CEO to take Blockbuster ahead into digital age


Store rentals will still be important, the CEO says.

DALLAS (AP) — In his corner office 32 floors above downtown, Blockbuster CEO James Keyes pulls out his phone and starts up last year’s Oscar winner, “Crash,” to demonstrate his vision of the movie-rental giant’s future.

Customers, he said, will someday soon go to kiosks in Blockbuster stores to burn movies on to a disk or download them directly to phones or other devices.

Technology is usually seen as Blockbuster Inc.’s enemy. Why would anyone drive to a store when they can order online and have movies mailed to their home or transmitted straight to their television set by video on demand?

Keyes said store rentals will be an important part of the business for at least five more years. And if Blockbuster can remain the world’s biggest movie-rental company during that time, it will be in stronger position to lead when viewers routinely download films, he said.

“This is an industry in transition and a company that hasn’t been able to keep up with that change,” said Keyes, named CEO in July. “But Blockbuster is one of the best-known brands in the world. We’ve just got to find ways to use technology to make the company more relevant.”

With nearly 8,000 stores, Blockbuster is synonymous with renting movies. But it lost more than $4 billion from 2002 through 2005. The Dallas-based company eked out a $54 million profit in 2006, but it lost money amid further sales declines in the first nine months of this year.

Keyes outlined these steps the company will take by early next year: Blockbuster will test new store layouts with kids’ areas and beverage bars, some stores will get kiosks that eventually could be used to download movies, Blockbuster will begin transmitting movies to customers’ PCs and the chain will test new sales of small electronic devices, soundtrack CDs and books to reduce its dependence on the stagnant movie-rental business.