1 / 17

The future of broadcasting an example of a sector study

The future of broadcasting an example of a sector study. British Broadcasting needs to go international. Home market saturated and fragmenting Economies of scale needed for programmes Comparative advantage ‘ the best brand name in the business’ Global competition for supplies & outlets

suzuki
Download Presentation

The future of broadcasting an example of a sector study

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The future of broadcastingan example of a sector study

  2. British Broadcasting needs to go international • Home market saturated and fragmenting • Economies of scale needed for programmes • Comparative advantage • ‘ the best brand name in the business’ • Global competition for supplies & outlets BBC Worldwide - 50% of total BBC revenue Europe’s leading exporter of TV progs and formats Global TV operator – 19 commercial channels

  3. The evolution of broadcasting • National Terrestrial • Continental Satellite • Global Broadband • From broadcasting to narrowcasting • From national audiences to specialist niches

  4. The value-delivery systemJeremy Mayhew (BBC Worldwide) Guardian 20/9/97 Production Distribution Retailing Content Distribution Gateways Transmitters ‘Platforms’ Networks: Terrestrial Cable Satellite Internet software: encryption decoding hardware: set-top boxes smart cards network servers

  5. Multimedia convergence Film TV and music Cable, Satellite and terrestrial Content • Content is key to sales of subscriptions and hardware • Multimedia mergers: • AOL Time Warner • Universal Vivendi (Canal Plus) Has this approach worked? Computers WAP phones iTV Hardware Transmission Processing

  6. Where will the power reside? • Strong content • to drive subscriptions, pay per view,audiences • Well-placed monopolistic gateways BBC strategy • trade on strengths in content • avoid over-dependence on any one system • joint ventures & deals with gateways/distributors (eg Freeview/Freesat)

  7. Ways of entering the market • Export sales(£660m - 40,000 hrs of programmes • Licensing(Teletubbies in Chinese) • Joint Ventures • Discovery, Foxtel, Atlantis, Flextech • Disney magazines, Hello fulfilment, CBS library • Direct Investment - beeb.com • new digital channels BBC Prime, World, America

  8. New Media • BBC website • Listen Again • interactive Media Player (iMP) • Creative Archive, • Plans to sell pay-to-view programmes abroad via its website

  9. Global Media Ownership • http://www.mediachannel.org/ownership/chart.shtml

  10. Rupert Murdoch - News Corpwww.newscorp.comthe leading player • Originally a newspaper publisher • Vertical integration: Fox Studios/TV • First-mover advantage in satellite & digital • content provider & gateway controls • Global TV channels • Fox, BSkyB, C7 (Aus) Star TV Asia • Uses sport as ‘the battering ram’ Guardian 16/10/96

  11. Growth markets- • Asia (exc USSR) 60% of world population • Fastest economic growth rates • Economic liberalisation of China • explosion in consumer demand (1.3 billion people) • Media and entertainment market worth £14.5 bn • 110 million internet users • 378 million mobile phone users

  12. Star TV • Star 20 channels English, Mandarin and Hindi • 300 m viewers in 53 countries • Majority shareholder NewsCorp Relations with Chinese government crucial • BBC World News replaced by Sky • Yet it still failed to win over the Chinese

  13. 2003 Murdoch buys Direct TV USA • http://media.guardian.co.uk/rupertmurdoch/story/0,11136,933806,00.html • Foxtel News set to rival CNN and BBC • ‘like the Sun in the Sky’ ? • Buys minority stake in ITV • Battle with Virgin cable

  14. How can the Government... • Ease cross-media ownership restrictions? • createglobal-scale media groups • encourage innovation and entrepreneurship • Ensure competition - consumer choice & access? • Protect freedom of speech & news reporting? • Preserve standards of decency? Ian Hargreaves FT Creative Business 5/12/00 The answer is Ofcom?

  15. Communications Act • Removed barriers to ownership • including foreign investment • allows a single ITV company • Relies on normal competition law • and the existence of Public Service Broadcasting • Regulates content through OFCOM • diversity, quality and impartiality • but still limits cross-media ownership • prevents Murdoch getting control of ITV

  16. Public Service Broadcasting aims •sustaining citizenship and civil society •promoting education and learning •stimulating creativity and cultural excellence •representing the UK, its Nations, regions & communities •bringing the UK to the world and the world to the UK • Who pays?

More Related