Tag: Aaj Tak

  • Indian Express, CNN-IBN journalists win MS Oberoi media awards

    Indian Express, CNN-IBN journalists win MS Oberoi media awards

    MUMBAI: Transparency International India, an international NGO with support from the Oberoi Group has instituted the first MS Oberoi Awards aimed at recognising and rewarding journalists for outstanding stories exposing corruption in India.

    Varghese K George from Indian Express and Rohit Khanna from CNN-IBN won The Gold Award. The Silver Awards were shared by ML Narsimha Reddy of the Telugu Daily Eenadu, and Samudra Gupta Kashyap of the Indian Express in the Print category and by Saurabh Shukla of Aaj Tak and Siddhartha Gautam of CNN-IBN in the Electronic category.
    The jury comprised o B G Verghese, Harsh Mander, Justice Leila Seth, Vinod K Bakshi and Arun Duggal.

    Verghese said, “While shortlisting the entries and selecting the winners, the jury has given weightage to stories that have direct and significant effect on development, progress, human rights violation or public interest. Also the impact and significance of such disclosures and the risks and challenges countered by the journalist in breaking the story were among the factors taken into consideration in making the final decision.”

    Announcing the awards Transparency International India chairman Tahiliani said, “Transparency International aims to increase the level of accountability and transparency of government institutions, elected representatives and the government. In a democratic society all citizens need to take a stand against corruption and must therefore be well informed. The electronic and print media have played a vital role in generating awareness through their reach.”

    The Oberoi Group chairmans P R S Obero added, “Journalists, who often at substantial personal risk, investigate and expose corrupt practices deserve applause, recognition and encouragement. The Rai Bahadur M.S. Oberoi Media Awards are an effort to demonstrate our admiration for these compelling tales of courage, character and integrity. I would like to congratulate the winners for their exemplary zeal, which if relentlessly pursued by all of us, has the potential of making India a better place to live in and do business with.”

    The presentations will be made on 11 January in New Delhi.

  • Sanju Saha quits Star News, to join Pepsi India

    Sanju Saha quits Star News, to join Pepsi India

    NEW DELHI: Sanju Saha, executive vice president, human resources at Star News, has put in his papers and is slated to join Pepsi in a much higher capacity.

    Industry sources said that Saha, just 37, is joining as executive vice president, human resources of the Rs 70 billion Pepsi India group, a high profile job that functionally is director, HR.

    Reluctant to comment on the development, Saha did tell indiantelevision.com: “I can say that I am as of date EVP HR, Star News, but I am leaving the group, that is confirmed.”

    Sources who know him say that Saha was looking for a higher profile, which Pepsi has now offered him. And though no one is putting a date to either his finally leaving Star or joining the F&B global major, sources said he is joining Pepsi in the first week of February.

    Saha had been working with Star News for the past two years and was responsible for streamlining the HR department and making it market oriented, getting the right people and generally “ruddering the ship in an industry that has seen so much turmoil”, a Star insider says.

    Saha has previously worked with Aaj Tak, thus having worked in senior capacities in both the top Hindi news channels of the country.

    “I come from a banking background, having worked with American Express before joining the media, Aaj Tak,” Saha said.

    Before AmEx, he had worked with Britannia and Vazir Sultan, the Hyderabad based tobacco manufacturer.

  • News broadcasters look at innovative ad sales

    News broadcasters look at innovative ad sales

    Mumbai: Approximately Rs. 600-700 million news market in India may get radically stirred if a proposal being considered by the newly-formed News Broadcasters Association of India sees the light of day.

    According to the still-under-discussion proposal, hindi language news broadcasters with sizable market shares are looking at the pros and cons of offering a uniform advertising rate to clients.

    The proposal, reportedly mooted by a few news market leaders in India who are part of News Broadcasters Association of India, may initially exclude the english news channels from this proposed uniform approach to ad sales, which might be a stumbling block in it going through.

    Scepticism notwithstanding, one news channel head admitted that the proposal is being considered.

    “It’s (having common ad rates across hindi news channels) certainly on the agenda, but there are too many ifs and buts to be sorted out before any possibility of actual implementation,” the chief executive who did not want to be named said.

    The executive explained that the idea is to find common ground on various news broadcast-related issues, including infrastructure, distribution and, probably, ad sales too.

    Still, the revenue sharing formula being suggested too is debatable. As per an initial suggestion, after offering common ad rates, the revenue would be split amongst news channels as per respective market share in terms of viewership and ratings.

    For example, if Rs. 100 is generated through this common plank, then the bulk of it would go to the news channel boasting the largest market share and then split up as per market share percentage.

    However, another news channel head questioned the model suggested, saying the proposal may be “lofty, but the revenue share formula would throw up various questions.”

    Still, most news channels admit there’s no denying that having common approach to issues, including editorial, distribution and infrastructure, is worth exploring in the Indian market as certain expenses are spiraling.

    For instance, distribution and placement charges of news channels have increased manifold over the last two years with limited bandwidth of cable networks and mushrooming news channels.

    Presently, the major Indian news channels in hindi and English include Aaj Tak, Star News, Zee News, NDTV India, NDTV 24×7, Sahara’s eight-odd channels, India TV, CNBC TV18, Awaaz, CNN IBN and IBN7.

    The News Broadcasters Association of India is also in the process of finalizing content code for its member companies and exploring having an ombudsman on the lines of Editors’ Guild of India, which primarily oversees the print medium.

  • News broadcasters look at innovative ad sales

    News broadcasters look at innovative ad sales

    Mumbai: The approximately Rs. 600-700 million news market in India may get radically stirred if a proposal being considered by the newly-formed News Broadcasters Association of India sees the light of day.

    According to the still-under-discussion proposal, Hindi language news broadcasters with sizable market shares are looking at the pros cons of offering a uniform advertising rate to clients.

    The proposal, reportedly mooted by a few news market leaders in India who are part of News Broadcasters Association of India, may initially exclude the English news channels from this proposed uniform approach to ad sales, which might be a stumbling block in it going through.

    Scepticism notwithstanding, one news channel head admitted that the proposal is being considered.

    “It’s (having common ad rates across Hindi news channels) certainly on the agenda, but there are too many ifs and buts to be sorted out before any possibility of actual implementation,” the chief executive who did not want to be named said.

    The executive explained that the idea is to find common ground on various news broadcast-related issues, including infrastructure, distribution and, probably, ad sales too.

    Still, the revenue sharing formula being suggested too is debatable. As per an initial suggestion, after offering common ad rates, the revenue would be split amongst news channels as per respective market share in terms of viewership and ratings.

    For example, if Rs. 100 is generated through this common plank, then the bulk of it would go to the news channel boasting the largest market share and then split up as per market share percentage.

    However, another news channel head questioned the model suggested, saying the proposal may be “lofty, but the revenue share formula would throw up various questions.”

    Still, most news channels admit there’s no denying that having common approach to issues, including editorial, distribution and infrastructure, is worth exploring in the Indian market as certain expenses are spiraling.

    For instance, distribution and placement charges of news channels have increased manifold over the last two years with limited bandwidth of cable networks and mushrooming news channels.

    Presently, the major Indian news channels in Hindi and English include Aaj Tak, Star News, Zee News, NDTV India, NDTV 24×7, Sahara’s eight-odd channels, India TV, CNBC TV18, Awaaz, CNN IBN and IBN7.

    The News Broadcasters Association of India is also in the process of finalizing content code for its member companies and exploring having an ombudsman on the lines of Editors’ Guild of India, which primarily oversees the print medium.

  • 51.2 million C&S homes in India: IRS 2006

    The Media Research Users Council (MRUC) has released the topline findings of the Indian Readership Survey (IRS) 2006 (Round 16). The study, conducted for the period July 2005 to June 2006, covers 4,686 towns and villages across the country and involves a sample size of 250,357 individuals.

    The survey notes that the number of C&S homes has increased from 49.1 million in in the previous R15 (January 2005 to December 2005) survey to 51.2 million in the latest R16 one. The total number of TV homes in India has grown from 90 million to 91.9 million. The total TV viewing audience in the country meanwhile, has grown from 430.7 million to 437.8 million.

    As has been the trend in the recent past, the IRS numbers are far more conservative than those thrown up by the National Readership Studies Council‘s (NRSC) findings of the National readership Survey (NRS) 2006. According to the NRS 2006 findings (released in end-August 2006), the number of C&S homes has increased from 61 million in 2005 to 68 million this year. NRS 2006 showed that there are 112 million TV homes in India compared with 108 million last year.

    Minutes 
    2003
    2006
    Avg Time TV 108 92
    Avg Time Radio 80 70
    Avg Time press 31 29
    Avg Time Internet 58 68
    All Media – Av time spent 132 119

    If there is one common thread running through the IRS findings, it is that the explosion in media offerings is leading to increasing casualness in consumption and therefore a concommitemt reduction in stickiness. Viewers are cutting back on time and frequency in consumption.

    There is an overall dispersion in media consumption. More media is being consumed, but time spent has gone down. This is fairly consistent with the changes in urban lifestyles where traveling, socialising, maintenance all eat into leisure time.

    Key Trends in Audience Dispersion

    *More media is being consumed
    *It is being consumed more casually than before
    *With lesser frequency
    *And lesser time being devoted

    This is the case with both TV and Print. Both are experiencing a churn in their relationship with media consumers. On the one hand, there is an explosion in media vehicles, both TV and Print. On the other hand, audiences have really got busy and are compromising on media consumption – in terms of time as well as frequency. They are sharing time across media.

    What this is resulting in is that regular viewers are giving way to occasional viewers. The number of channels watched yesterday increased to 2.2 suggesting higher surfing. While on the other hand, a decline in the number of channels watched in the last one week just suggests further fragmentation.

    Summary

    *Declining stickiness
    *Polarisation in frequency of viewing
    *Overall time spent – a downward trend
    *Audience skew towards lower time slabs
     


    10 Lakhs=1 million

    News & Current Affairs is the fastest growing genre on TV. At 31 per cent reach in the population, it has the highest penetration by genre.

    While News and CA audiences have grown at a faster pace, dailies have grown much more in terms of size – 55 million vs 51 million.

     

    Explosion in media offerings Vs In-elastic Time

    Media proliferation has provided more consumption opportunities. But the consumer is time-constrained. He is cutting back on consumption within the medium, as reflected in the lowering of duplication. But is adding on another medium, as reflected in the increased inter-media duplication.

    He is also cutting back on time and frequency. And clearly moving towards casualness in consumption.

    Impact of TV on Print – Medium is not the message

     

     

    Quality news and information available more than before through means other than newspapers
    Consumption of news not restricted to newspapers alone
    TV and Internet serve the news-seekers immediacy
    While TV News channels provide specific styles
    Internet is a on-demand medium

    TOP 15 MEDIA OPPORTUNITIES
    DD1 (National Network)
    220
    Star Plus
    72
    Dainik Jagran
    54
    Aaj Tak
    51
    DD News
    49
    Zee Cinema
    46
    Sun TV
    44
    Sony TV
    33
    Gemini TV
    33
    ETV
    32
    Zee TV
    31
    Dainik Bhaskar
    29
    Amar Ujala
    29
    KTV
    25
    Hindustan
    24
    All figs in Millions
    Channels – Last 1 week
    Dailies – Claimed Reach

    The great news here for all news media owners is that this increased appetite for news is fuelling readership growth as well so it is not as if TV is eating into print but that both are growing and expanding.

    Readership has grown in absolute numbers, led by Dailies
    *But the AIR Reach has reached a plateau:
    *Regular reading giving way to casual reading
    *Decline in average number of titles read and a gravitation towards reading a single title, within a language & periodicity
    *All this leading to decline at vehicle-level readership, but keeping the AIR constant at an aggregate level

    Dainik Jagran has the highest readership in the country with 18.19 million readers, followed by Dainik Bhaskar with 13.48 million readers.

    Among English newspapers, The Times of India leads with 6.92 million readers, followed by hindustan times with 3.5 million. As before, The Times of India is the only English daily among the top 10 publications.

    In conclusion, the challenge in front of media is to reassemble and deliver to advertisers a mass audience for news, not in one place but across different geographies, different genres and different platforms.

    Click below for bigger picture

    Snapshot of population SEC changes Household penetration of ent. durables
    Exposure to various media Press reach by age Top 10 dailies
    Top 10 language dailies Top 10 English dailies Top 10 TV channels Tuned
    Top 10 watched channels Top 10 GEC/ lifestyle channels Variations in Press Reach
    Top 10 radio channels Top 10 movies channels Top 10 music channels
  • News channels – shifting gears, positions

    News channels – shifting gears, positions

    And charging down the back straight is Star News, snapping at the heels of leader Aaj Tak but still not quite there yet. Early pacemaker NDTV India, meanwhile, seems to have run out of steam and has dropped two places down to fourth behind steady stallion Zee News…

    It’s been a topsy-turvy nine months in the Hindi news space as TV channels tried different programming innovations to woo audiences and advertisers and gain market share. What has clearly been demonstrated is that improvements being shown by some news channels and the addition of fresh blood makes the news channel ratings race a roller-coaster one. Media observers term this period of upheaval as a time when the rules of the game are being cast and recast.

    That this upheaval has been more for the positive is indicated by the fact that the news broadcast industry, which two or three years ago was worth just Rs 1 billion, has grown into a Rs 5 billion market with the potential of growing further. However, as a media analyst points out, a shakeout is bound to happen through consolidation. But till that happens, these “frequent ups and downs in the ratings charts will continue” to take place through the ways events are covered or, maybe, just on innovative presentation.

    Revenues in this sector grew 13 per cent, which is about even with the growth rate of the Indian TV industry as a whole, according to the TAM Media Research. Is there room for further growth? It would appear so. A recent study conducted by Synovate, the market research arm of Aegis Group, indicates that a majority of Indians (78 per cent) trust a lot of the news stories they see or hear. It is that trust and appetite for news that the current players and the upcoming wannabes are banking on to sustain growth going forward.

    Entering the last quarter of calendar 2005, it has clearly shaped up into a two-horse race for the numero uno position between long time leader Aaj Tak and the year’s biggest gainer by a mile Star News. A sea change from 2004 when it was NDTV India that was doing all the running to catch up with Aaj Tak.

    According to TAM, the Hindi news segment witnessed a spike with respect to certain channels in viewership during the calamity that hit Mumbai on 26 July and in its aftermath. And if there is one single event that really gave the Mumbai-headquartered Star News its critical forward thrust, it was the manner in which it managed its coverage of the catastrophic Mumbai deluge. Conversely, NDTV India’s dip in channel share is also partly linked to its coverage of the Mumbai floods and serves to highlight that things are still in the evolution phase as far as channel rankings go.

    Consulting firm KPMG’s associate director Anindya Roychowdhury offers what can be taken as both a cautionary note and one of hope to those who have seen a downswing in their fortunes in the recent past. Says Roychowdhury, “Although there has been a shift in (channel) positions, nonetheless it needs noting that news channels have sticky eyeballs, which is unlike entertainment channels.” Roychowdhury’s point is that because news channels extract more loyalty, if a channel manages to get its act together again, viewers that have been long hooked to its offerings earlier would like as not return (or if the rival channel loses some of its sheen on the content and presentation front).

    Adding to what Roychowdhury said, another financial analyst states that the channel which has a grip on robust content will survive in the long run.

    An overview of data for the last nine months (January-September) provided by TAM (C&S, HSM, All Adults, 15+) shows the country’s subse tez (fastest) news channel Aaj Tak continuing to stay ahead of the pack in this space, despite witnessing highs and lows.

    Aaj Tak
    Jan
    Feb
    Mar
    Apr
    May
    June
    July
    Aug
    Sep
    29%
    28%
    25%
    25%
    25%
    26%
    27%
    25%
    25%

    What has Aaj Tak to offer on its position?

     

    According to Aaj Tak executive news director QA Naqvi, the channel is undoubtedly the market leader and “shall remain so to create history.” Says Naqvi, “Aaj Tak has been able to retain its position as India’s leading news and current affairs channel primarily because it has stayed steadfast with its core principles — credible, authoritative and insightful.”

    Pointing out that viewers have always chosen to watch Aaj Tak during major news events, Naqvi adds, “We recognise that the appetite of the audience for news has changed and we have changed to accommodate these without changing our basic values.”

    So does this mean that the other channels do not bring the same facets on air? Naqvi refuses to take the bait. “I’m here to speak of Aaj Tak and that’s about it,” he counters.

    But the seasoned news manager does admit that with eight Hindi news channels already on air, any further additions – as is being projected by various companies – would further segment the already fragmented news space. “Competition is intense,” he admits.

    Completing five years of a successful run, Aaj Tak is now looking at consolidating its position. “In the first year (2000) Aaj Tak’s share of audience was 55 per cent (Zee 31 per cent and Star News 9 per cent). We were number one then, which was no mean achievement, and we are still at the top. This is an even greater accomplishment,” avers Naqvi, but doesn’t forget to add that these days nothing should be taken for granted.

    That media planners buy into the Aaj Tak story and swear by it is a given, more so since it has proved its efficacy over five years and counting. Says Meenakshi Madhvani, CEO of media audit outfit Spatial Access, “Aaj Tak is a great reach builder and in certain SECs even works as a frequency delivering mechanism that compares with the mass general entertainment channels (Star Plus, Sony, Zee TV).” In terms of comparable value in a targeted media plan, about the only channel that delivers similar results to Aaj Tak is Cartoon Network, points out Madhvani.

    While Aaj Tak has managed to retain its leadership position, it is Star News that has been hogging the headlines. Over the last eight months, Star News has witnessed a phenomenal climb from 18 per cent in January to 24 per cent in September, coming within sniffing distance of Aaj Tak that remains ahead by a nose at 25 per cent channel share.

    Star News
    Jan
    Feb
    Mar
    Apr
    May
    June
    July
    Aug
    Sep
    18%
    17%
    17%
    17%
    16%
    16%
    20%
    24%
    24%

    Explains a justifiably elated Star News CEO Uday Shankar, “Well, it is not a sudden turn around. It is an endeavour that has been going on for a long time, which is now visible. It has been a gradual process.”

    The former Aaj Tak news head does not shy away from admitting that a cloud of uncertainty over its news uplink licence and the row with the government in 2003 over shareholding pattern in Media Content & Communications Services India Pvt Ltd (MCCS), which is the holding company for Star News and its sibling Star Ananda, had “taken a toll” on the performance of the Hindi news channel earlier.

    “At that point, more than the growth, the company’s survival had become the focal point,” Shankar points out.

    But after the running battle with the government — some say instigated by rivals — got sorted out it was time to concentrate afresh on building the channel and making it more responsive to people’s aspiration and needs.

    “Our aim had been to make Star News a channel that sets the agenda of news (for other TV channels as also print),” Shankar says, giving a glimpse behind Star News’ philosophy that revolves round ‘keeping the viewers abreast of news’. To quote Shankar from a recent release. “We strive to give our viewers stories and news that affect their lives, and this has led to Star News’ steady growth throughout the past year. Our success has been built not only on attracting new viewers, but in keeping them interested enough to keep coming back.”

    “That the slow process of building a channel and a relationship with viewers can bear fruit is evident from Star News climbing to the No. 2 spot in the month of August,” asserts Shankar.

    He acknowledges the fact that the Mumbai deluge gave an entirely dimension to disaster coverage and the information imparted by Star News turned out to be remarkable. The visuals put out by Star News, Shankar gushes, “expressed something that words failed to and the coverage simply reflected the true face of the devastation.”

    And what of NDTV India? TAM data shows that Prannoy Roy’s channel has been on a downward spiral ratings-wise. According to media analysts, NDTV India’s loss has been Star News’ and Zee News’ gain.

     

    NDTV India
    Jan
    Feb
    Mar
    Apr
    May
    June
    July
    Aug
    Sep
    21%
    21%
    21%
    21%
    20%
    19%
    17%
    17%
    16%

    And that’s another tale in itself. Zee News, the first Hindi news channel, has withstood the storm of new players in the space for over a decade, The channel that started 2005 with a 15 per cent channel share has steadily increased it to a high of 19 per cent in the months of June and July, and plateaued out at 18 per cent in August-September. Presently, it occupies the third slot.

    Zee News
    Jan
    Feb
    Mar
    Apr
    May
    June
    July
    Aug
    Sep
    15%
    15%
    16%
    17%
    18%
    19%
    19%
    18%
    18%

    Zee Telefilms news group director Laxmi Goel reiterates, “Zee News has been in this space for over a decade from the time when there was only Doordarshan for news and to the present time when there are eight to 10 news channels. Still, Zee News is going strong and it will continue to run the race with its philosophy — Haqeekat Jaisi Khabar Waisi.”

    How does he view the ratings race? Goel adds, “Zee News has seen growth and consolidation in its viewership numbers this year. We have seen a healthy growth in the cluttered news space despite marginal up and down movements on the ratings chart.”

    Goel, however, pointed out that though the number of players have increased “there is little difference amongst the front runners.” There are the top four and then there are the rest is his contention.

    One of those “fringe players” is Sahara Samay Rashtriya. Despite a number of news channels in its stable — both region-specific and a national channel — Sahara Samay continues to remain on the outside looking in.

    Sahara Samay
    Rashtriya
    Jan
    Feb
    Mar
    Apr
    May
    June
    July
    Aug
    Sep
    6%
    6%
    6%
    6%
    5%
    5%
    5%
    7%
    6%

    Still, Sahara Samay Rashtriya vice-president Prabhat Dabral has a different theory. Sahara had adopted a different strategy altogether, he empahsises, adding, “We have a game plan wherein the media company will first strengthen the regional channels. As this happens, their combined strength will push up the national channel.”

    When his attention is drawn to the numbers, Dabral, however, admits the national news channel is not doing well in the rat race, but is hopeful it will “pick up steam very soon.”

    Another of the also rans is India TV. After completing a year, the Rajat Sharma-promoted India TV is now gearing up for some action. The company has roped in Universal McCan president Chintamani Rao as India TV CEO with an aim to strengthen the channel’s brand equity as it gets ready to launch two regional news channel in the Gujarati and Punjabi markets.

     
    India TV
    Jan
    Feb
    Mar
    Apr
    May
    June
    July
    Aug
    Sep
    5%
    6%
    8%
    7%
    7%
    6%
    6%
    5%
    6%

    And what about India TV’s performance on the ratings meter? The channel really picked up steam in March through a series of steamy sting operations that resulted in its hitting a high eight per cent market share.

    In April and May, India TV maintained a 7 per cent share, which dipped to 5 per cent in August bringing it to a level from here it had started this year in January.

    Yes, casting couch stories did create a buzz and they did reflect on the ratings chart. As per TAM data, on 13 March, India TV mounted right at the top of the heap with a never-before channel share of 22.4 per cent. This was the day when India TV caught on camera film star Shakti Kapoor in a queasy corner that fanned the casting couch issue anew.

    That the expose had the charts rocking could be gauged from the fact that even market leader Aaj Tak on that fateful Sunday (13 March 2005) dropped to 20.2 per cent, while NDTV India stood at 18 per cent, Star News posted 14 per cent and Zee News 13.4 per cent. Sahara Samay and DD News were lower down in the order with shares of 6.2 per cent and 5.9 per cent, respectively.

    Then there is also newer entrant, Channel7, which has managed to emphatically establish one point: it’s no pushover.

    Coming from the Jagran newspaper stable, which has a wide network of newspaper editions, Channel7 is cashing in on its strength in the Hindi speaking belt of North India and the state that it’s headquartered in: Uttar Pradesh.

    But the new kid on the block too is grappling with distribution problems. Though Channel7 is “paying a carriage fee,” some challenges still need to be overcome.

    Channel7 CEO Piyush Jain says, “If you compare week-on-week, then certainly there would be a little volatility. It is always better to look at trends over a three to four-week period. We are very delighted with the overall performance of the channel till date.”

    Distribution Front:
    Distribution still remains an important aspect for all the news networks. Shankar asserts, “Distribution is very important. You may have the best of product, but if viewers or the target audience (TG) do not get to see it, what use is the product.”

    Admitting that Star News did face some hitches in a few pockets of the country that needed fixing, Shankar said, “We first built our content, ramping up the quality and then turned our attention to the distribution side of the channel.”

    Concurring with Shankar, Zee News’ Goel offers a related perspective on the distribution game — that of placement of a channel. “Zee News did not suffer from the malady of low connectivity, but on some cable networks the news channel was not anywhere near tunable bandwidth,” Goel says, adding from the day that problem was fixed, dividends have started accruing.

    With the news market getting more fragmented, Dabral acknowledges the challenge increases. “As a strategy, we have decided to distribute Sahara Samay Rashtriya only in those markets where the reach of the regional channels does not exist.”

    Almost everyone concurrs that carriage fee is an open secret of the industry and news channels do pay up to get carried on cable networks. “It is a two-way process; one pays a carriage fee and the other accepts it,” Goel says candidly.

    Present programming strategy and looking ahead:
    Strong position of a news channel is a comprehensive mix of content, marketing and distribution. All going hand in hand.

    Having gained in ratings, Zee News, a pay channel in sharp contrast to the others that are free, will have to strive harder than the rest to maintain its gains.

    That’s why Zee News is attempting to broadbase its ‘thought’ leadership with out-of-the-box programming strategy. An example is Jinnah vs Jinnah, a documentary on Pakistan’s founding father who is still creating political turbulence in modern India. “A timely film (Bharatiya Janata party president LK Advani came under fire for terming Jinnah a secularist), Jinnah established our editorial maturity and thought leadership further,” Goel claims.

    Quite a few prime time shows too were refurbished on Zee News this year with the discontinuation of News at 9 pm and making the Prime Time 9 as a one-hour definitive news package where the first 30 minutes are dedicated to top stories of the day and the latter half devoted to a special story on weekdays.

    On the other hand, Star News is attempting to create a programming line-up, apart from news bulletins, that is reflective of innovations like developing new time bands. Shankar names shows like Wah Cricket!, Sansani and Insaaf ka Taraazu on different time bands in this regard.

    “None of the news channels associated afternoon viewing with news channels. We were the first to develop this time band by introducing a show like Saas Bahu Aur Saazish to drive traffic during the afternoons,” Shankar explains, adding, “Suddenly afternoons have grown to be a strong time band.”

    Aaj Tak too is giving itself time and options to experiment with news-based programming, though it refuses to spell out the details. “Obviously I would not like to go into the specifics about our strategy, but we will be experimenting with new subjects and fresh treatments of some existing programmes,” Naqvi states.

    In the recent past, Aaj Tak has re-branded news segments such as Dus Tak, the late bulletin at 10 pm and Aaj Subha in the mornings. “Not only have the look and feel of these shows been changed, but the focus too has shifted to give the news coverage more depth,” Naqvi elucidates.

    Pointing out that Aaj Tak’s new programming initiatives have yielded results, Naqvi claims, “The success of newer shows only strengthens our conviction that news has a wide appeal that has to do more with the inclusion of a variety of subjects in news programming, rather than sensationalising or trivialising news.”

    Advertising Income:
    Has the change in channel positions started having its impact on ad revenues on the various players as yet? Not as of now but when rates come up for renegotiation, it likely will. Says Starcom South Asia CEO Ravi Kiran: “Normally we have bulk annual deals done in the industry. So the present turnarounds, basically issue-driven, will not affect the rates. A smart media planner should always be ready to handle such risks. But when the rates come for a revision, such factors may play a role.”

    Concurs the CEO of another big media agency: “It is a supply-on-demand market and such changes wouldn’t have a dynamic impact on the rates. We should wait and watch to know what such changes would do to the rates. Yes, when the rates come for the annual revision, the market positions and rankings would play an important role.”

    Conclusion:
    In a nut shell, it has been largely observed that natural or man-made disasters do help the news channels in attracting newer audiences, but this effect is temporary. The gain in viewership has to be sustained through convincing programming, otherwise stray viewers go back to the channel they are used to viewing.

    (Despite several reminders, NDTV and India TV declined to offer any inputs to this report)

  • Tata Sky launches DTH service; STB price Rs 3999, basic subscription Rs 200

    Tata Sky launches DTH service; STB price Rs 3999, basic subscription Rs 200

    NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: Tata Sky Ltd, the $ 500 million joint venture between Tata Sons and the Rupert Murdoch-owned Star Group, today officially announced its arrival as India’s second DTH platform after Dish TV.

    Tata Sky is kicking of its service in 300 cities at an “introductory” monthly subscription of Rs 200 for the 55-odd channels it presently has on the platform.

    Price: hardware+installation Rs 3,999
    Monthly subscription: Rs 200
    No. of channels available: 55+
    Present area of service: 300 cities
    1st year target: 1 million subscribers
    Investments made till now: over Rs 25 billion
    Most critically, the Tata Sky set top box (supplied by News Corp owned NDS)
    has been priced at Rs 3,999 (inclusive of taxes). This includes installation
    and hardware cost and a full service warranty for one year.

    However, along with the monthly subscription of Rs 200, the Tata Sky offering will be more expensive than rival Dish TV’s package.

    Tata Sky CEO and MD Vikram Kaushik with Tata Sky chairman Ishaat Hussain
    Click here for a slideshow
    The Subhash Chandra-owned Dish TV is priced at Rs 3,290 (inclusive of taxes). This includes the cost of the STB as well as three months’ subscription. The monthly subscription for the basic Dish TV service of 75 channels is Rs 180.
    Announcing the launch at a glitzy event in Delhi where the likes of cricket commentator Harsha Bhogle rubbed shoulders with Mandira Bedi, Tata Sky MD and CEO Vikram Kaushik grandly proclaimed, “Entertainment will never be the same again.”

    Going on to harp on the state-of-the-art technology and finesse of the service, Kaushik added, “It’s a technological innovation that’ll bring the senses alive.”

    Apart from the many channels on the Tata Sky platform, a conspicuous absentee is the Zee Turner bouquet of over 20 channels as an agreement between Tata Sky and Zee Turner Ltd has not yet been concluded.

    Kaushik admitted that negotiations have not been concluded, but was hopeful that “things would get sorted out soon.”

    Another major absentee is the Sun Network, which dominates the South Indian markets. Tata Sky is, however, not alone in this, since Dish TV does not have access to the Sun channels either.

    “We are offering 55+ channels at the moment and with the passage of time the number of offerings would grow,” Kaushik said.

    The channels presently available on the non-tiered Tata Sky platform include all the channels from the Star (17), Sony Discovery One Alliance (14) bouquets as well as ESPN Star Sports and two channels of NDTV as its key offerings.

    It is worth noting here that it was only this morning that the deal for the carriage of the One Alliance channels by Tata Sky was signed and delivered.

    Confirming this to Indiantelevision.com, SET Discovery president Anuj Gandhi said the pricing terms was similar to the one signed recently with Dish TV.

    One Alliance is being paid around Rs 38 per subscriber by Dish for its channels. The deal is a five-year one that is extendable at the end of it, Gandhi revealed.

    Also available on the Tata Sky platform would be some Doordarshan channels as well the likes of Times Now, Aaj Tak, Headlines Today, etc. Some interactive and specially designed movie channels have also been thrown in as a sop.

    The Tata Sky service, Kaushik claimed in the presence of his company chairman Ishaat Hussain, has been designed to give subscribers “choice, control and convenience” in the way they want to watch television.

    A host of interactive services such as an on-screen programme guide, Actve Sports, Actve Star News, Actve Newsroom and Actve Khabar are also on offer.

    To offer maximum convenience to subscribers, Tata Sky has set up a pan-India distribution network of popular consumer electronic stores and mobile phone outlets for retailing its hardware and prepaid recharge vouchers.

    The pre-paid vouchers come in various denominations starting off with Rs 260.

    The company has also tied up with LG, ITC International Business Division and Indian Oil Corporation as part of its distribution drive.

    “We are looking at ramping up our activity and service over the next three months when the service should be covering the whole of India,” Tata Sky consumer marketing head Vikram Mehra said.

    The company has engaged a field force of approximately 3,000 people who will be complemented by a high-end 24×7 call centre, manned by multi-lingual customer service associates, trained to solve all customer problems.

    But Mehra was not forthcoming on the media campaign that’s about to break “soon”, except to say that it would be a 360 degree campaign using all normal media outlets.

    Tata Sky is an 80:20 DTH joint venture between the Tata Group and Hong Kong-based Star Group.

    The joint venture has invested over Rs 25 billion in the project till now, according to Kaushik, who added the target of 1 million subscribers in the first year is achievable.

    The unveiling of the Tata Sky service finally turns into reality a dream Murdoch has had since 1997 – of having a DTH platform in India

  • TV Today mulls business channel, Bloomberg tie-up

    TV Today mulls business channel, Bloomberg tie-up

    MUMBAI: The Aroon Purie-controlled TV Today Network is exploring starting a business news channel in association with American financial and business news major Bloomberg.

    The tie-up can involve Bloomberg picking up an equity stake in the proposed business channel. Even if an equity deal doesn’t happen, the tie-up would certainly be a licencing and co-branding one on the lines that Time Warner inked with the TV18 group for the English news channel CNN IBN in 2005 as and when it’s concluded.

    When contacted, TV Today declined to comment.

    Unofficially, though, the Delhi-headquartered TV Today attempted to play down the developments, saying such reports were “speculative at the moment.” Insiders, however, insisted work on a business channel has started.

    The network has earmarked between Rs 350 million to Rs 400 million for operating a new business news channel, company sources said.

    The Indian news network is targeting to launch the business channel in the first quarter of 2007, if not earlier. However, the deal is subject to regulatory and government clearances.

    Last year, Bloomberg had applied to India’s Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) for a proposed television software venture, which will produce and distribute business and financial news television programmes in English to local television channels.

    Bloomberg’s TV channel that was available in India till a couple of months back is off air as it hasn’t yet applied for landing rights, a new rule that’s being pursued by the Indian government to monitor TV channels uplinked from outside India.

    Interestingly, TV Today Network floated a subsidiary company, christened TV Today Network (Business) Ltd, during the last financial year ended 31 March 2006. The development was communicated to capital markets and investment experts some time ago.

    “Consolidated financial results (for FY 2006) include the results of 100 per cent subsidiary TV Today Network (Business) Limited, which was formed during the current year and is yet to commence business. Accordingly, figures of corresponding period/year are not applicable,” the company had said in a statement. The stock market buzz signifies that TV Today is likely to launch the business channel through this subsidiary company.

    In an interview given to Indiantelevision.com in 2004, Purie had expressed the possibility of starting a business news channel.

    Presently, TV Today operates Hindi market leader Aaj Tak, its English sibling Headlines Today, a Hindi version of Headlines Today called Tez and Dilli Aaj Tak. TV Today scrip closed on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) on Wednesday at Rs 76.75 after opening the day at Rs 76.75.

  • NDTV India pulls the curtain down on crime shows

    NDTV India pulls the curtain down on crime shows

    NEW DELHI: NDTV India, the Hindi news channel from the Prannoy Roy-promoted NDTV Ltd stable, has decided to say goodbye to crime shows. Instead, it will focus more on investigative and topical features.

    So, out go daily shows like Dial 100 and weekly FIR. In their place come more socially relevant programmes like exploring the DNA of increasing number of suicides by farmers in the Vidharbha region of India. Even in Metro FIR, the crime segment would be dropped.

    “Our strength has always been serious and topical features and we are going to exploit it further. Crime shows and sensational stuff is not our cup of tea,” NDTV India managing editor Dibang told journalists here today, explaining the future roadmap for the channel.

    According to Dibang, a print medium journalist-turned-TV newsperson, feedback has shown that crime shows might give ratings, but do have a tendency to pander to sensationalism and be intrusive in the personal lives of people.

    “We want to set ourselves apart from tabloid (news) channels and this is not something that we have realized suddenly or over night,” he explained.

    However, this realization doesn’t take away the fact that NDTV India, which at one time was seen as the contender for the top spot in the Hindi news space, has slipped to No. 3 position, while Aaj Tak continues to rule as the market leader. Star News has been occupying the No. 2 slot for some time now.

    Quizzed on this, Dibang, who came to NDTV from Aaj Tak, acknowledges the recent turn of events, but stands by the theory that NDTV India would rather dish out serious and thought-provoking shows than ones that may bring in the ratings in the short term at the cost of assaulting viewers’ sensibilities.

    “We have always been a pro-active channel and given the regulatory environment and policies being proposed by the government, we’d prefer to do away with crime shows and unnecessary sensationalism. NDTV India is not going to be TRP-linked, but become an example for self-regulation,” he counter punched.

    As an alibi, he also dished out some figures like declining viewership of crime shows, most of which are aired at 11 p.m. on TV news channels. “Few years back, the novelty factor of crime shows brought in audiences, more than prime time in the evening. But recent data shows viewership of such shows have fallen as the Hindi-speaking audience is slowly maturing,” Dibang said.

    Does that mean NDTV India would not cover crime events at all. “We’d cover crime as done by newspapers, depending on an event’s merit,” Dibang explained, adding issues that affect the common man would be more aggressively taken up.

    It needs to be seen whether discerning viewers in the HSM flock to NDTV India or not.

  • TV Today mulls Mumbai Aaj Tak

    TV Today mulls Mumbai Aaj Tak

    MUMBAI: TV Today Network is now eyeing a Mumbai-centric news channel after having recently launched Dilli Aaj Tak, which serves the National Capital Region (NCR).

    On the sidelines of a book release function here today, sources in TV Today Network confirmed that Mumbai Aaj Tak is very much on the cards, but a time frame cannot be given at the moment.

    The sources said the fate of Mumbai Aaj Tak channel would be formally decided after evaluating the numbers delivered by Dilli Aaj Tak.

    What is more important, TV industry observers point out, is that the Aroon Purie-controlled network does not still have a full fledged infrastructure in Mumbai to support a 24-hour local channel.

    The function yesterday marked the release of a Hindi book, Anchor and Reporter written by Aaj Tak deputy editor Punya Prasun Bajpai.

    With the launch of Dilli Aaj Tak, TV Today Network has now successfully launched Hindi news space market leader Aaj Tak, English sibling Headlines Today and a Hindi version of Headlines Today called Tez.

    While Dilli Aaj Tak has competition in S1, Sahara Samay NCR and Total TV, in Mumbai the field is more open since apart from Sahara Samay Mumbai, there are only cable news channels run by MSOs and cable ops.

    TV Today Network posted an increase of 66.86 per cent in net profit at Rs 110 million for the quarter ended 31 March 2006 as against Rs 66.1 million for the corresponding quarter last year.

    The total income of the company increased 25.83 per cent to Rs 514.4 million for the same quarter from Rs 409 million in a year ago period.

    The TV Today scrip opened today at Rs 85 on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE).