So cable haters have been rejoicing because there are going to be online offerings of HBO and CBS. I posted about this a few days ago. I have been reading blogs and commentary since then that say this is the end of bundled cable. One in particular I found amusing was a commentary to an article about this how the poster was going to get 10 channels and by his estimation, pay about $10 for the pleasure. So I asked him if he actually read the blog post. If you bought just HBO and CBS at their estimated prices, you'd be at $14. So if you figure in an average price of $7 per network, that makes his cable bill about $70 for those 10 channels. About what he pays now to get 70+ nets through the evil bundle.
And at the end of the day, someone still has to aggregate the billing. Imagine going into the supermarket and writing out a check to every company that you've bought food from.
The fact is that as content moves to delivery over the internet, it may not look or feel much different than it does now. Want ESPN, then pay $48 for the"Disney Bundle" Want CNN? Buy the Time Warner bundle...$29, MTV...the Viacom bundle, $35. Now how does it look?
Content, like internet speeds, is a value proposition. Cable rating vs broadcast keeps heading in opposite directions. The business model of broadcast was never able to address audience fragmentation. A la carte can, but don't believe it decreases the value of the content because anything that attracts an audience still has value.
Thursday, October 30, 2014
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
What does that mean to me?
Another consumer confidence
report is out:
CONSUMER
CONFIDENCE REBOUNDS
The Conference
Board Consumer Confidence Index, which
had decreased in September, rebounded in October. The Index now stands at 94.5
(1985=100), up from 89.0 in September. The monthly Consumer Confidence Survey, based
on a probability-design random sample, is conducted for The Conference Board by
Nielsen. “Consumers have regained confidence in the short-term outlook
for the economy and labor market...With the holiday season around the corner,
this boost in confidence should be a welcome sign for retailers,” said Lynn
Franco, Director of Economic Indicators at The Conference Board. Consumers’
optimism, which had declined considerably in September, improved in October.
The percentage of consumers expecting business conditions to improve over the
next six months increased from 19.0% to 19.6%, while those expecting business
conditions to worsen fell from 11.4% to 9.3%.
So what does this mean? That tomorrow
there will be another report indicating that consumer confidence has
fallen! Holiday spending will be
up! Holiday spending will be down! Expect the economy to grow! Expect the economy to shrink!
The bottom line is if you have a strong identity and a strong message,
you will grow. Most importantly if you
provide a good customer experience, you will grow. Share your customer experience with content marketing
and a strong message. I will write more
about that later.
Until then, let’s celebrate the good news of consumer confidence…till tomorrow.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Cable is DEAD....again.
The cry of cable is dead is ringing out across the internet
this week with the twin announcements that HBO and CBS are opening up OTT
streaming shops. Before we all get out
our black mourning coats for cable there are 2 things to keep in mind. First off, in every article I read, Time
Warner, owner of HBO, is working with MPVD providers (cable companies) in
rolling out their services. HBO is not going
to endanger their core business to scrape up a few million ‘Game of Thrones’
pirates. In fact, all you bit torrent
users may want to beware, I feel a substantial change coming over HBO about the
pirating of their service to view GoT.
They had viewed it as a badge of honor in past, but I believe they are
over that and want the money. So in the
end, I think there will be some folks to leave cable to get only HBO, but far
more of their potential viewers get no cable now, so there won’t be a huge
change.
Now, about CBS. They are
hoping you will pay $6 per month to view past episodes of current shows, and
past seasons of their programming. So
the boys of the Ponderosa will ride again and Captain Kirk will be zooming
around the galaxy with Spock, et al. Here’s
the problem, cable subscribers can already access this seasons’ programming with
the On Demand function of their cable boxes.
Most if not all of the older shows are available on Hulu, Netflix and
other OTT services. So why would someone
want to pay $6 to get it all in one place?
Because Sumner Redstone believes that the Tiffany Network still carries
the kind of cache that makes people think that 6 bucks is worth it to get all
that content in one place. It’s a branding effort. I remember watching a roundtable and the FX
network president complained to Reed Hastings of Netflix that he was irritated
that there was no branding of FX when people go to Netflix and watch past
episodes of Sons of Anarchy. Same thing
with CBS, they hope that the stored goodwill of the past will reflect on the current
crop of shows. Whether or not Redstone
is right remains to be seen, but I’m betting not.
Monday, October 13, 2014
Missed you!
I am guilty of a cardinal sin of social media. Taking too long
between posts on a site which is only driven by its content! Let’s move on and promise each other it won’t
happen again.
It was with particular delight I read that Nielsen had data
errors which lead to incorrect ratings during the new season of shows. I am delighted for a couple of reasons. One is
Nielsen has ALWAYS been susceptible to rating errors, especially in diary
markets where it was once reported that ratings numbers are only within 10% of
the true numbers 10% of the time. How are
they even able to sell data that corrupt?
Secondly raw numbers are worthless.
So 1.8 rating means what? If I’m
selling skateboards a 1.8 in 18-49 just tells me I have lots if waste because I
need to reach 18-24 year olds. Likewise
if I’m selling reverse mortgages, those numbers mean nothing to me.
Rentrak is the new kid on the data block and they will be
pushing Old Man Nielsen out the door pretty soon. With their mix of viewing numbers and
contextual data on just WHO is viewing and their ability to do mobile measurements
puts them light years ahead of Nielsen. The internet is taking content (TV) and
fragmenting it even further. I had
someone complain to me last week that one of the networks had a new channel
position and that made them upset. I asked
them, “Do you have Netfilx?” They said
yes, and I asked them, “What channel is that on?”
This is the future of TV.
Welcome to it Nielsen.
Thursday, October 2, 2014
NFL on the air!
So it was just announced that Direct TV had renewed the NFL Sunday Ticket. Look at this:
"DirectTV announced renewal of its NFL Sunday Ticket deal with the National Football League. Renewal of the exclusive right to distribute every Sunday out-of-market NFL game had been required for completion of DirecTV’s pending acquisition by AT&T. Terms weren’t disclosed, but the new agreement expands the satellite pay TV company’s rights to stream NFL Sunday Ticket live on mobile devices and via broadband Internet."
The last line is the entire reason AT&T bought Direct. Look for more of their carriage agreements to have this clause. AT&T was not able to buy their way into the TV business with U-Verse, so this is the new in. This one will work for them because this is the future of how cable TV will be delivered, anywhere, anytime. It is the way Charter will do it, Comcast, everyone.
Welcome to the future and the next time someone tells you pay for play is dead, refer them to this transaction. Content is king, and your audiences, your customers, pay for it every day because they can customize it to their taste.
DIRECTV RENEWS SUNDAY TICKET
"DirectTV announced renewal of its NFL Sunday Ticket deal with the National Football League. Renewal of the exclusive right to distribute every Sunday out-of-market NFL game had been required for completion of DirecTV’s pending acquisition by AT&T. Terms weren’t disclosed, but the new agreement expands the satellite pay TV company’s rights to stream NFL Sunday Ticket live on mobile devices and via broadband Internet."
The last line is the entire reason AT&T bought Direct. Look for more of their carriage agreements to have this clause. AT&T was not able to buy their way into the TV business with U-Verse, so this is the new in. This one will work for them because this is the future of how cable TV will be delivered, anywhere, anytime. It is the way Charter will do it, Comcast, everyone.
Welcome to the future and the next time someone tells you pay for play is dead, refer them to this transaction. Content is king, and your audiences, your customers, pay for it every day because they can customize it to their taste.
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