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Chapter 8 – Entertainment Industry Lesson 8.1

Chapter 8 – Entertainment Industry Lesson 8.1. Entertainment Marketing . Objectives. Explain financial strategies in the motion picture industry Calculate film revenue, and discuss the importance of foreign markets for movies Describe financing for auto racing.

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Chapter 8 – Entertainment Industry Lesson 8.1

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  1. Chapter 8 – Entertainment IndustryLesson 8.1 Entertainment Marketing

  2. Objectives • Explain financial strategies in the motion picture industry • Calculate film revenue, and discuss the importance of foreign markets for movies • Describe financing for auto racing. • Essential Question – In what ways do movies make money?

  3. Did you know? • The Global Entertainment Industry is expected to reach $1.4 TRILLION by 2015. • In 2011, the gross box office sales (movies at the theater) was $10.1 BILLION in the United States! • In 2011, the global box offices sales reached $32.6 BILLION! • The entertainment industry is considered the second largest export (after agriculture) in the US! • Entertainment industry has the largest payroll of any business in this country!

  4. Entertainment Profits pg. 194 • The Profit makers • For the last ten years, movie ticket sales have increased in the US • Only 50% of movies actually make a profit! • Studios average cost of film production and marketing is $89.4 million per year! • Selling of DVDs and international box-office sales are sometimes larger sources of income than the actual ticket sales

  5. Is big best? • Titanic was the first movie to earn more than $600 million in North America • International box office sales were over $1.2 billion • Titanic was still being shown in movie theaters three days before the DVD was released! • What are the top 10 highest grossing movies?

  6. Cost cutting strategies • Wide release – is a movie released in more than 2,000 theaters at one time • Preview – is the release of a movie the evening before its official opening. • Usually held between 6-10pm. • Matinees – or pre-evening shows, generally have less audience and lower-priced tickets • Low-budget movies – generally those costing less than $250,000 to produce and have low advertising budgets.

  7. Profit and Opportunity • Profit – the money left after all bills have been paid. • Profit from an American film depends largely on its popularity overseas Generating Film Revenue – -To figure profits, moviemakers look at several elements of the film process: • Ratio of tickets sold:cost of production • Income from licensed merchandise, soundtracks, relationships to theme parks, global releases and domestic/foreign ticket sales • Blair Witch Project – cost $50,000, grossed $36 million during first three weeks!

  8. Cultural Opportunities for Profits • Worldwide distribution revenue is critical for movie profits • Income from an international release of a movie can increase box office take by 50-100% over domestic ticket sales

  9. Cultural Opportunities for Profits (cont’d) • Not always profitable - • Theater owners and movie distributors in India said they would no longer show dubbed versions of English-language films • Want to prevent corruption of Indian taste • 1.3 BILLION people in China = great market for movies, but, unfortunately: • Pirated movies are abundant • Chinese government must approve the content, film location and distribution of films • “Django Unchained” pulled (on wiki)

  10. Fast money • Difference between entertainment and sports is determined by the viewer • Car racing – sport or entertainment? • Racers have the same problem film producers have –

  11. Fast money (cont’d) • Where do race groups get money to finance their form of entertainment? • Mutual fund • Sponsors • Mutual fund – investments from stocks • Sponsors – they pay for the car and upkeep. Can have numerous sponsors, but usually one big one

  12. Chapter 8.2 Distribution of entertainment

  13. Objectives • Understand the different kinds of entertainment distribution • Discuss promotional strategies for motion pictures. • Essential Question – how are movies distributed?

  14. Distribution of Home Entertainment • In the early days it was just… How they made cartoons in the 1930’s

  15. Distribution of Home Entertainment Now we have….

  16. Cable Mania • In the late 1990’s, the number of cable TV networks, esp those with digital channels, increased greatly. • Original cable space was limited, but digital cable allowed more channels • Cable TV programs are sent through the air, picked up by a master antenna and delivered to homes via cables

  17. Cable Mania (cont’d) • Books’ guess 29 million households in US would have an HDTV by 2008 • Actual = 35 million in US in 2008 • Now = 53% of all homes have HDTV • Approximately 125 million homes in the US • Means approx 63 million households have a HDTV • Wow! • MOU – (memorandum of understanding) written agreement that contains voluntary technical standards. Source: Cable & Telecommunications Association for Marketing

  18. Satellite Television • Satellite TV competes with cable • But blows cable out of the water when it comes to rural areas

  19. Internet Entertainment • Ignore the book, lets talk

  20. Mega-Distribution • Broadcast webs – (not the WWW) are groups of TV networks, production studios, and related entertainment firms that produce shows inhouse for their groups. • Vertical integration – one company controls several different areas of the same industry • Example - Disney

  21. Vertical Integration Example Vivendi Universal SA Headquarters – Paris, France USA Interactive (Subsidiary) Universal Pictures HSN.com Universal Theme Parks Ticketmaster.com USA Network Hotel Reservations Network Music & publishing business Expedia.com

  22. Movie Marketing • Trailers – Movies shown in theaters and on video include advertisements for other movies/related music/merchandise Transformers 3 Avatar Paranormal Activity 3 Step Brothers • The Blair Witch Project – developed a web page that made the story look like a real news article. Trailer

  23. See it at home • For a HakimBuck- what does DVD stand for? • Digital video discs • No longer need to travel to first and second run theaters to see films • DVD’s/Blue ray • Point-of-purchase (POP) displays – set up next to the checkout area and are an effective promotional tool • Examples…

  24. POP displays

  25. DVDs – how do we get them? • Walk in stores • Redbox/Blockbuster Express • Netflix • Online Streaming

  26. Extra Credit • In your travels, if you see a POP display, take a picture! Picture can be either on a phone or camera • Show me the picture, tell me where the POP display is and the extra credit is yours!

  27. Homework • You need to survey 15 people, that live in different addresses and see if they have either: cable, satellite, digital air, or none. The people surveyed CAN NOT be from our class!! • Your survey results, and the student’s name you asked, needs to be inputted in either Microsoft Excel or Word in a logical manner I can understand, with your name in it and submitted into the Usershares (I:) folder • In Word/Excel Create a graph or chart of your choice using your survey data • Results will be tallied and your document graded for: • Completion • How well I can understand it • Due: • Three days from today’s class

  28. Marketing Music and Theater Chapter 8.3 Page 205

  29. Objectives • Understand the distribution of music • Discuss the legalities of music distribution • Explain two kinds of theater promotion • Essential Question – What is theater promotion?

  30. Today’s music • Listening to music of your choice is a popular form of entertainment for all ages • The music industry is constantly changing to keep up with new technology • How CDs are made

  31. Digital Music Marketing • Digital music is delivered to TVs through both cable and satellite providers • Listened to by as many as 75% of subscribers, daily • Where do you listen to digital music?

  32. Distributing Music • Concerts – • A major source of revenue for musical artists • Traditionally, fans stood in line to buy tickets – but not anymore • The internet offers a fast and convenient alternative for purchasing tickets • Pre sales- take place at web sites affiliated with the concert artist, such as fan club web sites • Bieber Fever!

  33. Distributing Music • MP3- what’s it stand for? • Mpeg Layer 3 • Tougher for musicians to “sell” their music now because people are downloading it for free • RIAA – (Recording Industry Association of America) uses software to track computer users online to see who is illegally downloading MP3s

  34. Distributing Music • Many musicians are bypassing record companies to market directly to their fans through the Internet. • Benefits • Don’t have to pay high costs • Can release one song at a time instead of a whole CD

  35. Promoting Theater • Word-of-mouth is a major source of promotion for Broadway shows • Still use typical distribution channels (posters, TV ads, and newspaper ads)

  36. Awards influence sales • The Oscars – 6,000 members determine each Academy Award, or Oscar. • They vote on motion pictures, directors, studios and actors • Second highest TV viewership after the Super Bowl • The Grammys – Awards for music artists and music producers

  37. Awards influence sales (cont’d) • The Emmys – awards for television shows • The Tony Awards – awards for theatrical (theater) shows

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