Tag: BCCI

  • BCCI invites bids for e-auction of India rights

    BCCI invites bids for e-auction of India rights

    MUMBAI: The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has invited bids for media rights of international and domestic cricket matches in India for a five year period from 1 April 2018 to 31 March 2023. This time, the rights will be decided via an online auction on 27 March which will start at 2 pm.

    The BCCI has three media rights package. This includes global TV rights plus rest of the world digital rights package, Indian sub-continent digital rights package and global consolidated rights package.

    Star India in 2012 had won the media rights for Rs 3,851 crore. The invitation inviting tender (IIT) document can be bought for Rs 680,000 or $10,000 (non-refundable and non-adjustable) by demand draft or pay order (both payable in Mumbai).

    The interested broadcasters or companies can also make a consolidated bid for all the three packages. A bidders workshop has been scheduled on 7 March at 11 am to educate the interested bidders on the online bid process.

    The IIT documents are available for collection from the BCCI office from 10 am to 5 pm from 20 February to 5 March. The parties may submit their bids latest by 10 am on 27 March, which means up to five hours before the start of the online auction process.

  • Star India bags production rights for IPL 2018

    Star India bags production rights for IPL 2018

    MUMBAI: Star India, which holds the TV and digital rights of the Indian Premier League, today also won the audio-visual production rights for IPL 2018 as well as the BCCI’s domestic circuit for the 2018-19 season. The deal amount has not been revealed.

    In a release, the board’s acting secretary Amitabh Choudhary said that the BCCI reserved the right to extend the term for one more season of the IPL and one more season of domestic cricket. “The board, at its discretion, can extend the term to include IPL season 2020, as provided for in the services agreement,” he added.

    The BCCI had invited request-for-proposal (RFP) documents for services relating to the live production of all matches for the IPL and the domestic cricket season.

    A lot is riding on this year’s season for sponsors as the T20 tournament has gone on to become the fifth most popular sports event in the world with more than 335 million viewers. Last year, Star India won the global IPL media rights for Rs 16,347 crore for a period of five years.

    Also Read:

    IPL 2018 gets a makeover with Star India

    IPL 2018: Team sponsorship deals may see an uptick

    IPL auction: Gayle to play for KXIP, Unadkat most expensive Indian player

  • 578 players to go under the hammer for IPL auction

    578 players to go under the hammer for IPL auction

    MUMBAI: The much-anticipated VIVO IPL 2018 player auction list is out with 578 players up for grabs. This big pool of cricketers, which comprises 360 Indians, will go under the hammer in Bengaluru on 27 and 28 January, 2018.

    A total of 62 capped Indians and 298 uncapped Indian cricketers will vie for the available slots with 182 capped overseas cricketers, 34 uncapped overseas players and two cricketers from associate nations, according to a BCCI release.

    With Rs 2 crore as the highest reserve price, 36 players, including 13 Indians, have opted for the top bracket.  Marquee Players R Ashwin, Gautam Gambhir, Shikhar Dhawan, Ajinkya Rahane, Harbhajan Singh, Yuvraj Singh, Christopher Gayle, Ben Stokes, Kane Williamson, Glenn Maxwell, Joe Root, Mitchell Starc, Faf du Plessis, Dwayne Bravo, Kieron Pollard and Shakib Hasan–each priced at Rs 2 crore–will set the tone as an intense battle is set to follow.

    M Vijay, KL Rahul, Kedar Jadhav, Dinesh Karthik, Robin Uthappa, Yuzvendra Chahal and Karn Sharma have also set their base price at Rs 2 crore and will hope to attract high bids as the eight franchises look to build their teams for the upcoming seasons.

    The below list contains the individual breakdown of capped players as per their base price.

    public://list_1.jpg
    The breakdown of uncapped players as per their base price is as below.

    public://list1.jpg

    IPL chairman Rajeev Shukla said, “A lot of strategising and number-crunching is involved before a cricketer is picked at the VIVO IPL Player Auction. The dynamic nature of the auction makes it unpredictable and exciting. The eight franchises have given us an indication of what their core would be with their Player Retentions and the VIVO IPL 2018 Player Auction will be an important step towards the creation of a successful team. The marquee list is full of star players, but I am also looking forward to the uncapped Indian players who have proved their mettle in the earlier editions of the VIVO IPL and are sure to attract high bids.”

    The complete list of VIVO IPL 2018 Player Auction is here: http://www.iplt20.com/news/113978/vivo-ipl-2018-player-auction-list-announced

    Also Read:

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    BCCI invites brands to acquire third-party rights for IPL

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  • Star and BCCI pull out all stops to make the VIVO IPL 2018 Retention event – an unprecedented success

    Star and BCCI pull out all stops to make the VIVO IPL 2018 Retention event – an unprecedented success

    MUMBAI: The VIVO IPL 2018 Retention event, broadcast for the first time in its 10-year history, had cricket lovers riveted across television sets and mobile devices and set social media abuzz with mentions and conversations that came close to rivalling those of full-fledged T20 India matches.

    Star India’s presentation of the VIVO IPL Retention event was viewed by a massive, never-before audience of 8.1 million across both TV & digital. As per BARC data (Source : BARC 2+ U+R) 4.1 million TV viewers watched the event across the Star Sports Network from 7-8 p.m. on 4th January and as Star reported 4 million watched the event  on Hotstar.  

    On social media, the event dominated conversations across platforms with 35k mentions making the VIVO IPL Retention day comparable to the chatter during a T20 match. It was trending #1 in India on Twitter in no time at all.

    The Board of Control for Cricket in India at Chief Executive Officer, Rahul Johri said, “The discovery and nurturing of great cricketing talent and developing the cricketing infrastructure throughout the country, are important pillars of our mission at BCCI. Therefore, a quantum increase in the growth and popularity of the VIVO IPL 2018 would immensely scale up deliveries on those important fronts. We are delighted that with the transformative technology and the might of TV and digital combined, the VIVO IPL 2018 seems poised to be bigger than ever before.”

    Star India – Managing Director, Sanjay Gupta said, “The unprecedented response to the retention event across TV and digital is early proof of what Star’s scale and Hotstar’s technology possibilities can accomplish. By offering the VIVO IPL to cricket fans lovers through both, the Star Sports network and Hotstar, Star India will be with the consumer at every viewing opportunity, unleashing enormous convenience and richness of content for the consumer and the advertiser.”

    From the hitherto two-month series, Star will grow the VIVO IPL into a 5-month extravaganza of viewing delight of cricketing action and glorious entertainment, and the IPL Retention was just the first beginning of the great things to come.

    Star will use its technology prowess to power unique and first-of-their-kind viewing experiences by enabling first-time-live-on-digital, check-ins and live scorecards on handhelds for truly immersive engagement of consumers. 

    The Star network will make the VIVO IPL resonate even more closely with cricket lovers across major regional markets in the country. Star will make it a deeply local experience by adding four more languages – Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Bengali — which will allow cricket lovers in various regional markets to enjoy their favourite passion sport in their first language.

    On Star, the VIVO IPL 2018, to be aired in as many as 6 languages on 10 star sports channels and Hotstar will reach its biggest audience ever.

  • The BCCI India rights conundrum

    The BCCI India rights conundrum

    MUMBAI: With BCCI’s India media rights coming up in March, big broadcasters and digital players are readying their war chest of cash.

    The current holder, Star India, acquired the rights in 2012 at Rs 3851 crore for a six-year period across 96 matches. The amount comes down to an average of Rs 40 crore per match. Multi Screen Media (Sony) bid a close second with Rs 3700 crore.

    Last year, The Hindu quoted a BCCI official who said, “I wondered how Star India even agreed to pay that price for each of the three forms of internationals. The reserve price could be Rs 30 crore for home internationals, if not even lower, next year.” In the last couple of years, BCCI officials, both former and present, have made no secret of the fact that Star India would not agree to enter the India bid race if the reserve price for a home international match (including Tests, ODIs and T20Is) is set anywhere close to Rs 43 crore.

    Therefore, it is fair to assume that Star India struggled to make money on the matches. Supporting this argument, a media observer said, “We can’t say how much of the subscription revenue they would be apportioning to India team, because when Star sells its subscription bouquet, it is sold as an overall sports package, not right wise. If we compare ad rates vis-à-vis the rights acquisition, they have not made money.”

    Star India, in September 2017, hit all other bidders in the fray for a six with just one single mind-boggling global bid of Rs 16,347.50 crore to acquire the broadcast and digital rights of the Indian Premier League (IPL) for the next five years. IPL is hotter than even international events. An IPL game will fetch Rs 55 crore per whereas an international match brings about Rs 40 crore. Star India might focus on making the IPL the biggest revenue-generating property in the world after the EPL and the NBA.

    According to industry sources, broadcasters will be looking at paying Rs 35 crore per match, touted to be a fair amount in current market standards, to the BCCI for the upcoming rights acquisition.

    Sony Pictures Network (SPN) India is likely to make a strong bid for the Indian cricket team home rights. We know that Sony already has the Rs 11,000 crore that it was ready to splurge on the IPL rights.

    The other contender, Dsport, is also rumoured to throw its hat into the ring for the BCCI rights. In an interview to Mint last month, Discovery Communication India SVP and GM Karan Bajaj stated, “We may look at putting cricket on Dsport next year after launching the general entertainment channel Discovery Jeet.” The channel even picked up the bidding document for IPL media rights but didn’t turn up on the bidding day.

    For digital rights, players like Facebook, Twitter, Reliance Jio, Amazon Prime, Hotstar, and Sony Liv will play a crucial role. Facebook was the highest bidder from the digital communication platforms for the IPL with Rs 3900 crore followed by Jio with Rs 3075 crore. Hotstar, which was launched in February 2015, wasn’t in the picture when Star India acquired the BCCI rights in 2012. 

    Meanwhile, Twitter and Amazon have gotten their hands on one of the most high-profile sports properties in the world, the National Football League (NFL). In the time to come, both players have vowed to dominate the live sporting segment on digital in India, too.

    The contract with Nimbus, before the rights went to Star in 2012, had a base price of Rs 31.25 crore per game for each of the three formats purely for the broadcast rights. The BCCI’s marketing committee had kept the base price at Rs 31.25 crore plus Rs 1 crore (i.e, Rs 32.25 crore) for an international game in the A category and Rs 33 crore plus Rs 1 crore (Rs 34 crore) for B category matches.

    Looking at the current scenario, broadcasters will have to cough up a reasonable amount, which can be in the range of Rs 32-38 crore, in order to be in profit. The fact that Star India may not agree to enter the India rights bid, if the reserve price for a home international match is set anywhere close to its previous bid, will help broadcasters such as Sony and Discovery to be in strong contention.

    Also Read :

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    BCCI invites brands to acquire third-party rights for IPL

    Comment: Is BCCI lbw on Star’s sponsorship googly?

  • BCCI invites brands to acquire third-party rights for IPL

    BCCI invites brands to acquire third-party rights for IPL

    MUMBAI: The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has invited third parties to indicate their interest in acquiring rights pertaining to the VIVO Indian Premier League (IPL).

     There will be three types of partner rights, which include official partner rights, strategic time out partner rights and umpire partner rights. The term for each partnering rights will be of minimum three and maximum five years.

    Last year, Star India won the global rights, which include broadcast and digital, by bidding Rs 16347.5 crores.

    According to a BCCI release, the official partner rights include the exclusive association of the brand as the official partner, right to use the official IPL composite logo and official partner status in all communications, category exclusivity across all the central sponsorships for Vivo IPL and also the first right refusal on broadcast sponsorship in product category.

    For on-ground, the official partner will be on LED perimeter advertising boards, pitch mat on the outfield at midwicket, boundary rope branding across all matches, branding on all interview and press conference backdrops and logo featured on back panel of team dugouts.

    The cut-off date for sending in expressions of interest (EoI) is 17 January 2018.

    On the digital side, brand logos will be featured on the IPLT20 website. Match day activation integration will also be done on the website. These will be applicable to all the three types.

    The second type, IPL strategic timeout partner rights includes the right to use the official IPL composite logo and strategic timeout partner status in all communications, category exclusivity across all central sponsorships for Vivo IPL, first right of refusal on broadcast sponsorship in product category.

    On-ground will include branded timing graphic on the big screen at each strategic timeout for all the matches.

    The last type is IPL umpire partner rights, which includes the right to use the official IPL composite logo and umpire partner status in all communications, category exclusivity across all central sponsorships for Vivo IPL and first right of refusal on broadcast sponsorship in product category.

    The TV facing branding includes static logo branding on LED sight screens (50 per cent on each sight screen), big screen for 3rd umpire decisions and DRS decisions, on all interview and press conference backdrops, logo featured on back panel of team dugouts, umpire shirts, trousers, hat/cap, match referee shirts and jacket.

    No more than one third party will be granted rights in relation to each product category. BCCI intends (but shall not be obliged) to appoint up to a maximum of six official partners, one strategic timeout partner and one umpire partner. Third parties may express an interest in acquiring the rights in respect of more than one product category but no single third party will be appointed as an IPL official partner, IPL strategic timeout partner or IPL umpire partner in respect of more than one product category.

    The grant of the rights shall be conditional upon the relevant third party entering into a binding agreement with BCCI, the form of which will be sent by BCCI to any relevant third party. No legally binding obligations shall be assumed by or imposed on BCCI or its nominated representatives in connection with this document and its subject-matter, and none of the rights shall be granted until such time as a binding agreement is entered into by BCCI and any relevant third party.

    BCCI anticipates a period of negotiation with third parties submitting EoIs till 31 January 2018, and does not intend to consider any offer for the rights which are received after this date. The above time schedule is subject to revision by BCCI in its discretion.

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    Star bids highest for BCCI’s IPL media & digital rights and is the winner

    Comment: Does Star stand to gain or lose by sharing IPL with DD?

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    Guest Column: Star India’s IPL deal raises three crucial questions

  • Comment: Does Star stand to gain or lose by sharing IPL with DD?

    Comment: Does Star stand to gain or lose by sharing IPL with DD?

    MUMBAI: On a balmy September afternoon, while some reps from bidding companies blew smoke in the air (and the tensions, too, probably) at a five-star hotel in South Mumbai’s Colaba, some senior executives of Star India were lounging in a room in the same hotel-not as anxious as some of the smokers outside, a person familiar with the settings chirped. Soon, the Indian cricket board, BCCI, announced that Star had won the broadcast rights to the money-spinning IPl cricket tournament for five years for Rs 16,3475 million (Rs 16347.5 crore) or approximately $ 2.55 billion.  

    Cut to a fortnight or so earlier to New Delhi where the August summer was refusing to relent and the temperature fluctuated in a room in Supreme Court where the learned judges observed that India’s pubcaster Prasar Bharati cannot freely re-transmit TV signals of sports or cricketing events to other distribution platforms where the rights were held by a private broadcaster or a TV channel and was being shared with Doordarshan under a legislation of the country.

    In both the cases cited above the common factor was Star India (a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch-controlled News Corp/21st Century Fox), probably the biggest broadcasting company in India in terms of revenues.

    Champagne should have been popped on both the occasions. Probably it was, but privately. And, the public reactions were cautious. Even in his interview to indiantelevision.com mid-September, Star India chairman and CEO Uday Shankar was cautiously optimistic about IPL win and India’s regulations relating to the media sector.

    Almost 70 days after winning the IPL rights — somewhere in between hectic consultations would have happened between Star India top leadership and company’s promoters — reports surfaced in media that Star India probably would have to share the IPL telecasts with pubcaster DD that will air the cricket matches on its terrestrial network and FTA DTH platform, DD FreeDish.

    What’s the gist of these reports in the media? IPL cricket matches would be telecast live on Star Sports channels and also a DD channel that would be available terrestrially and on DD FreeDish. This would be made possible — as and when the government formally issues a directive as both the law  and information & broadcasting ministries were being consulted — under a regulation called the Sports Broadcasting Signals (Mandatory Sharing with Prasar Bharati) Act, 2007. Some tweaks would have to be made and IPL categorized as a tournament of national importance at par with other sporting events like Olympics, Commonwealth Games and Wimbledon for the sharing to be mandated.

    Indiantelevision.com must admit, though, till the time of writing this piece everything’s in the realm of conjectures and possibilities. While Star and BCCI did not comment on emails on the issue sent to them by us, even the government sources quoted in the media as having articulated on the possible development were unnamed.

    It makes one thing clear: that nothing is clear as of now or set in stone. It’s also possible that as a trade-off for the Supreme Court directive barring  free re-transmission of shared TV signals of sporting events where rights were held by a private broadcaster, Star India could be mulling sharing IPL matches with DD — and also part of the advertising revenue.

    According to Financial Express newspaper, which quoted industry estimates, Sony Pictures Networks India (SPN), the official broadcaster (till 2017) of the T20 tournament since its inception, had crossed the Rs. 1,300 crore (Rs. 13,000 million)-mark in terms of ad revenue. The newspaper also stated that IPL’s season 10 garnered 1.25 billion impressions as per BARC data, gaining 24 per cent more viewership (compared to last year) on Sony channels.

    Writing a guest column in indiantelevision.com after Star won the IPL bid in September, senior business journalist and author of two books on IPL, Alam Srinivas, observed: “In 2009, when the IPL rights were renegotiated, Sony agreed to pay Rs 82,000 million for a nine-year period or Rs 9,111 million a year. At a simple inflation rate of 10 per cent, the figure will escalate to Rs 17,311 million over nine seasons. At a compounded rate of 10 per cent, the figure will be Rs 21,483 million. Star agreed to pay Rs 32,695 million per year, or a sizeable over 50 per cent higher than the 10 per cent compounded figure. This indicates that the IPL’s valuation has shot up, or at least the stakeholders think so.”

    Given this scenario, the following questions arise:

    Question No. 1: Is IPL that crucial (versus Test cricket, for example) to be designated as a sports of national importance to be shared with the pubcaster?

    Question No. 2: If that’s made possible, how will the technicalities of different TV feeds play out?

    Question No. 3: Will Star gain or lose financially having dished out $ 2.5 billion for a five -year rights?

    Question 4: Will sharing of the IPl matches with DD impede or affect Star’s usual high-octane marketing campaigns aimed at monetization of high-value events and will it set a precedent?

    The answers are not easy to frame as possible explanations are not forthcoming in the absence of any formal and official confirmations or denials.

    If we have to answer Q. 1, then prima facie, the answer would be ‘no’. IPL is a domestic cricket tournament having played out for 10 years with DD showing (officially) minimum interest. That IPL’s popularity has increased shouldn’t be reason for it to be shared with pubcaster, especially when the pubcaster has mostly shied away from airing Test cricket, which is a five-day affair over seven hours daily, and even when India featured in such matches.

    But then in an age of social media, when many games are played on the basis of perceptions, giving a huge swathe of Indian population easy and practically free access to IPL matches on DD could also mean scoring points with a big voting bank. After all, TV services or even entertainment are not categorized under essential services (like some utility services) that need not be subsidized by the government or access made free. Still in India, politics and sports have had a history of an intricate and, at times, incestuous interplay.

    Question 2 and 4 are easier to attempt. Simply because if Q1 and Q3 are sorted out — amicably — then these issues don’t matter much. TV feeds have been shared with DD and AIR by private broadcasters in the past on few occasions. What would be important is that DD adheres to the Supreme Court verdict and ensures that its free signals are not illegally carried by any unauthorized distribution platform(s) in the case of IPL matches.

     This brings us to Q.3 on which hinges Star’s fortunes despite being mandated by a regulation that can smack of strong-arm tactics by the government.

    However, it has to be admitted, again, that DD’s reach is tantalizing — at least theoretically. The FreeDish FTA DTH platform has an estimated 22 million subscribers, mostly in non-urban areas, while DD channels on the terrestrial network supposedly cover over 80 per cent of the approximate 1.26 billion Indian population.

    Given these numbers — clamour amongst private TV channels to be on the FTA DTH platform could be an indication — sharing of IPL matches with the pubcaster may not be such a big loss for Star.

    In an imagined world, Star could agree to share the IPl matches, forced under a regulation, but insist that it would retain the rights for marketing and ad sales of the matches  shown on DD channel too, sharing 25 per cent of the ad revenue— again as per stated law.

    This move could help Star not only increase the reach of IPL matches by at least 25 per cent, but also do some imaginative and aggressive ad sales with sponsors on digital and linear TV spaces. A marketing guru did admit in private that most FMCGs and big global spenders are now more looking at non-urban markets, which DD’s platform guarantees.

    In conclusion, we might say there are too many straws in the wind presently. A word of caution: this can set a precedent that may not always be healthy for the rightful rights owners. But then, as the boss, the government is always right, as the folklore goes.

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  • Guest Column: Star India’s IPL deal raises three crucial questions

    Guest Column: Star India’s IPL deal raises three crucial questions

    “Astronomical”, “whopping” and “staggering” were some of the words used to describe Star Group’s consolidated global bid of $2.55 billion for the media rights of the Indian premier League (IPL). Several newspapers described it as the “costliest” cricket property in the world.

    It seems to be an opportune time to look at the truth behind the numbers, and answer a few relevant questions. Was Star’s “all or nothing” bidding strategy exceptionally brilliant or extremely stupid? Does the seemingly-high price reflect the enormous and growing valuation of the IPL? Are IPL’s media rights costlier than those for the Indian national team?

    The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) allowed two kinds of bids – a consolidated global bid for the seven rights, including TV and digital, through a consortium, or individual bids for the specific rights. For example, a company could bid for the TV rights for the sub-continent only or only for the ‘Rest of the World’. Another could bid for two, three or four of the seven rights. A fourth could bid for all the seven rights separately. A fifth could do this, and also put in a consolidated global bid through a consortium.

    All-or-nothing Strategy

    From the information that’s available, Star was the only bidder to exercise the last option – a consolidated bid and separate bids for the seven rights. The others chose to focus on specific rights based on their strengths. Sony, which held the IPL TV rights for the first 10 years (2008-2017), put almost all its budgeted payment – over 99 per cent — on the TV rights for the sub-continent. Facebook, Airtel and Reliance Jio had huge, but single, bids each for the digital rights.

    The second component of Star’s “all or nothing” strategy was to bid really high for its consolidated bid, and fairly low for the specific rights. The idea was simple: make sure that it had a relatively higher chance to bag the composite bid, and ensure that if it got only a few individual rights, it paid much less. This is clear from the bid amounts. Star’s consolidated bid was Rs 163,475 million for five years. However, the sum of its bids for the seven individual rights was only Rs 788,247 million, or less than half of the former amount.

    Take a look at the comparative individual bids by the various players to understand Star’s game plan.

    Its bid for the subcontinent TV rights was Rs 61,969 million or much less than Sony’s Rs 110,500 million. Its price for the digital rights was Rs 14,430 million, or even lesser in percentage terms than Facebook’s Rs 39,000 million, Airtel’s Rs 32,800 million, and Reliance Jio’s Rs 30,757 million. Thus, Star made certain that it wouldn’t overpay for the individual rights.

    But Star was willing to go overboard for the consolidated and overall rights. The reason for this was obvious: BCCI’s tender stated that a combined bid could win only if the amount was higher than the sum of the highest bids in the individual categories. The latter figure, as it turned out, was Rs 158,195 million, or just over 3 per cent lower than Star’s consolidated bid of Rs 163,475 million. It was a lucky break for the winner – if its bid had been four per cent lower, it would have got only a puny ‘Rest of the World’ right that was worth Rs 487.5 million.

    Seeking Synergies

    In the future, the “all or nothing” strategy may turn out to be exceptionally brilliant or extremely stupid.

    This can be explained by two examples. When entrepreneurs opt for mega takeovers, they generally have two kinds of plans. The first is to sell off the various assets as they feel that the sum of the parts will be considerably higher than the whole. The other is to leverage and extract synergies that will result in a higher valuation for the whole.

    Both can work, but will the latter strategy work for Star? The quick answer: only if it knows the art and science of synergies.

    Over the past several years, sports organizers, media rights-winners (bidders) and advertisers have explored ways to take advantage of sport viewers’ habits in the age of convergence. According to a 2016 working paper by the Harvard Business School, some of the organizers, like UEFA (football), have successfully integrated “commercial activities and resources of sponsors into sports events” to improve “audience experience”.

    According to a 2016 piece by Patrick Hanavan, Chief Client Officer, Extreme Reach, a cloud technology platform, “There is increasing evidence that consumers are pairing their TV watching with ‘second-screen’ behaviour on social media….” This provides advertisers with “more opportunities for synergy between their TV buys and video buys… and potentially more cost-effective inventory.”

    public://BCCI_1.jpg

    Given such trends, a rights-holder, who has combined and comprehensive TV and digital rights presence, is ideally-placed to woo a larger set of audience, reach more advertisers, grab more spend from the same advertiser, and work closely with the sport organizer. The global trend is towards a seamless ‘rights’ strategy that encompasses TV, digital, broadband and social media.

    Although it’s not strictly similar, Turner Sports’ handling of the NBA media properties is an example. According to a report, Turner’s handling of the NBA’s digital business became so extensive to encompass “everything from mobile and social to broadband and the NBA’s out-of-market package”. Add TV to this mix, and what you have can be a winning combination.

    Star can easily drive, rather than merely woo, IPL traffic to its different properties. Star owns Indian cricket as it has the crucial rights for IPL and national team (the Indian cricket rights are with Star till first half 2018). It can extract cricket synergies if it innovates and thinks differently. Over time, the IPL viewership can translate into increased audience for non-IPL content on Star’s properties like Hotstar. The net result: higher returns on overall investment.

    Unfortunately, such grand strategies can unwind easily. Star’s attempt to drive traffic internally can drive it away. Seamless integration requires time, and five years may not be enough to translate the objectives into reality. Moreover, the fresh bidding for the Indian team’s rights will take place in 2018, and Star may lose them. It will be left with the IPL rights for a short summer period.

    Crucially, competition will keep nipping at Star’s heels, and may overtake it in the future. Next year, Sony, Facebook, Airtel and Reliance Jio will bid more aggressively. This will definitely happen when fresh tender for the IPL bids are floated in 2022. The story of how the bidding for the IPL digital rights has panned out is an indicator. The last time, Star won them for mere Rs 3,030 million for three years or Rs 1,010 million a year. This time, FB bid Rs 39,000 million for five years or Rs 7,800 million a year. It implies that the annual worth has gone up by nearly 225 per cent. Clearly, the social media network hopes to ride the cricket wave. The next time, Star’s “all or nothing” may come to nothing.

    Worth of IPL

    In 2009, when the IPL rights were renegotiated, Sony agreed to pay Rs 82,000 million for a nine-year period or Rs 9,111 million a year. At a simple inflation rate of 10 per cent, the figure will escalate to Rs 17,311 million over nine seasons. At a compounded rate of 10 per cent, the figure will be Rs 21,483 million. Star agreed to pay Rs 32,695 million per year, or a sizeable over 50 per cent higher than the 10 per cent compounded figure. This indicates that the IPL’s valuation has shot up, or at least the stakeholders think so.

    Of course, if one accounts for the rupee devaluation between 2009 and 2017, the math will be different. In 2009, the dollar averaged Rs 46, and is now just over Rs 64.

    A similar 10 per cent inflationary calculation for the price paid per match for the national team (the contract was bagged by Star in 2012) and IPL (2017 deal) will reveal that the conclusion that IPL is more expensive isn’t correct. If one looks at the overall scenario from a different perspective, IPL’s valuation has come down. A couple of years after the inaugural season, the league’s value was $4.1 billion in 2010. In 2016, Duff & Phelps found that it was still worth the same — $4.16 billion.

    Only this year did Duff & Phelps upgraded the valuation of IPL to $5.3 billion. Even this signifies an increase of 29 per cent over seven years, or less than what you can earn on fixed deposits. In fact, according to Brand Finance, the value of the league has diminished from a high of $4.1 billion to $3.8 billion now, after reaching a low of $2.9 billion in 2012.

    But at the same time, other deals indicate that the stakeholders still have faith in IPL. Recently, IPL title sponsorship was sold for Rs 22,000 million or twice the figure for the Indian team sponsorship.

    Only time will tell whether Star India can convert the opportunities to shore up its bottomlines further, considering its financial clout and business acumen.

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    public://Alam_Srinivas.jpg(Alam Srinivas, a senior business journalist and Executive Editor of Patriot, has authored two books on IPL, `IPL: Cricket and Commerce’, and `Cricket Czars: Two men who changed the gentleman’s game’. The views expressed are personal and Indiantelevision.com need not necessarily subscribe to them.)
  • Comment: With IPL rights Uday Shankar gambles audaciously, must plan pragmatically

    Comment: With IPL rights Uday Shankar gambles audaciously, must plan pragmatically

    The numbers were close to what we at indiantelevision.com were betting on. In conversations with senior executives from various companies, we had predicted that the telecast rights to the Board of Control for Cricket in India’s (BCCI)’s Indian Premier League (IPL) would fetch it around twice the price that Sony had earlier coughed up. And that too for a rights period which has been halved as compared to Sony’s time.

    Star India’s bid of Rs 16,347.50 crore ($2.56 billion) lived up to that expectation. Sony had last paid Rs 82,000 million ($1.6 billion then) for the rights. In rupee terms that’s close to twice what was earlier paid.

    Of course, the key execs in Star India – led by chairman & CEO Uday Shankar – have good reason to pop the bubbly. They bested a slew of broadcasters, telcos, OTT players and more experienced global sports rights owners to the IPL rights tape with an offer that may appear  mindboggling – nay mind numbing – to many an industry observer.

    Star India, however, got through by what many might say is a thin whisker. The combined highest individual bids for all the rights on offer including India, digital, ROW A,B,C,D, E totted up to Rs 15,8195 million, whereas the 21st Century Fox owned network’s global bid for all rights was Rs 16,3475 million — a difference of just Rs 5000 million. A seasoned industry observer like Kunal Dasgupta, former head of  Sony Entertainment in India, said Star hasn’t bid too high — if one takes into account the combined figure of bids of others.

    Star India led the individual bidding for only one territory – the UK. Elsewhere its rivals bid higher. So, if Star India had not safeguarded itself by putting in a global bid, it well may have been sitting on the losing side with telecast rights only for old Blighty.

    However, it is on the winning side now. And media watchers are questioning whether  Shankar and his team have  bitten off more than they can chew. The network is already anteing up Rs 430 million a match since 2012 for telecast and digital rights to all international cricket that India plays. Thankfully, the Rs 38,510 million deal ends mid-2018 when the IPL-Star era begins.

    But who knows the broadcaster might make its pitch for the same rights once again. If one goes by its hunger to create and own Indian sport, one can expect a spurt in prices for the rights to international cricket featuring India too. So much so that the Rs 550 million per IPL match it is now committed to pay out may look relatively cheap. As things stand today, India cricket rights are cheaper than theIPL’s— and that says a lot about a league that has been valued at a shade over $ 5 billion by an international company.

    That’s for another day. Clearly, new benchmarks have been set with the new IPL deal. For Shankar, it is a calculated gamble that may actually help him raise his stocks within the 21CF family. Star is clearly pulling out all the stops in India. As are his bosses Rupert, Lachlan and James Murdoch. Because it is something they have been used to doing. Up the stakes and keep a stranglehold on sport that viewers cannot do without. Monetising it effectively comes later; remember Kaun Banega Crorepati, the Indian version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire.

    In 2015, the UK’s monolith satellite operator Sky (21st Century Fox owns 39.14  per cent of Sky and is seeking to own completely through its December 2016 offer of pounds sterling 11.7 billion) agreed to fork out £4.176bn to keep hold of the maximum possible number of English Premier League matches – 126 – in the new three-year cycle, almost double the £2.28bn it shelled out in 2013. That worked out almost £10.2 million (Rs 844 million per game). So doesn’t Rs 550 million look cheap?

    Sky had signed a cheque of just £191 million for rights to the EPL (60 matches a year) from 1992 to 1997 – a steal at £0.6 million per match.

    In  July 2017, the leading UK DTH player  raised the stakes even further by launching an English Premier League channel, which would air the 126 matches as part of an initiative to revamp its sports channels. Ten of its sports channels were available at £27.50 per month, whereas individual channels could be subscribed to at £18 a month.

    Will Star go for a similar spin-off play in India?

    Will it launch an exclusive IPL Star Sports channel with debates and coverage of what the various teams and team owners are doing?  And biopics around some of the main players in the teams? Can it start a talent hunt to zoom in on cricketers who could play in the IPL? Can it create special programmes, format shows around the IPL? Sure the creative ideas are many, and many of them could end up being money spinners as well as duds. A lot of this has not been attempted before and is new territory for all, but Star India knows how to enchant viewers with its programming. However, one expects a lot more from it then just bringing TV characters and actors from its top shows onto the field for some of the ceremonies – something it did when it was the India team sponsor.

    Or will the network go for a simpler idea— broad base its telecast across its TV channel network with regional language commentary? Will it work with the BCCI to bring in further entertainment or excitement into cricket?

    While some may question Uday Shankar and team’s thinking behind paying out such a fat purse, clearly there’s some arithmetic and growth strategy in place. Shankar admitted to that when at a post bidding press conference he hinted that the winning bid seemed the “right” figure keeping in view the competitiveness of the bidding by others. Star India has displayed what many considered derring-do when it took the path to develop very local Indian sports like kabaddi, not to mention badminton, table tennis, football and other sports in India. But it has had the last laugh; especially with kabaddi that has found traction and is emerging as a money-spinner.

    With the world as his playground and the rights to digital and television globally at his disposal, expect Shankar and co to do magic. In one market the Star India team could sell the rights to a telco for the live feed, in the same market,  it could sell it to a VOD player for a delayed telecast and also sell it to a broadcaster there for pay TV or run a pay TV channel. In the UK, it has got a ready buyer in the Sky Sports cricket channel, which it launched along with  EPL Sports.

    The IPL teams have got representation from several cricket and emerging cricket playing countries; so the interest is bound to be there. And, if it is limited, Star and local partners will work to whip up the excitement.

    Otherwise, it could use the fun and action on the IPL cricket field to seduce subscribers in various countries to opt for its VOD and streaming service Hotstar. It has just about begun its global journey for Hotstar with its launch in Canada and the US a couple of days ago.

    The VOD platform has been blanked out in all other nations apart from these two and India. Viewers in these markets are used to paying – even if it is only a monthly fee of $9.99 to $13.99. In Indian rupees that is a lot of money: around Rs 650 to Rs 800. If Star manages to lure in even five million paid subscribers, at those levels it will generate an average of a whopping Rs 100,00 million annually per three month IPL season. Over a five year period it can expect its total subscription pie to grow to Rs 65,000 million in digital revenues from just Hotstar. Of course, one has to calculate expenses and operational costs. But then it will also rope in ad revenue too for the service.

    It is in India where it will seek to really exploit the IPL magic. Television advertising and subscription revenues,  premium VOD revenues for both live and delayed feeds – as well as ad  commercial sales  revenues on the free basic Hotstar service. Or, it could license the live digital feed to a social media network or a telco. Remember Facebook, Airtel and Reliance Jio bid in excess of Rs 30,000 million for the India digital rights alone. If any of them bite when Star makes them an offer, it would secure the broadcaster’s India’s revenue to some extent at least. Star well might keep the free delayed feed in house and stream it on Hotstar or sell even that to another player. The opportunities are mind-boggling.

    Of course, the big money monster is clearly going to be TV in India for the next five years, and even 10 or more, possibly. And that’s where Star India will go in for the kill.  The Indian cable TV ecosystem is evolving. However, cable TV operators and DTH players have been wary of raising subscription rates as well paying more for the content to broadcast partners.
    Though, through cricket, Star may look at building a walled garden — something that competitors have hinted at — the success or failure of it could only be gauged by a future time. As they say, hindsight is a great teacher.

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  • IPL has come to the rightful home of cricket in India: Star’s Uday Shankar

    IPL has come to the rightful home of cricket in India: Star’s Uday Shankar

    NEW DELHI: Star India chairman and CEO Uday Shankar today said that the winning bid figure for IPL media rights of approximately $ 2.55 billion (Rs. 163475 million) was the “right” amount for a property as exciting as the Indian Premier League and justified the acquisition by asserting the competitiveness in bidding in various categories proved it.

    “We are delighted to bring IPL to the rightful home of cricket in India and elsewhere,” Shankar said at a post-bid press conference in Mumbai, adding that the eco-system of IPL and sports broadcasting has changed over the last 10 years, which reflected in the figures bid by players anxious to corner a slice of the cricket pie.

    “We believe that the IPL is a powerful property and lots of value can be created in the digital (world) and on TV for fans,” Shankar said explaining why Star bid both, for the digital and TV rights of the premier cricket property that was with Sony for the last 10 years.

    Shankar drove home the point that, as Star had a strong presence in TV and was also the owner of a robust digital platform (Hotstar), it made sense for the company to get complete rights of IPL. 

    However, Shankar made no bones of the fact that the company would have to think hard on the strategies to monetise the IPL as pay TV revenues were “highly regulated” in India, courtesy sector regulator TRAI’s new proposed tariff regime.

    For the record, Star India had challenged the tariff regime proposed by the TRAI in Madras High Court and a final directive form the court is still pending.

    Pointing out that Star would “continue to work within the law” in an effort to get better return on investment, especially now that it has invested heavily in IPL too, Shankar jocularly added, “We’d have to figure out something or we have a problem.”

    Shankar was also of the opinion that the Indian consumer had surprised critics and skeptics alike by taking to digital quite well. “As a country, we were told India was not broadband-ready (but) in less than two years India has emerged as one of the exciting markets (for digital players),” he said, adding that a better broadband infrastructure and cheaper data prices would further boost the market for online video consumption in India.

    The Indian cricket board, owners of the IPL brand and property, however, skirted questions on Star’s impending monopoly over the broadcast business now that it has also acquired the rights for IPL. Dish TV had written to BCCI and the government warning that if Star won the IPL rights too, it would be in a monopolistic situation to dictate terms to distributors of TV content as Star already had rights of most major cricket properties around the world.

    Meanwhile, the man credited with conceiving IPL, Lalit Kumar Modi, now living in exile in the UK, tweeted, “So, Star Sports wins the global rights for IPL. I would’ve hoped for a larger figure. Deserved greater value after 10 years of success.” 

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