Category: Regional

  • Aventail Expands India Distribution with Select Technologies

    Aventail Expands India Distribution with Select Technologies

    Select Technologies to Support Aventail’s Growing SSL VPNs sales and support

    Bangalore, 30th May, 2006 – Leading SSL VPN product company Aventail Corporation (www.aventail.com) is expanding its distribution in India through a new agreement with Select Technologies, a leading solution provider in the country with more than 5,000 customers. Select Technologies will provide sales and support to Aventail’s growing clientele, which includes Wipro, Tesco, Marico, iGATE, ING Vyasa, and i-flex, both directly and through their large channel partner network across India. Together, Aventail, Select, and system integrators will offer a three-level support system.

    “With security being the top priority for enterprise and SMB customers, an affordable solution with top class security features and protection is the requirement today,” said Mr. Sunil Pillai; Business Head, Select Technologies. “Aventail’s leading technology coupled with Select’s expertise in providing innovative, cutting-edge solutions for Information Protection and Management domain make this relationship a strong one,” he added.

    “Select has a good history of making brands successful in India , and they have the required experience and expertise to carry Aventail in their portfolio,” said Mr. Ajay Kumar, Country Sales Manager for Aventail in India . “Aventail is leading the market in providing enterprises secure remote access, and Select’s strong channel network will help us increase our penetration and customer base across India.”

    Aventail’s SSL VPN is a scalable, enterprise class, clientless solution based on Aventail’s proven Smart SSL VPN platform. Aventail’s clustering and high availability support with load-balancing is an ideal solution for hundreds or thousands of users. The secure application platform is designed to provide practical, easy-to-use anywhere access to Web, client/server, and file shares from any device combined with simple manageability and usability. All of this makes it a clear alternative to IPSec-based VPNs. Many of Aventail’s customers worldwide are replacing legacy IPSec solutions with the Aventail SSL VPN in order to have one solution for all remote access scenarios.

    About Select Technologies

    Select Technologies is a 100% wholly owned subsidiary of WeP Peripherals Limited (WeP). Select Technologies provides innovative Information Protection & Management Solutions and Services to Large Enterprises, Corporates and SMEs and is a ‘One Stop Solution House’ for market leading Information Protection and Management solutions. Select specializes in providing innovative and effective world class solutions through a strong and dedicated team of qualified and trained professionals to provide support services and training to partners and end users. Select conducts business through more than 238 NSI, RSI, Solution Providers & channel partners across the country focused on Information Protection and Management business and sustains relationship with over 5000 customers. Headquartered in Bangalore, Select has offices across the metros and major cities of the country. For more information, please visit: www.select-technologies.net

    About Aventail
    Aventail is the best-of-breed remote-access company. Aventail delivered the first SSL VPN solution in 1997 and today is a market leader, delivering the easiest to use and control remote-access solution. Aventail Smart SSL VPN appliances provide users with transparent, clientless access to more applications from more devices via any network environment. For network managers, Aventail delivers a single secure access gateway for all users, internal and external, to all network resources with complete security. With more than two million end users around the globe, Aventail is the SSL VPN of choice among mid to large-sized organizations worldwide, Some of Aventail’s customers in India include Wipro, Tesco, Marico, iGATE, ING Vyasa, i-flex, Times of India and ITC. For more information, go to www.aventail.com.

    Aventail, Aventail ST, Aventail Smart Access, Aventail Smart Tunneling, Aventail EPC, Aventail OnDemand, Aventail Connect, Aventail Secure Collaboration, Aventail EX-2500, EX-1500, Aventail EX-750, and their respective logos are trademarks, registered trademarks, or service marks of Aventail Corporation. Other product and company names mentioned are the property of their respective owners and are mentioned for identification purposes only.

    Note: The information in Aventail press releases is accurate and current only as of the date posted. Aventail does not update the information once the release has been issued. To the extent any press release contains information that is not historical fact, that information is considered forward-looking. Aventail’s results may differ from those projected in any forward-looking statements.

  • Karnataka Opening Up!

    In the last two years, the South Indian television market has witnessed much churn in terms of fresh investments and new initiatives. In all the languages combined, at least 10 new channels were launched during this period. In this two-year period, there has been one market missing all the action – Karnataka.

    However, 2006 holds something different for the Rs 1.5 billion Kannada television market. Zee has made the first move by launching its second South Indian channel Zee Kannada, a pay channel, on 11 May. Not to be left behind, the Hyderabad-headquartered Associated Broadcasting Company Pvt Ltd, which runs Telugu news channel TV9, is targeting a July launch for its Kannada news channel – TV9 Kannada.

    Exploring the news space further in the market will be Kannada Kasturi, promoted by chief minister Kumaraswamy‘s wife Anitha. The news channel is expected to launch by year-end.

    Though the Kannada television market is the third largest player in the regional space (behind Tamil and Telugu), it, surprisingly, didn‘t help much in attracting new investments. While the Rs 1.25 billion Malayalam (Kerala) television space witnessed the launch of about five channels in 2005, Karnataka received just one single player, Udaya 2, a youth-oriented music channel from the Sun Network stable. And it required two outside players – Zee and TV9 – to bring some changes in the pattern.

    “It has something to do with people‘s mindset. It looks like Kannadigas are not very enterprising when it comes to television. They are more involved with the film business. Also it requires a mammoth effort to make your presence felt in the market since you have two established players — ETV and Udaya — to compete with. Then, Hindi also attracts audience here,” points out Shyamsundar, head of the production house Yantra Media.

    Explains ETV chief producer Manvi: “The Kerala market is different from Tamil and Telugu because, here it is not a one-sided competition. Asianet and Surya are going neck and neck, but you have smaller players also making significant contributions. The market attracts fresh investments since it is open to all kinds of experiments and fresh programming strategies. In Kerala, new players are thriving on this confidence. Other regional markets are yet to deliver that confidence.”

    In that case, what is the strategy that Zee has zeroed in on to take on ETV and Udaya in Karnataka? The media behemoth had suffered a setback five years ago when it first entered the South market through Kannada with Kaveri TV through a joint venture with Asianet. Understandably, Zee has done its homework before making the second attempt as an independent venture now.

    The preparations included extensive field research involving about 700,000 households to get its programming mix right. Soaps, films and telefilms will constitute 25 per cent of the channel programming. Gameshows and talk shows will make up another 25 per cent. As for the rest of it, there will be a stress on current affairs programmes, events and film-based shows.

    Zee Kannada‘s positioning is in direct contrast to that of its southern sibling Zee Telugu. The one-year old Telugu channel targets the young upwardly mobile viewer segment, while Zee Kannada is following the traditional strategy of going for the mass audience.

    “Being the second largest player in the regional space, you can afford to experiment a lot in the Telugu space. We had our options to choose our target group (TG) in Telugu. But Kannada is a comparatively a smaller market. Hence, the plan is to follow the traditional strategy,” states head of Zee South Initiatives Ajay Kumar.

    Most importantly, Zee Kannada will be making a conscious attempt to be very close to Kannada culture and retain the local flavour in its programmes. According to market sources, Zee has adopted this strategy from ETV Kannada.

    “ETV‘s programmes are very local oriented and that is the channel‘s USP. Almost 95 per cent of the programmes are done by local producers. Zee Kannada seems to be following the same strategy by signing up a chunk of local producers. At the same time, Udaya follows a different gameplan as it explores the whole of South and Hindi as well (Balaji Productions),” says a source.

    Shedding light on the programming strategies of the leading channels, both Udaya and ETV Kannada have created their own compartments in the space. ETV banks on serials and fiction programmes, while Udaya is known for its films and film based programmes. Udaya has three more channels in Udaya News, Ushe (film and music) and Udaya 2.

    One common strand in any South market is films and this plays a crucial role in Kannada television as well. Acquisition costs for a blockbuster film ranges from Rs 15 million to Rs 20 million.

    Knowing that having strong film content would matter a lot for the channel‘s strategy in the movie-crazy market, Zee Kannada has acquired a combo package of new and old films to create its movie library.

    “Since the TG is the same, Zee Kannada will have a head-on collision with Sun Network‘s Udaya TV and its sister channels. In this context, having strong film content will be crucial,” says a source.

    “Though ETV Kannada acquires many good films every year, Udaya is ahead when comparing the number of films acquired,” adds Shyamsundar.

    Switching to the news space, we have TV9 Kannada and Kannada Kasturi gearing up to explore the relatively virgin land. Finally offering some competition to the lone player in the segment, Udaya News. Kannada Kasturi is still in the process of streamlining its strategies whereas TV9 Kannada is preparing the ground for a July launch.

    Driven by the tagline “Close to your heart”, TV9 Kannada is positioned as a young-at-heart, urban news channel with an international look and feel. TV9 has adopted its Telugu strategy for Kannada as well.

    “We targeted the urban youth and women with TV9 Telugu. We are following a similar strategy for TV9 Kannada also. Within a short duration, TV9 Telugu reached an impressive position in the market, and we are confident of repeating this performance in Kannada as well,” states TV9 chief news coordinator Rajasekhar.

    TV9 Kannada is planning to create a space for itself in the film-crazy, entertainment-oriented market through efficient coverage and innovations. “The idea is to crack the market by providing something fresh. Kannadigas are used to the traditional methods of news delivery and presentation. Our attempt will be to take it to a new level, with a lot of innovations. The plan is to woo the urban crowd by offering them international standards in the local language,” says Rajasekhar.

    Inspired by the entry of new players, the Kannada television market is targeting a 25 per cent expansion this year. Market analysts feel that this would also inspire more local advertisers, including retailers, to try television.

    “The ratio between local advertisers versus national advertisers is as low as 10 per cent versus 90 per cent in Karnataka. The television advertising here totally depends on Mumbai and Bangalore clients. We hope this will change with the entry of players such as Zee and TV9,” says Shyamsundar.

    “The market has the potential to touch even the Rs 2 billion mark in a short time. New players mean competition, but it is surely a good sign for the business,” adds Manvi.

  • Sun TV to bank on pay revenues and radio biz for growth

    Since Kalanithi Maran started his media business 13 years back, he has been fighting against one rival: himself. Now, after years of staying almost unchallenged in the southern region, he is setting himself up for battle in newer markets.

    He has an expanded war chest of Rs 6.03 billion which he raised through an initial public offering (IPO) of Sun TV Ltd (STL) to pledge his new bet on private FM broadcasting. Also in the pipeline is a direct-to-home (DTH) service through Sun Direct TV, a privately held company.

    Holding 90 per cent stake in STL, Maran is worth Rs 78.28 billion. And the market cap of STL has hit Rs 86.98 billion in a brief span of two weeks, enjoying a 44 per cent premium over its IPO price. In media business, only Subhash Chandra‘s Zee Telefilms has a higher market cap with Rs 110.9 billion.

    Indiantelevision.com takes a close look at the ambitious plans Maran has to grow his media empire and the challenges that lie ahead of him as he heads a listed company.

    Concern for topline growth

    At question is Maran‘s ability to counter slow growth from his traditional revenue lines – advertising sales and broadcast fees. To squeeze more out of matured channels who enjoy a very high level of audience share can turn out to be a challenging task.

    Ad revenues have stayed flat for two years, sitting at Rs 1.55 billion in FY04 and Rs 1.56 billion in FY05. Broadcast fee (time slots that Sun sells to content producers on its channels) has also seen small change, going up from Rs 458 million to Rs 495 million during this period.

    Maran has attacked this somewhat in FY06. Advertising income was up 24.7 per cent to Rs 889 million in the first half of the fiscal, as against Rs 713 million a year ago. This was the period when Sun‘s combined audience share for all its Tamil channels (Sun TV, Sun News, KTV and Sun Music) went up from 60 per cent in FY05 to 70 per cent in the first half of FY06. In Kerala, the company‘s aggregate audience from its Malayalam channels (Surya TV and Kiran TV) rose from 29 per cent to 34 per cent during this period.

    The growth could escalate for the year-period (Sun has not yet announced its FY06 results), fuelled by a rate increase for Sun TV channel by seven per cent in September 2005. This is the first rate hike the channel has come up with in the last three years.

    Analysts also expect Surya TV to put up a better show in FY06, estimating its revenues to touch Rs 450 million. The Malayalam channel, facing stiff competition from Asianet, was raking in close to Rs 300 million. Other channels like KTV have also the potential to stimulate marginal growth.

    But several content producers and marketing agents associated with Sun network feel the potential to exploit more ad revenues from existing channels is limited. “With such a dominating viewership, Sun has been commercially exploiting its slots to the optimum. There is very little scope to raise ad or auction slot rates. This is particularly true of Sun TV, the Tamil flagship channel. And in case of Surya TV, the main Malayalam channel, Maran has to take into consideration the presence of Asianet as a strong competitor,” they say on request of anonymity.

    For speeding the growth engine, Maran has a multi-pronged strategy. In the short run, he expects pay-TV revenues to climb significantly once he takes flagship channels Sun TV and Surya TV pay. And in the medium-term period, the radio operations should be able to generate substantial cash flows to drive the company‘s topline growth. Also adding to the kitty will be the three yet-to-be launched channels and rise in international revenues with new alliances in overseas markets.

    “A master tactician, Maran has protected himself adequately from any slowdown in growth. Topline growth can see faster growth if Sun gets into movie production as well. Pay revenues will also fatten Sun‘s profitability,” an analyst in a leading equity firm says.

    A drag on the company‘s profitability, Maran has hived off his cable distribution business ahead of the IPO. Kal Cable, which operates under the SCV brand, was separated from 1 April 2005. In FY2005, SCV‘s revenues stood at Rs 156 million while costs were at Rs 301 million. The FY06 results will, thus, exclude the financial performance of Kal Cable.

    A result of this: net profit has surged to Rs 614 million in the first half of FY06, up from Rs 322 million a year ago. Rich profits have always been the strength of STL. On a turnover of Rs 2.9 billion for FY05, net profit stood at Rs 778 million. In fact, net profit as a percentage of total income has averaged 27.6 per cent over the past five financial years.

    “STL, the dominant broadcaster in the South Indian languages of Tamil and Malayalam, enjoys a phenomenal net profit. With a slot auction model for the main channels, programming expenses are in any case low,” says an analyst at a brokering firm.

    So how do the revenues pile up? Several estimates by analysts are available, ranging from Rs 7.5 billion to Rs 8.4 billion by FY08. Conservative estimates put it at a little over Rs 6 billion. Net income is also estimated to jump to over Rs three billion in FY08.

    A lot of these projections, however, will depend on how much growth takes place from pay-TV revenues and on the success of Maran‘s FM radio expansion.

    Sun to ramp up pay revenues

    Keeping flagship channels Sun TV and Surya TV free-to-air, STL has clocked pay-TV revenues well below its potential. In FY05, it stood at Rs 398 million, up from Rs 325 million a year ago.

    Maran wants to change all this by turning Sun TV and Surya TV into pay channels. Currently, it has three pay channels – KTV, Sun News and Sun Music. But in Chennai which is a conditional access system (CAS) market where consumers can view pay channels through a set-top box (STB), all these pay channels are free-to-air.

    Sun is yet to ramp up its pay-TV revenues. Analysts estimate revenues from pay-TV to go up progressively from Rs 500 million in FY06 to Rs 1.1 billion in FY07 and Rs 1.7 billion in FY08. This calculation is based on Sun TV going pay in the middle of this year and Surya TV converting from the free-to-air mode later in the year.

    “There is going to be a definite and substantial upside for Sun TV Ltd‘s pay revenues. Sun can scale up its pay-TV revenues by converting flagship and new niche channels to pay mode. The number of cable households, paying subscribers and pay channel rates are also expected to go up,” an analyst says.

    Sun TV, which is expected to be priced at Rs 15-20, is expected to ramp up STL‘s current 2.8 million paying subscriber base. Taking Surya TV pay, however, will be a difficult task if Asianet decides to stay free-to-air.

    STL‘s pay revenues will also come from its content contracts with direct-to-home (DTH) operators. Revenue from DTH consumers is estimated at Rs 260 million, putting the company‘s subscription revenues in the neighbourhood of Rs two billion by FY08 at the optimum level.

     

    Radio to tune in growth

    FM radio will be Maran‘s first media vehicle to have a national footprint, taking him outside the southern language market. He will operate 46 stations across the country through Sun TV Ltd‘s two subsidiaries, Kal Radio and South Asia FM.

    The investment required: over Rs 3.3 billion. Kal and South Asia FM will, in fact, require an approximate of Rs 1.83 billion towards acquisition of broadcasting equipement (FM transmitters, FM antennas, payment of common infrastructure), setting up of local offices and radio studios.

    But Maran realises this is where his big leap in revenues for Sun TV Ltd will come from. Though profitable, the revenues from the four operating stations are small. In Tirunelveli, for instance, Sun earned revenues of Rs 28 million in FY05 and Rs 13 million in the first half of FY06. And in Coimbatore, the income stood at Rs 56 million and Rs 32 million during this period.

    Some analysts, however, expect radio operations to contribute to 20 per cent of Sun‘s total revenues by FY08, compared to around five per cent in FY05. Sun‘s radio revenues are expected to leapfrog from Rs 147 million in FY05 to Rs 1.97 billion in FY08. In the southern language markets, Sun has the advantage of dominating ownership of movie rights which it can leverage for its radio business. But it remains to be seen how successful he can be in new markets outside the southern region.

    The structure that Maran has outlined for FM radio looks somewhat like this: Kal Radio (where Sun TV owns 89 per cent) will operate in the southern language states, while South Asia FM (Sun has 94.91 per cent equity) will take up stations beyond the Southern markets.

    Maran has not bid in Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata, leading to speculation in the market that he may have some understanding with Astro (Sun has a JV with Astro for launching language channels). These are the cities where Red FM, which was acquired by a consortium of NDTV, Value Labs and Astro from Living Media Group‘s Radio Today, operates. But no official confirmation is available on this and it may be a matter of pure coincidence.

    Maran‘s plan is to consolidate the radio assets. The existing licenses of the four operational radio stations are, thus, being transferred to Kal Radio. While Suryan FM has licenses and operates in Chennai, Coimbatore and Tirunelveli. Udaya TV Pvt Ltd. runs Vishaka FM in Visakhapatnam.

    Analysts say Sun‘s design to operate the FM radio business through subsidiaries is to separate radio from other segment revenues for licence fee computation (4 per cent of gross revenues). Besides, Sun will have the flexibility to rope in a joint venture partner.

    Sun‘s ownership of rights of a vast number of films in various South Indian languages will provide it with a unique advantage to grow its radio revenues and earnings strongly over the next few years.

    Flexing muscles for cable distribution in South India

    Maran may be the king of content but he realises the importance of having distribution in his winning mix. Which is why he wanted to acquire Indian Cable Net (formerly RPG Netcom), the largest multi-system operator (MSO) in Kolkata, ahead of launching Bengali channel Surjo.

    Maran was so confident of the deal sailing through that in an earlier interview with Indiantelevision.com he admitted he was “on the verge of closing it.” But, as events rolled out, Subhash Chandra beat him to it and Siticable snapped up Indian Cable Net. Surjo‘s launch was shelved and the media king of the south is yet to gat a foothold into the northern market.

    No major investments have been made into the cable business for over a year. Maran did try to expand GCV‘s presence in Hyderabad but without much success. He even explored talks with Siticable to work together in that market but nothing conclusive came up. Sources say Siticable, which doesn‘t have signals from Star and Sony, is finalising plans on how to revive its network independently as it has lost market share in the city to Hathway Cable & Datacom. Maran will, thus, have to come out with a different formula even as he nurses ambitions to spread GCV‘s tentacles across Andhra Pradesh.

    In Tamil Nadu, the story is entirely different. SCV dominates cable TV operations, so much so that chief minister Jayalalitha introduced legislation in the state assembly that would allow the state to acquire and take over bigger cable TV networks in Tamil Nadu, including MSOs and optical transport systems. Though controversial, a lot of how things shape up will depend on who wins the assembly elections.

    Control of the distribution chain has put Maran in a unique position in Chennai, a conditional access system (CAS) market. The low offtake of set-top boxes (STBs) has meant that CAS has more or less been killed in this market. Sun has indirectly benefited by the virtual blackout of all the English-language channels like Star World, Star Movies and HBO. Hindi channels, in any case, did not have much of viewing in this southern-language market.

    “All the other channels have lost their business models here. Sun with its strong language content channels have become more powerful in this market,” the head of a large broadcasting company says.

    In a corporate restructuring, Sun has terminated its cable TV distribution agreement with Kal Cable from 1 April 2005. The reason: cable was losing money. “Unlike MSOs operating in the Hindi belt, SCV will have very less carriage fee. For digital to get a push, Sun TV has to go pay in the Chennai market,” says an analyst.

    Gearing up for DTH

    It is a slice of the business many players are keen to lay their hands on. In India, it doesn‘t matter if you run cable TV or IPTV operations. DTH promises to bring about addressability and better quality of service in a distribution chain that has been dominated by an unorganised cable TV industry.

    Maran hopes to kickstart DTH operations this year even as Insat 4C launches in July. Having booked space on the satellite, he is negotiating with the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) for eight Ku-band transponders. Initially, he had asked for five transponders on the satellite which could later be ramped up to nine.

    Sun Direct will join the race after Tata Sky launches its service. Already in existence are Dish TV and Doordarshan‘s DD Direct Plus, which offers subscribers free-to-air (FTA) channels. Soon to follow will be Anil Ambani‘s Blue Magic service, which has also booked space for its own DTH plans.

    So how will Maran stand out in this crowded market? He may come out with a specific south language package, keeping the pricing low. Along with this basic bundle, he can add sports and the other language channels to consumers who want more. Tata Sky and Dish TV as national players will find it difficult to compete in a target-specific market. Even if they match the pricing, they may not be in a position to offer all the south channels due to lack of transponder space.

    For broadening the menu to South Indian audiences, Maran will have to create more niche channels. Also necessary is to have Sun TV and Surya TV as pay channels by then. For those subscribers he fails to tap in DTH, he will try to retain through his cable network. But whatever DTH plans he has, no information is coming out from the company.

    Finding favour in the stock market

    Some analysts feel STL is an expensive buy with the stock price quoting at around Rs 1260 per share. But there are several indicators one should consider before taking a final view.

    a) There is a scarcity premium on the stock. With Maran offloading just 10 per cent stake, there is a chase among buyers.

    b) Sun enjoys a clear leadership position and there is no credible competitor emerging to challenge this status. Asianet is a strong contender but only in the Malayalam market. Maran is adequately protected with his breadth of channels. He has also developed extensive programming assets and holds rights for 2,650 movies (60 per cent are Tamils and 40 per cent Malayalam). He is in an ideal position to exploit content across all platforms including DTH.

    c) There is a growth trajectory in radio and pay-TV business. The success in these two areas is crucial to STL‘s future earnings and valuations.

    d) Profitability is the most attractive element in Maran‘s business and this is likely to continue

    e) Launch of kids and documentary channels will further add to STL‘s topline growth. Maran is in talks with Hungama TV for partnership in the kids space. While he will take care of the distribution infrastructure, the programming and other support for the southern version of the channel with initial focus in Tamil language will be handled by Hungama TV.

    f) Maran can also create a slew of channels for DTH which will allow him to increase bandwidth.

    g) These fresh investments run the risk of facing failure in the marketplace. But investors are currently betting on Sun more for its strategic than growth value.

    h) Maran has the flexibility to do a private placement and get in a strategic investor. The Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB), in fact, has formally cleared STL‘s application for issue of preferential allotment of shares to foreign investors. No allotment has been made so far.

    i) Sun can also expand internationally through a $25 million joint venture agreement with Malaysia‘s Astro All Asia Network. The JV plans to collaborate in content creation for filmed and other entertainment products in Indian languages including Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Hindi and Bengali for distribution to international markets.

    j) The market expects Maran to merge Gemini and Udaya at some stage with STL. But these are speculations and could prove to be wrong. Incidentally, Maran consolidated his ownership position by buying out entire stakes of Sharad Kumar and Dayalu Ammal (wife of DMK president M Karunanidhi). In Gemini and Udaya, he still has minor partners.

    k) When actor-cum-politician Sarath Kumar quit DMK to join AIADMK, speculation was rife that wife Radhika would walk her production house Radaan Mediaworks out of Sun TV. Since Radaan is the leading producer for Sun network with popular shows like Chithi and currently Chelvi, this would have an impact on STL. Nothing has happened so far and Radaan has not started making shows for Jaya TV. If it does, then it can‘t make content for Sun as Maran has a policy that disllows production houses from making shows for rival broadcasters. Will that be a severe blow for Sun? Analysts feel broadcast platforms have far higher long term strengths than production houses, particularly when competing channels are so far behind.

    Sun’s IPO may set the trend in the South

    Sun‘s IPO may have a ripple effect in the southern region, inspiring several broadcasting companies to tap the market.

    A strong case in point could be Asianet, though it has not expressed its intent to get listed so far. But Hyderabad-based Maa TV, which has been struggling to raise funds, is considering taking this route. Even Raj TV is closely observing the market trend.

    “We realise we have to add up channels so that we grow to some size. For our expansion, we require funds. We have been trying to raise private equity but have failed. We may plan for an IPO,” says a senior company executive.

    South-based listed companies like Radaan, Telephoto Entertainment and Pentamedia have actually spoilt the market with their poor financial performance after the IPO. A healthy company like Sun can open up the capital market for other players to step in.

    The problem is that companies of the size of Maa TV may not attract investor confidence unless they work out better business models. And those like Raj TV may not want to change the way they run their closely held business.

    But a transition in culture may well be on the way. Media organisations will have to keep pace with the changing times if they have to grow and flourish.

  • Zee Kannada to launch on 11 May

    Zee Kannada to launch on 11 May

    MUMBAI: Zee Telefilms’ proposed Kannada general entertainment channel Zee Kannada is now ready for launch. According to market sources, the channel will hit the airwaves on 11 May.

    Zee Kannada will target the general Kannada-speaking universe and the programming space will cover soaps, movies, gameshows, talk shows and current affairs programmes.

    The channel will be headed by Venkat Giridhar in the capacity of business head. He will report to Zee Telefilms South initiatives head Ajaykumar.

    According to sources, soaps and films will constitute 25 per cent of the channel programming. Gameshows and talk shows will make another 25 per cent. There will be a stress on current affairs programmes and film-based shows.

    Zee Kannada has acquired a combo package of new and old films to create its movie library. Having strong film content would matter a lot for the channel’s strategy in the movie-crazy market. “Since the TG is the same, Zee Kannada will have a head-on collision with Sun Network’s Udaya TV and its sister channels. In this context, having strong film content will be crucial,” says a market source.

    “We have conceptualised our fiction programmes with fresh themes and innovative concepts. The effort will be to give a new direction to this segment and thus get a foothold in the market,” says a Zee source.

    Zee Kannada’s positioning is in direct contrast to that of its South sibling Zee Telugu. The one-year old Telugu channel targets the young upwardly mobile viewer segment.

    “You can experiment a lot in Zee Telugu as the market is huge. You have various options to choose your TG in Telugu. Kannada is however a comparatively smaller market and we have to stick to the basic strategy,” adds the source.

    The Rs 1.4 billion Kannada television ad market is dominated by Sun Network’s Udaya TV. Another key player in the market is ETV Kannada.

  • Islamic TV channel Al Resalah launched in Saudi Arabia

    Islamic TV channel Al Resalah launched in Saudi Arabia

    MUMBAI: A 24-hour Arabic Islamic channel Al Resalah (The Message) is launched in Saudi Arabia. The channel, which aims to counter the misconception about Islam, was unveiled by prince Al Waleed bin Talal, chairman of Kingdom Holding Company.

    Al Resalah’s supreme advisory committee comprises some of the renowned Islamic scholars, Shoura Council members and heads of Islamic organisations. The funding for the non-profitable channel has come from the personal contribution of Prince Al Waleed.

    Al Resalah, transmitted through Arabsat and Nilesat, will broadcast a variety of programmes including educational, drama, songs, and game shows purely in the Islamic context. The channel will air open-minded viewpoints and the true message of Islam and its teachings.

    “Islam is being hijacked and defamed by a group of deviants, who operate in the name of religion in several parts of the world. Al Resalah targets the new knowledgeable young generation and open-minded Arab audience to counteract the negative image of Islam, being portrayed in other societies of the world,” Prince Al Waleed has been quoted in media reports as saying.

  • Assembly polls: Regional channels in overdrive

    Elections are a matter of life and death for politicians and political organisations. Another section of society that approach elections with equal earnestness is the media.

    With five states – Assam, West Bengal, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry – engaged in assembly elections in April – May, the regional television market has entered an exciting phase.

    While Assam has already completed the formalities, West Bengal had the first and second phases of polling on 17 April and 22 April. Three more phases are remaining – 27 April, 3 May and 8 May. Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry have it scheduled for a single date, on 8 May. In Kerala it is three phases: 22 April, 29 April and 3 May.

    Thus we have three important regional television markets of West Bengal, Tamil Nadu and Kerala, which command 50 per cent of the total language television revenues, trying to make the most of this opportunity for market expansion. Understandably, all these three ‘news hungry‘ markets have been witnessing a lot of churn recently, be it with channel launches or expansion of existing operations.

    Tamil Nadu is one market that has been attracting attention for all the wrong reasons. Kalanithi Maran-headed Sun TV is enjoying a superior position in the market and we are not again talking about that viewership dominance. The channel is in an envious position of having no competition at all in the news space; or to put it better, no competitor at all. While Sun TV and its news channel sibling Sun News are making the maximum out of the elections, rivals Jaya TV, Raj TV and Star Vijay don‘t have the necessary permission to telecast news and live programmes.

    Ever since its inception in 1999, Jaya TV has been fighting for a teleport licence, which would enable it to beam live news. This year, as the elections approached, the channel had intensified its efforts with the purpose of launching a separate news channel and the matter had even reached the Madras High Court. But, as per the indications, Jaya‘s plans of launching the news channel to capitalise on the election may not just get materialised. The channel is now concentrating on the election coverage by telecasting delayed news bulletins and current affairs programmes.

    “At this crucial time, we can‘t afford to indulge in court battles. We don‘t want our attention to get diverted. We are making our best efforts possible covering the elections,” states Jaya TV VP News Sunil KP.

    As already reported by indiantelevision.com, Raj TV‘s coverage of the elections is also restricted to delayed news bulletins and other non-live programmes. Star Vijay, meanwhile, sounds very pleased with what is has been doing as a general entertainment channel. “We are presently concentrating on bringing quality entertainment programmes to our viewers. Our audiences turn to us for entertainment and we are doing what we are supposed to do in the best possible manner,” quips a Star Vijay executive.

    Looking west to Kerala, God‘s own country deserves a mention more for broken promises. Keralaites were promised two more news channels ahead of the elections: MM News from print giant Malayala Manorama‘s TV arm MM TV and Jai Hind TV from the state‘s Congress party. While MM News is now targeting a May-June launch for the channel, Jai Hind will be unveiled only by mid-May. However, MM News has already started its dry run partially.

    “It is for sure that the channel launch will happen only after the elections. We want to enter the market fully prepared and we didn‘t want to launch the channel just for the sake of covering the elections. We have now started sending our team of reporters to cover election-related events, but it is not a full-fledged dry run yet,” says MM TV news director Johny Lukose.

    However, unlike Tamil Nadu, Kerala is not short of news channels. The state already has three news channels in Asianet News, People TV and Indiavision. For the youngest of the three Malayalam Communications‘ People TV, the launch timing couldn‘t have got any better. The channel was launched in 2005, ahead of the state local body elections and now in 2006 follows the assembly elections.

    To the up to West Bengal, both local as well as national players are showing equal aggresive intent in this market. Star India made its debut in Bangla last year by launching its news channel Star Ananda, in association with print major Ananda Bazar Patrika (ABP). Again in 2005, Rathikant Basu-promoted Broadcast Worldwide withdrew its GEC Tara Bangla from the market to launch news and music channels, Tara Newz and Tara Muzik. Both launches were timed to coincide with the local body elections.

    Now, in April this year, Zee Telefilms found the time ripe to launch its Bangla news channel Chobbees Ghanta in association with Akash Bangla. Kolkata-based Xenitis Group of Companies also entered the market this year with its news channel Kolkata TV, keeping in mind the elections coming up. The latter has reportedly spent Rs 100 million on the pre-launch outdoor publicity campaign.

    PROGRAMMING STRATEGIES

    As soon as the government declared the polling dates, channels across these three markets had unveiled their special initiatives. The general strategy has been, covering the election in three phases: pre-elections, elections and post-elections.

    In the West Bengal market, where the results are reportedly a foregone conclusion, issue-based programmes have stolen the limelight. “Here, there is no suspense attached to the election results. Hence, the effort has been to do more issue-based programmes. Apart from that, Tara Newz has been doing in-depth constituency analyses, live discussions and debates,” says the channel head Amit Chakraborty.

    Star Ananda has branded its election coverage special as Lalbarir Lorai. “The series empowers the viewer with a ringside view of all the twists, turns, sub-plots and issues on hand with continuous updates, news, views, live on-ground debates, travelogues, interviews with the big names, scorecard of performances, opinion polls, exit polls,” claims an official communiqué from the channel.

    Speaking on the channel‘s election coverage strategy, one Star News executive offers,” Star Ananda‘s election programmes are meant to empower the viewer to make informed choices. As a news channel, we give primary importance to this responsibility.”

    According to Zee News director Laxmi Goel, the new kid on the block Chobbees Ghanta will try to lure viewers by offering unbiased coverage and fast delivery of news. Market leader ETV, meanwhile, has increased the duration of its hourly five minutes news updates to ten minutes. However, there are not many special programmes from the channel. “Being a GEC, we are addressing a larger audience. We will put efforts to cover what matters most, the results,” says ETV chief producer Manvi.

    Speaking about the programming strategy being followed by Malayalam channels, the sub-genres followed are more or less the same as those of Bangla channels.

    According to Malayalam Communications MD and editor John Brittas, the competition has helped the channels to raise the bar in election coverage. “Malayalam Channels are more matured now. The election-related programmes have turned more in-depth and issue-based. The reports are now more objective and the quality has really gone up. Technology upgradation has also improved the quality of delivery. With so many channels out there, channels have been making their best efforts possible,” says Brittas.

    “We are trying our best bring in the quality and effectiveness of reputed national news channels to the regional language. We don‘t want to be here as just another Malayalam channel. Our aim is to deliver Keralites a channel that holds the national standards and we have been making the best use of elections to do that,” says Amrita TV director & CEO Sudhakar Jayaram.

    Asianet managing editor KP Mohanan takes pride in coming out with a series of exclusive interviews when it mattered the most. “We have been doing a lot of exclusive stuff these days. We did a half an hour live interview with the prime minister Manmohan Singh recently and that was the first of its kind in Malayalam television,” says Mohannan.

    INVESTMENTS

    Election is also an occasion that television channels choose to make fresh investments in infrastructure and human resources. According to Zee‘s Goel, the company has earmarked Rs 90 million for the first three months operations of Chobbees Ghanta.

    “Since the channel was launched just ahead of the elections, we have gone for the best of the broadcast technology and infrastructure. And of course, this is a long term investment,” says Goel.

    Tara Newz has made investments to the tune of Rs 10 million to provide best services during the elections. The company recently installed the graphics set up offered by the Beehive Systems for about Rs 2.8 million. However, Chakraborty feels that the investments have been made with long term goals in mind. “We have upgraded our systems keeping in mind the upcoming Bangladesh elections also. Tara Newz is popular in Bangladesh also, and we will be covering the elections extensively,” he says.

    According to Jayaram, Amrita TV has invested about Rs 7.5 million on its election-related initiatives. “The channel was given a facelift recently, as we completed one year of operations. We are now preparing software that will help the anchor to analyse each constituency to the minute details during the results. We are also associating with top election analysts of the country,” says Jayaram.

    Malayalam Communications is spending about Rs 4 million on its election programmes. “This is something like a mega Onam (the most popular regional festival) and we are trying our best to make the most out of it. We have made fresh investments in technology and graphics,” states Brittas.

    Meanwhile, Asianet News, the news channel from Asianet Communications, is gearing up for a major face lift. “We have spent quite a sizable amount on infrastructure. Investments have been made in various segments including graphics and server based production systems. On 11 May, when the assembly elections results will be announced, Asianet News will come out with various noticeable changes. The channel will be given a new look and feel, says Mohannan.

    Rival Indiavision has used the opportunity to acquire new equipments. “We have been renting our equipments but now we have bought our own. We have also increased our live connectivity to 10 districts this time round. Originally we had only one OB van in Delhi, and now we have one for Kerala as well,” says Indiavision executive editor M V Nikesh Kumar.

    However, for Surya TV Thiruvananthapuram bureau chief Anil Nambiar, the trick of the trade lies in using the limited resources and space to its utmost value. “Surya‘s news content duration is limited as we bank on sponsored programmes and other fiction initiatives. Hence, we are a team of 30 reporters, trying our best to come with quality coverage,” says Nambiar.

    Post results, as politicians get busy deciding their future actions and doing the performance analyses, these television channel executives will also be spending a considerable time in the board rooms, analysing their performance.

    After all, for regional channels, there is no business like the news business.

  • LMOs And The CAS Conundrum

    LMOs And The CAS Conundrum

    Nothing can get more complex than this. It is not only the pay-TV broadcasters and the government who are wanting to take time out for implementation of conditional access system (CAS). Opposition is coming from within the value chain of the cable TV industry itself with the distributors and the last mile operators (LMOs) expressing concern over CAS.

    “CAS is not good for consumers, distributors and last mile operators. It will lead to too much of confusion in the market. Besides, broadcasters are not providing a la carte rates,” says Cable Operators and Distributors Association (Coda) vice president Ravi Singh.

    Clearly, the mood among the cable operators is not to rush with CAS. They would rather wait to see if direct-to-home (DTH) picks up once Tata Sky launches its service later in the year. Their fear of CAS is grounded in the fact that they will lose control of their subscribers to the multi-system operators (MSOs). And in the transparent system of digital cable, they will have to open up the unreported subscribers to the MSOs.

    Cable operators’ fear of CAS is grounded in the fact that they will lose control of their subscribers to the multi-system operators
    _____****_____

    To counter this “two-way defeat,” the distributors and last mile operators are willing to vote CAS out. So how do they plan to compete with DTH? By dropping prices of analogue cable while throwing the offer open for digital service without CAS.

    Quite a miserable situation to be in if you are a MSO as you will be hurt both ways. In the scenario of a price drop, the MSOs will have to absorb the slippage. And in case of digital cable without CAS, they will have to invest while facing the uphill task of luring subscribers away from analogue. Particularly in a market that has grown a spoilt breed of over 52 million (NRS says its 61 million) cable TV consumers who are used to a large menu of channels on a comparatively low monthly subscription fee.

    The LMOs, in fact, have an open-ended strategy. If DTH starts pocketing cable TV subscribers, the gameplan is up for change. They will bend and cooperate with the MSOs, becoming a part of an organised distribution system with margins well-defined and structured.

    Yes, broadcasters have been dilly-dallying on CAS. But MSOs have not made it any easier for them with such statements as “the true value of pay channels has come to the surface in Chennai where consumers have thrown them out.”
    _____****_____

    But wait. Having enjoyed the spoils of a long grown unorganised industry, the distributors and LMOs do not want to let go so soon. Coda, an association of cable operators and distributors in Mumbai, is even talking of setting up a digital headend in a CAS regime. This is nothing new. In 2003, when the CAS topic was hot, Coda made similar rumblings that threatened but sounded empty. But this time, there is a significant change. There are around 50 distributors in Mumbai and they have invested in fibre. What this means is that they are connected by fibre with each other, except in small patches where work is going on, and have the infrastructure to put up a digital network.

    “We will jointly invest in a headend and run it as partners,” says Coda president Ganesh Naidu.

    Talk is easier than action. Investments on setting up a digital infrastructure is not all; a sizeable chunk of money needs to be set aside for subsidising set-top boxes (STBs). Then there is the issue of professionalising customer care services like a call centre and technical team for maintenance. Besides, negotiations with broadcasters can be a tedious process. And who can forget management issues between as wide a body as the distributors and the LMOs?

    Behind the garb of an entrepreneurial spirit may lie the hidden agenda of bargaining for a “pound of flesh.” The distributors, who feel insecure of their role in a CAS system, want to ensure that their place is protected as a bridge between the MSOs and the LMOs. They, along with the MSOs, have been asking for more, as share in terms of commission from conversions into digital consumers.

    The MSOs can take the blame for not ironing out differences with their distributors and LMOs. Even as the time frame for implementation of CAS is set for delay, there is no effort to fix the margins. The argument on offer: such margins can be settled only after the broadcasters come out with their proposals.

    Yes, broadcasters have been dilly-dallying on CAS. But MSOs have not made it any easier for them with such statements as “the true value of pay channels has come to the surface in Chennai where consumers have thrown them out.” Perhaps, MSOs went overboard thinking that this would win them support from the consumers and, hence, the government as it would imply cheaper cable subscription fees. The sad fate of CAS is that consumers didn’t quite agree with this.

  • Vijay TV schedules auditions for ‘Airtel Super Singer’

    Vijay TV schedules auditions for ‘Airtel Super Singer’

    MUMBAI: There is an opportunity for talented Chennaities to walk in to the video booths at Chennai and register their voice to compete in the upcoming Vijay TV talent hunt initiative, the Airtel Super Singer.

    The video booths are located different locations at Chennai on the following dates: Abirami Mega Mall – April 11 to 14, Udayam Theatre – April 11 to 14, Spencer Plaza – April 12 to 14, Satyam Cineplex – April 13 to 14.

    Interested candidates can also register through the Vijay TV Super Singer vans which would be stationed across Chennai, informs a channel communiqué.

    In case a person is not short-listed, they can still try their luck on the day of the Chennai zonal audition that is scheduled on 16 April at the Chennai Convention Center, Nandambakkam. The judges for the Chennai audition would be music director Iman, noted playback singers S.P. Shailaja and Malathi.

    Auditions are restricted to the first 600 registrations only on a first come first serve basis. One can give any number of auditions and if not selected in the Chennai zone, he or she can audition in Madurai, which is to be held on 23 April. The Madurai audition that was originally scheduled on 8 April has been postponed to 23 April due to the heightened election campaign in the region.

    The show will be on air from 28 April, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 pm. The winner of Airtel Supersinger gets to sing in a Harris Jeyaraj Movie

  • Sun TV raises Rs 6.3 billion through IPO

    Sun TV raises Rs 6.3 billion through IPO

    MUMBAI: Sun TV Ltd. is set to fix a price of Rs 875 per share, mopping up Rs 6.3 billion ($134.2 million) from its initial public offering (IPO) of 6.9 million shares.

    The IPO has received an overwhelming response and has been oversubscribed 47.05 .times. Total bids received from investors stood at 324110480. Sun had fixed Rs 875 as the price at the top end.

    The IPO offered a fresh equity issue of 68,89,000 equity shares of Rs 10 each for cash. The shareholding of Sun TV Ltd principal promoter Kalanithi Maran will now reduce to 89.99 per cent from 99.99 per cent (61,999,969 shares).

  • Sun, Raj TV reach out-of-court settlement on 66 movie telecast rights

    Sun, Raj TV reach out-of-court settlement on 66 movie telecast rights

    MUMBAI: Sun TV Ltd and Raj TV Network have reached an out-of-court settlement over disputes on 66 Tamil films valued at around Rs 19 million.

    According to the agreement, both the networks can screen these movies on their channels. The titles include blockbusters such as Dalapathy, Nayakan and Kaathal Kottai. “We recently arrived at an out-of-court settlement. Both the networks can show these movies,” a source close to Raj TV Network said.

    Claiming to have the perpetual rights to these 66 movies, Raj TV had moved the Chennai High Court against Sun TV.

    Sun TV has also made a similar statement in its initial public offering (IPO) document. “We are party to 15 civil suits with Raj TV, either filed by us or by Raj TV, in relation to alleged infringement of copyright in respect of 66 Tamil films. Raj TV and we have reached an agreement to settle all the aforesaid civil suits. Under the terms of the agreement, Raj TV and us have agreed to withdraw these cases upon each of them being listed,” the company said.

    Tamil and Malayalam combined, Sun owns a movie library of around 2,650 films. Raj TV owns about 2000 to 2500 Tamil movie titles.