Programming content plays a central role in pay-TV competition. And in making a choice among pay-TV companies, a subscriber will have to base his/her choice largely on the programming offered by each one.
To attract subscribers and ensure they renew their subscriptions, a pay-TV provider needs to have must-see content whether in sports, movies, documentaries, kids' programming, music or other genres of entertainment.
Premium programming, especially live coverage of prestigious sports events and recent Hollywood movie releases, drives consumer choice. By owning the right to broadcast such to its own subscribers, especially exclusively, a pay-TV company is preferred to its rivals. By its nature, premium content is often monopolised from source. Sports content, for instance, requires television rights, which are often sold collectively by the league or is concentrated in the hands of a single pay-TV operator, always one with the requisite financial muscle. The competition for such content is fierce, a situation that astronomically drives up the cost of acquisition.
In the United Kingdom, for example, two broadcast giants, Sky and BT, recently paid over 5billion pounds for the rights to show Barclays Premier League matches for three years (2016-2019). The sum represented a 70 per cent increase over what was paid the last time. HiTv, the defunct pay-TV company that won the Barclays Premier League rights between 2007 and 2010, did not have the money to renew the contract when it expired. It eventually folded up.
Even for content produced locally, costs do not stay the same. Content production and content owners are affected by local and international economic indices, a situation that causes an upward reviews in costs when new content contracts are being entered into. The sharp dip in the value of the naira has adversely affected the content market, with content aggregators having to deal with the attendant inflation in acquisition costs.
Local content, like the foreign variety, is paid for in dollars, the international currency of doing business. This is because most pay-tv platforms operate across international borders.
Without adequate payment to content producers, the quality (even quantity) of content production will dip alarmingly. A major reason for the good health of Nollywood and other local content productions like sitcoms, series and sports programmes is that broadcasters have ensured that content owners are adequately remunerated.
The pay-TV ecosystem is dominated by content owners/creators, who sell to pay-TV companies. Pay-TV companies own the customer relationship and make their money from rent on content delivery. The pricing power resides with the content owners, most often large TV networks, which charge affiliate fees. Affiliate fees are the primary revenue stream that funds television content. They are a percentage of what subscribers pay to the service provider, which is then shared back to the content owner or distributor, usually on a per subscriber basis.
Thus, a less notable content owner may only be able to negotiate, say, N50 per subscriber per month, while a big one like Sky Sports, Viacom or Disney can negotiate considerably higher sums per subscriber per month because any pay-TV company would be at a huge disadvantage if it markets a package without the must-see content that the owners offer. The advertising-only TV model of years gone by delivered the lowest common denominator content, while the affiliate fees model has affected how content aggregators think, operate and also how content is produced and financed.
Pay-TV providers have realised that subscribers pay because they want access to certain creators' content like the Barclays Premier League, movies or kids' entertainment. This means content owners could make pay-TV companies pay them ever increasing fees for that content. It gets better for big content owners like Disney, Viacom or NBCUniversal, who could band channels together and compel pay-TV providers to pay affiliate fees for all their channels whether popular or otherwise. Pay-TV companies are the ones that are then left to deal with resultant subscriber anger when subscription is hiked.
Ok
ReplyDeleteDSTV PR CLOAK,
DeleteNice
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Who ask you question???
ReplyDeletei can bet with all i got that this post is sponsored by DSTV. They can feel Nigerians ANGER and we won't back down. Linda hmmmm.(Hnkume@gmail.com)
ReplyDeleteseen
ReplyDeletea.k.a EDWIN CHINEDU AZUBUKO said..
ReplyDelete.
Wetin concern me here since i no get dstv or any of the above mention....
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***CURRENTLY IN JUPITER***
Good to know
ReplyDeleteOKORO UPGRADED**
Dis is too much grammar. Anything dem talk, what I know is dat DSTV subscription is way too expensive. Imagine paying #14,000 every month, upon it dey will keep repeating movies. Linda take note!
ReplyDeleteThis obviously is a paid publication by the DSTV trying to justify their foolish increase in subscription charges.Nigeria is the most populated country in Africa and with this equally has the largest no of subscribers to its services. Can they make such increase for their services in south africa or those "lesser" african countries and get away with it. Arrant Nonsense
ReplyDeleteDSTV I don't care for all dis una grammar. Thank God for season movies and alaba boys for making it affordable. Wn I'm in d TV mood I watch my video other times I'm with my novels or better still my phone.
ReplyDeleteTo hell with dstv didn't knw I can survive without it but I'm very resourceful
Next pls!!!!!!
One of the longest articles I've seen u write Linda, well done
ReplyDeleteOk, cool
ReplyDeleteDstv e don do o jare.
ReplyDeletePple want what they want, make pay tv an option.
It's only in Nigeria that Gotv will reduce the number of channels they broadcast, yet increase their subscription fees! Then, they will sponsor some hungry lawyers to go and contest the increment with frivolous and watery grounds of action. Now, if the Judge by reason of lack of good reason or if he is already bought over, dismiss the case; The law will see it that the issue has been decided and laid to rest!..... In my country Nigeria anything goes! In my country Nigeria, it's the Lebanese, the Indians, the Chinese and the South Africans that run the shows. They can wake up tomorrow and shove anything down our throats. All we can do is to swallow helplessly like slaves without a government!!!
ReplyDeletei guess the regulatory bodies should make posts like this one regular...a country that is the third largest movie producer and cannot boast of a credible film school sure has alot of work going digital in the coming months, my take is that jobs can be created with the dawn of content is king drive.
ReplyDeleteDstv continue with this Yeye until Startimes will send you back to SA. Your bouquets are overpriced. Even in SA they don't pay so much. Why is the cost only high in Nigeria? Continue!
ReplyDeletebut wait ohh, how is money made from content providers? tax? or what?
ReplyDeletei guess DSTV price hike is due to the tax they are paying in Nigeria, trust our NBC na.. well startimes are not doing enough to send DSTV parking at all..
ReplyDeleteLinda this post is a clear indication that Nigerians dont read they are only interested in "olofofo talk"..if na olofofo talk, comment for don reach 5k.... well, for me, i read every bit of this post and i enjoyed it.. how i wish we could just have our own Pay-TV in Nigeria.. thanks to CTL if not i for no fit dey watch football.. http://www.omobar.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteGuys
ReplyDeleteDSTV would be chased outta town soon, or forced to integrate with the new wave coming soon and starting firstly in Jos town.
NBC in collaboration with some bad ass guys are cooking up something good and affordable and digitalising content broadcast, a whole I'd just keep hush and this is to chase the damn overpriced DSTV n non-customer-centric business model into the abyss.
Those South African piss the living daylight out off me and i dnt blame them, i only hope that when things start working properly and the new govt starts looking into the this sector, we can have some sanity.
THIEVES!! Shut the Eff up DSTV.