories and storytellers.
Citing titles such as the Spanish La Casa de Papel and Sacred Games (India), she maintains itâs about more than just giving people something to watch from the couch - or as they choose what happens next on their morning commute to the office.
âNetflix is all about entertainment, but at the heart of what weâre trying to do is to connect people to stories and storytellers from around the world.â