It's like Kayak for streaming services

Agency
PROJECT
Role
OVERVIEW
PROBLEM

The friction in detail

The friction had a specific shape. A user would think of a movie, open Netflix, not find it, close Netflix, open Hulu, not find it, search Google, find a result from 2011 that was no longer accurate, try Amazon, discover it was available, but only for purchase, not streaming. Total time: eight to ten minutes. No guarantee of accuracy at the end of it. If the title wasn't available on any service that week, there was no way to know that upfront, and no way to be notified when it changed. The problem compounded with every new service that launched: more places to check, more licensing complexity, more outdated search results, more wasted time. The user wasn't doing anything wrong. The information just didn't exist in one place.

"It used to take me 10 minutes to look at each one."

The friction in detail

The friction had a specific shape. A user would think of a movie, open Netflix, not find it, close Netflix, open Hulu, not find it, search Google, find a result from 2011 that was no longer accurate, try Amazon, discover it was available — but only for purchase, not streaming. Total time: eight to ten minutes. No guarantee of accuracy at the end of it. If the title wasn't available on any service that week, there was no way to know that upfront, and no way to be notified when it changed. The problem compounded with every new service that launched: more places to check, more licensing complexity, more outdated search results, more wasted time. The user wasn't doing anything wrong. The information just didn't exist in one place.

We recognized a clear need

What if there was a single search engine that aggregated streaming availability in real time?

The Solution

A universal search experience powered by real-time integrations across 30+ services, plus title alerts, a Chrome extension, and a PRO tier that filtered results by a user's own subscriptions. Over two and a half years it expanded across five platforms with TV support and iPad optimization as the market evolved.

Core features: universal search across 30+ services, real-time availability, stream/rent/buy price comparison, custom availability alerts, and direct deep-links to launch apps.

Add this site to your bookmarks because I guarantee you, at some point, you’re going to need it.

Sarah Perez
Tech Crunch Consumer News Editor

Understanding users & the market

The idea for Can I Stream It? came from our own frustration, so we started by validating whether others had the same problem. Through informal interviews and surveys with movie fans and cord-cutters, we found users were repeatedly Googling titles or checking streaming apps one by one just to see where something was available. Existing solutions were fragmented, incomplete, or difficult to use, revealing a clear gap in the market.

Our research identified a core audience of tech-savvy streaming users who valued speed, simplicity, and convenience over platform loyalty. They regularly jumped between services to find content and wanted a faster, more unified experience. These insights shaped the product vision: a comprehensive, intuitive search tool that made streaming availability instantly accessible.

Target users & personas

PARENTS
Find family friendly movies quickly

Kids lose patience while parents search.

College Students
Find something to watch on a budget

Too much time spent scrolling, tight budget.

Movie Buffs
Track down obscure titles

Hard to find niche films, too many services.

Digital Consumers
Find the best streaming deal

Paying for multiple services, need better recommendations.

User flows

Scaled Can I Stream It? to approximately ~50K monthly active users.

Powered an estimated 75K–150K streaming searches per day across movies and television content.

Affiliate revenue via streaming-partner referrals.

Successfully operated during the early streaming platform era before large-scale search integrations from Google reshaped the category landscape.

Press & reception

"It's like Kayak for streaming services. Search one spot and get results from all the major players."

— Gizmodo

Can I Stream It? wasn't pitched to press. It was a side project we built because the problem was genuinely frustrating us. The coverage came because we solved a real thing, and the breadth of that coverage, from entertainment trade press to consumer advocacy to a Snapchat founder's app list, tells you who the product resonated with and why.