Archive for September, 2008

Taking On The Big Boys

So, you have an idea for a TV channel do you ?

Well, the first thing to tell you is that you’re not alone and, however great you think your idea is, it’s just that. An idea. And I hate to be the harbinger of bad news, but ideas are worth nothing in the broadcast industry. At least at this early stage they’re worth nothing…

So, how do you make the idea worth something ? Well, you have to give it substance. That means pulling together a number of things:

  • Content
  • An Audience
  • Revenue

OK, that’s a big first step. Let’s backtrack a bit. First of all you have to decide where you can get your content from, and how much it will cost; where you can get your audience from, and how much it will cost, and what the costs of delivery are going to be. And that’s before you hire the twelfth floor offices in a glass and steel palace, oh, and pay yourself.

Finally, you need a way to monetize your audience through selling advertising and/or charging for content. The bad news here is that you’ll need a substantial audience before you can attract even your first advertiser, and in the meantime you’re paying for content, delivery and those plush offices.

So, the next logical step that occurs to you after having you big idea is to go and raise some money from somewhere, which is a totally valid approach to pushing your idea forward.

However, I ask, is there a way you can do this without selling your soul to the devil (and losing over half your idea before you’ve even started) ?

Well, I think there is. Here are some thoughts:

Look for sponsorship – sponsors like ideas and like to be aligned with new, exciting developments that rub off on their brand, give them good PR and build an ongoing dialogue with their audience. The quality and influence of an audience will be more important to a sponsor than its size

Start small – scale your ambitions to your resources and ditch the glass and steel palace for your dining room table; look for niche advertisers in your sector and sell them modest packages with open-ended audience delivery

Partner – big companies are desperate to enter this fast growing market, but are unsure of how to do it, so do a deal – but, I hate to say this, make sure you invest in a good lawyer first

Grab an audience – there’s no hard and fast rule on where you find an audience, but some of the things that I’ve seen work include opening a Facebook/Beebo/MySpace group, working the discussion forums, looking to syndicate your Player to other websites, use YouTube as a promotional medium.

Free content – there’s loads of content out there doing nothing and just waiting for an audience; do a revenue share deal with content owners, or offer them some ‘B’ shares in the venture; encourage user generated content; where you are able, link to existing content and act as an aggregator and commentator.

Free delivery – there are low cost delivery methods out there; encoders such as SUPER are free; you can use Google Video as a low cost distribution medium or a low cost delivery service such as  - this is a plug - VidZapper .

All of a sudden a simple formula comes into play: idea + execution = value. Now you can look at how you can take your idea to the next phase. You’ll be able to sit in front of an investor (or a bank manager, if there are any left by then) and speak from experience about your business, what works, what doesn’t work and what you need to do next to become one of the big boys.

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Taking On The Big Boys

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Sky Falling In

Yesterday was a bad day for UK satellite broadcaster, BSkyB, with a ruling that it will have to sell  a large block of the shares it bought  in UK broadcaster ITV plc – no doubt at a heavy loss. Was it a price worth paying to prevent the embattled commercial station operator out of the hands of rival distributor, Virgin Media? Probably not.

On the same day, Ofcom announced an enquiry into Sky’s dominance of the UK Sports and Movie broadcast markets, with a view to making them wholesale any special deals they have.
Sky’s treatment of football fans has been especially shoddy and has resulted in vociferous complaints which is now coming back to hurt them.
In the US, the market situation is reasonably clear – you have wholesalers and distributors – just like in the old days of cinema, and you then have various timeslices of rights.
In the UK the situation is far more complex due to a number of factors, including PBS and the power of the BBC, the relative weakness of commercial channel operators such as ITV and the debt piled onto one of only two real competitors to BSkyB’s dominance, Virgin Media.
BSkyB is an aggressive and well run organisation that probably deserves its place at the top of the UK broadcast league (although support from majority shareholder NewsCorp’s newspaper titles surely helps). However, this cash cow is getting long in the tooth and it’s difficult to see how BSkyB can grow their subscriptions in the current climate. They have been successful in broadband after their inspired purchase of Easynet, but it’s difficult to see how this can now be used for anything other than cannibalise their current revenues – not using the internet to extend their client base by making their properties available on PPV or subscription to non-TV subscribers was a serious mistake that can yet be rectified.
One option is to auction their EPG slots in the way that Freeview does; another is to take revenue share on advertising from the channels they carry. Or they are likely to start suffering soon from what I call the Comcast syndrome – i.e. the inability to grow rapidly due to market saturation and regulatory control. Maybe Sky should employ Michael Grade’s lobbying team who were so effective with OFCOM.

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Sky Falling In

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Links for 2008-09-29 [Digg]

  • VIDEO: Dems fighting like hell against Fannie Mae regulation
    In 2004, House Republicans tried to bring more regulation, but the Dems fought against it vociferously. Said Barney Frank: “But I have seen nothing in here that suggest that the safety and soundness are at issue. I think it serves us badly to raise safety and soundness as kind of a general shibboleth when it does not seem to me to be an issue.”

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Links for 2008-09-29 [Digg]

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The Reform for Fannie, Bill S.190 was introduce by the Republicans….in fact, McCain co-sponsored (although this is video from the House of Reps).
The Bill must go thru Committee & gain 60% support. The committee is made up of 20 members. At the time, 11 were Republicans & 9 were Democrats. To get 60% of support, [...]

Continued here:
Democrats blocking regulation on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

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Ruckus Selected by TeliaSonera for Its Nordic IPTV Services

ruckus_logo.gif
TeliaSonera is
deploying Ruckus Wireless’ MediaFlex
Smart Wi-Fi systems to provide customers flicker-free wireless distribution of the
popular IPTV, Telia Digital-TV, throughout their homes. With the Ruckus Smart Wi-Fi
system, TeliaSonera customers can now place TVs anywhere within their home and wirelessly
connect to a host of innovative digital television services.

Telia Digital-TV, one of the first IPTV services in Europe to launch in 2005, with
a rapid growth in 2007 to some 300,000 customers, offers subscribers compelling new
programming packages that include some 70 TV channels, such as Discovery and the Disney
Channel, 24-hour on-demand library of movies and network-based, time-shifted TV services.

NoWire, Nordic’s leading wireless distributor, is supplying TeliaSonera with Ruckus
MediaFlex 802.11g Smart Wi-Fi systems to support whole home wireless distribution
of the Telia Digital-TV service. The Ruckus MediaFlex systems are being made available
to consumers through TeliaSonera sales channels and can be easily self-installed by
subscribers.

Broadband Surges Ahead in the Nordics

In terms of broadband penetration by population, Nordic countries make up five of
the top eight on the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development’s (OECD)
official list. In Denmark, approximately 35 percent of the population has broadband
access, the highest rate in the OECD. Broadband penetration in other Nordic countries
is above 30 percent.

Sweden’s high broadband penetration rate has been achieved on the back of extensive
investment in fast DSL and fiber upgrades which provide the infrastructure for triple
play services. The country is at the forefront of digital terrestrial TV, which can
be accessed by more than 98% of the population, and began the first stage of its digital
switchover in September 2005, ahead of the rest of Europe.

Smarter Wi-Fi Makes the Impossible Possible

Smart Wi-Fi is a newest innovation in 802.11 technology that now makes real-time streaming
of standard and high-definition digital content possible. Smart Wi-Fi is based on
recent technical advances in intelligent, miniaturized antenna arrays and quality
of service that enable extended range, unprecedented reliability and more consistent
performance of wireless communications.

Smart Wi-Fi works by continuously routing Wi-Fi signals over the best and highest
performing paths while steering these Wi-Fi signals around interference as it is experienced.
This enables Smart Wi-Fi systems to automatically adapt to the changing Wi-Fi environment
and uniquely support real-time, delay-sensitive applications such as streaming digital
video.

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Ruckus Selected by TeliaSonera for Its Nordic IPTV Services

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