Tag: CETMA

  • ‘NRS numbers have clearly separated the men from the boys’ : Peter Mukerjea – Star India CEO

    ‘NRS numbers have clearly separated the men from the boys’ : Peter Mukerjea – Star India CEO

    Size, the makers of Godzilla would vouch, definitely matters at the box-office. And Star India is getting bigger by the day. In terms of annual turnover (industry buzz says it should be between Rs 15-25 billion), manpower employment and activities, Rupert Murdoch’s Indian operations have outstripped any other media company in the country after having invested in the business here for over a decade.

    But big growth has also meant bigger problems. Anything that the company does — or doesn’t do — is viewed through a magnifying glass. So much so that at the time of a controversy regarding foreign investment in TV news ventures a couple of years back, some of the big domestic media companies rallied together to form a group that could have been easily called the “anti-Star platform”.

    A DTH proposal, in which Star is a minority partner with 20 per cent stake, took over 18 months to get a green signal from the government just because of Star’s involvement.

    Still, Star India CEO Peter Mukerjea would like to say that it hasn’t been a bad run for the company in India. Rather, it has been eventful with its ups and down. More ups than downs, as industry observers would say. No wonder, when asked on a lighter note whether it’s better to be a regional satrap than being one of the many in the parent company News Corp, Mukerjea jocularly shot back; it’s better being a regional satrap. More so when you’re the satrap of a region that is a money spinning venture for News Corp in Asia.

    In this wide-ranging interview with Indiantelevision.com’s Anjan Mitra, Prathim Mukerjea, more popularly known as Peter Mukerjea, holds forth on a range of industry and Star related issues, including whether in recent times Star India’s performance has been below par (an allegation that is not ours, but that of the competition).

    Excerpts:

    The National Readership Survey (NRS) data shows that Indian C&S homes now total 60 million. What’s your take on the numbers?

    The new numbers were long overdue as the old figure of 40-odd million C&S homes always puzzled me. On the one hand you had CETMA (apex body of electronics goods manufacturers) saying over 9 million colour TV sets had been sold last year and on the other side, you had the figure of 42-45 million C&S homes. Now India is not a market where old TV sets are tossed out. So, where were these TV sets going? Certainly these sets must be getting recycled into non-urban markets, while at the same time, many Indian homes are becoming multiple TV homes. Keeping all these figures in mind, the latest NRS data shows that the market is moving.

    Would you say that the NRS data is a true reflection of the Indian market scenario?

    I would say the 60 million figure is still conservative.

    What makes you think that NRS may have missed out on some cable homes?

    My belief is based on the feedback that we have been getting for Kaun Banega Crorepati’s second run (KBC2 as the Indian version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire is popularly known as) from the time we launched the promos.

    There’s a co-relation. There is a surge in calls (for participation) immediately after the promos of KBC go on air. Till now, we have received millions of calls and an analysis of the calls tells us that a large portion of them were being made from places that have cable TV, but have not got reflected in the NRS survey.

    My estimate is that the number of cable homes is more towards 65 million. However, the growth is important as for the first time the number of cable homes have crossed the 50 per cent mark of the total TV homes in the country.

    Do these figures have a lesson for the industry and Star India in particular?

    Of course. The numbers, in fact, highlight quite a few issues. Foremost, it pitchforks the rampant under-declaration (of cable homes serviced by cable operators) into sharp relief. It indicates that broadcasters are not getting paid what is actually due to them.

    At the moment in India, Star is getting paid for roughly one-sixth homes of the total number of cable homes. That also means that our distribution team has got some work to do.

    From another point of view, the NRS figure is a vindication of our
    belief that we are the market leaders and deserve a lot more credit than what was being given to us. More meaningful for us is the fact that we are at the top of the heap compared to the competition.

    So are you debunking Sony’s claims that Star’s on a slide now as programme ratings skid?

    I don’t want to get into the naming game, but talk about ratings slipping, etc, is actually a misnomer. If Star, for example, even has 25 per cent of the 60 million market, the ball game becomes entirely different. Star is in a different league altogether and the latest NRS figures testify to that. To my mind, the boys have got separated from the men.

    ‘My estimate is that the number of cable homes is more towards 65 million’

    A quick thought. A sizeable market share of an expanding market certainly means more opportunities. Would that mean a hike in advertising rates is on the cards at Star?

    I would think on those lines, but nothing has been finalized yet.

    Look, the number of TV households is growing, so are the C&S homes. That means more people are watching television. It is but natural that the expanded universe gets reflected in the rate cards.

    When is the hike coming and how much is it likely to be?

    Soon. I can’t give exact figures, but the hike would keep into account the rise in inflation and the increased number of C&S homes. You have to understand that we firmly believed more people were watching television, but the figures weren’t supporting our claims in the past. Now, the new data supports our claims clearly indicating the advertisers gained more mileage vis-?-vis what they paid for in the past. So a hike in ad rates should be a natural fallout.

    The growth opportunities will lead us to be more client and category focused. We’ll have to see not only the affordability factor, but also ensure weaving strategies to suit the needs of brands. The exercise is not to only to get the clients’ money, but see that they too get value that is tailored for their needs and products. From Star’s point of view, we need to deliver the best value.

    To me it seems that Star is setting out to wipe out competition altogether by trying to become a one-stop shop for all the needs of advertisers. Am I correct in assuming so?

    At Star what we want to do is provide so much of varied value to the advertisers that it might amount to almost saying `there’s no need for you to go anywhere else.’ With so many channels mushrooming all over, it doesn’t make sense, for example, for a media buying house to try being on all the channels.

    Rather, the client can cherry-pick and use the vehicle that delivers the value plus results. And, at Star, we believe we have that. A channel suited for almost every type of product.

    Star India has very recently effected a restructuring in its ad sales team. What is the rationale behind this initiative?

    The ad sales restructuring is driven by our focus on client service and building growth category for our business.

    How do you view the current scenario as far as Star India is concerned?

    The way I see it is that the Hindi general entertainment space has been critical to our business and will remain so in future too. A bulk of Star India’s revenues come from shows aired between Mondays and Thursdays. We’ll have to see how we can expand this to include the weekends in our scheme of things.

    People are watching us between Mondays and Thursdays, but how do we convince them to stick with us over the weekends too? KBC, airing on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, is an attempt at expanding the weekend viewership. The aim is not only to keep the viewer with Star through the week, but increase the viwership figures through compelling content on weekends.

    Apart from the weekends, has Star identified other areas for sprucing?

    Yes. We have identified certain areas with an aim to do better and it’s an ongoing requirement of ours in our quest to get better growth. Growth that is in excess of the average market growth of between 10-15 per cent (all media).

    In this regard, we have zeroed down on target client areas. Star will be focusing anew with renewed vigour on sectors like FMCG, soft drinks, auto, financial services and retail. These are high growth areas and Star would like to corner the maximum of their media spend.

    ‘At Star, we’ll have to explore how this ‘mobisode’ theme could be exploited for revenue’

    Apart from advertising, what are the other areas being tapped by Star for fuelling growth?

    Growth has to come from a combination of areas and revenue streams. Advertising revenue is certainly there, but we are now looking at substantially increasing our subscription revenue too. Then there is this emerging segment of mobile phones.

    Latest figures indicate the number of mobile phone users in the country has swelled. We will have to find out ways to exploit this section of the population and see what we can do from the programming point of view to monetize cell users. Our sister concern Fox is already doing that by designing one-minute episodes of popular shows for cell users’ benefit.

    At Star, we’ll have to explore how this ‘mobisode’ theme could be exploited for revenue. Probably, we’ll make one-minute mobisodes of the most popular serial of Star Plus. Definitely there is an opportunity.

    In-programme placement of products is another area that we are looking at aggressively. It has happened in movies in a big way, but on television, it is still treated quite casually.

    Tell me, can you survive only on strategies, minus one for programming?

    No, we cannot. Our strong point has always been compelling content. We will continue to invest in a variety of content, while innovating all the time. Our programming budget for 2006 (new financial year beginning 1 July) will form a major part of the overall investment.

    Quite a few broadcasters are waking up to the importance of the sizable South Indian market. Why is it that Star has taken only half-hearted jabs at that market?

    I agree we have not invested in the South market in a big way till now. That’s because of eager and aggressive competition. The South market, actually, can be broken into four markets as each of the four languages of Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam are separate markets in their own right. It’s also a fact that the bulk of action and revenue lies in the Tamil language market and we do have a presence through Vijay TV there.

    However, there’s no denying that lot of work needs to be done (by Star). The competitive forces are unique down South.

    ‘Negotiations (with Dish TV) are in a fairly advanced stage and the deal might be concluded very soon’

    What do you mean by competition is ‘unique’ in South India?

    Well, I mean that the existing player(s) is strong and enjoys a near-monopolistic advantage as far as distribution is concerned. If Star has to invade the South, then such challenges will have to be overcome. Then there are issues like DTH and broadband. Should one take one of those routes to go South or not?

    We haven’t yet decided how to go about it, but there are some thoughts on the South side foray too that may take some time to crystallize.

    Is Star satisfied being a minority player in the news business in India, while the resident shareholder flexes its muscle in an expanding business area?

    If you are hinting that there is friction with the majority Indian partner, I would have to disappoint you. Still, not only us, but all news channels are facing similar problems. Increasing foreign investment limits in news ventures will only help in bring in more cash, knowledge and talent, which will result in better output too.

    How’s the news joint venture with the ABP Group doing and would we see more expansion soon?

    It’s doing pretty well. The recently launched Bengali channel (Star
    Ananda) has managed to become the No. 1 channel in its genre and in Hindi the effort is to keep innovating.

    The Hindi news channel segment is fragmented and that’s why we have been witnessing so much churn there. In no other market are there so many channels operating in one language. Take any other developed market like the US or the UK or Australia and you would not find news channels in every nook and corner. For the first time, the C&S penetration has crossed the 50 per cent mark (compared to all TV homes) and that signifies growth and opportunities also for the news segment.

    But it’s also time for news broadcasters to stop poaching (of personnel). The business is expanding, but getting people from other (news) channels is increasing a company’s cost too. The trend is not good for the industry.

    So a shakeout is inevitable. When do you see that happening?

    Consolidation in the news business would start happening and I feel in a couple of years’ time there would be a shakeout.

    What are the revenue options for Star outside DTH and cable?

    What is our core competency? Our core area is to make compelling content and distribute it to as many people as possible. So, for the next year or two, the focus would continue to be that and we’d have to see how best we can monetize our content.

    Of course, we are looking at providing content to mobile users in a segment where the service is getting more feature oriented. We are in dialogue with some telecom companies for this to explore how we can develop a subscription model for content on mobile phones as there is a fair degree of optimism on the innovations that could be deployed.

    The wireless division is there and has grown its business by about 200 per cent in 2005 compared to 2004, though I must admit the base is small.

    Though Star has diluted its involvement in the radio business in recent times, is it open to stage a comeback once the regulations become more liberal?

    If foreign direct investment is allowed by the government, we’d certainly be interested in getting back. Still, until a clear direction comes from the government, it would be hard to speculate on our future plans.

    However, I feel it’s time the media sector too is treated in a way similar to other sectors like infotech and tourism where tax sops and liberal regulatory regime is a norm rather than an exception. A few years ago, people in India were talking about convergence, but now we are living in a converged era and media offers great opportunities through converged products.

    Now that Space TV (a joint venture between the Tatas and Star) has got the government go-ahead for a DTH service, how do you see the DTH market behaving in India?

    My take on DTH is that it’s not a technology, but another form of delivery. DTH is more about better services and offering choices to
    consumers than anything else.

    From a broadcaster’s point of view, Star would like to make its
    offerings of channels available on all the DTH platforms in India. However, having said that, I must also point out that there are certain issues like piracy that Star would look at before making available its channels to a DTH platform operator.

    How far are the recent media reports that Star is all set to make available its channels to Dish TV’s DTH platform, which is partially owned by Zee Telefilms, correct?

    Actually, the negotiations are in a fairly advanced stage and the deal might be concluded very soon.

    But haven’t we been hearing of this for over a year now?

    We have been exchanging letters and notes agreed, but now the dialogue is picking pace. Any moment we should arrive at commercial terms agreeable to both the parties.

    I also think that at this point of time, it’s better to look at agreements on an annual basis so that the economics (of DTH) could be ascertained by both the parties concerned. The issue of the subscriber base could, I think, be then addressed in a better fashion.

    On what lines would a commercial agreement with a DTH service provider be worked out?

    It’s difficult to say at this point of time what would be the contours of the agreement. What I can say is that it would be based on what’s charged to the cable service providers.

    Is there a possibility that Star agrees to come onto the Dish TV platform before Space TV gets going early 2006?

    I would not like to comment on or give a time frame for the launch of services of Space TV as it’s for the majority partners, the Tatas, to decide. But I see no reason why a deal with Dish TV cannot be worked out (before Space TV goes on air with its services). We are very close to a deal.

    Do you foresee cable operators, especially smaller ones, getting wiped out with the arrival of more DTH players in India?

    You cannot take away the fact that the cable operators have helped grow this business, but now a time has come when the cable operators need to instinctively offer services based on conditional access or an addressable system. I would say an addressable system would help cable operators to do better packaging of their offerings and help them in keeping their services going when DTH finally arrives. It’s time for them to step on the gas pedal.

    After having said that, I would add that addressability is inevitable, though making it mandatory is not necessary.

    ‘Consolidation in the news business would start happening and I feel in a couple of years’ time there would be a shakeout’

    There’s lot of corporate restructuring happening at Star India in recent times. New people are joining, while old ones are being moved around. Does it signify radical changes in the way the company operates here?

    Movement is an ongoing feature and there’s nothing dramatic in them. Such things happen in any business. In these days of core competence, people tend to work in the area of their respective competencies and it’s difficult to push an ad sales guy into distribution. So what do you do? You have to hire from outside.

    Let me rephrase. Do the changes at the corporate level being witnessed at Star India signify that the headquarters in Hong Kong is gaining an upper hand and calling the shots in the Indian operations?

    Star as a company is fortunate to have expertise and talent located internationally. Whether it be programming, multi-channel distribution, or DTH, Star can always rely on global expertise that is on offer. That’s one way of looking at things.

    The other way of looking at things is that as the Indian operation grows, the need to manage it also grows. We have been growing over the years, but over the last few years the pace of growth has increased. In such a scenario, it’s but natural to get help from our sister concerns around the globe. The power to leverage international expertise gives Star a competitive advantage vis-?-vis competition.

    Tell me, how many of our competitors in India can get international inputs? They cannot because internationally they have nothing much to fall back upon. I would say that if any broadcaster has international links and backups, besides Star, up to an extent it’s MTV in India.

    How would you defend the fact that for every decision, an okay from HK is needed?

    HK is Star’s head office and that’s where my boss is. I continue to get all approvals from Michelle (Guthrie) and this is in no way different to the way we have always operated.

    As I said, with the business growing here, we are trying to leverage our manpower assets situated in other parts of the globe. Sony and Zee, for example, don’t have anything to fall back upon. Just because we are bigger compared to others, everything that happens in our organization gets that much more amplified.

    How do you see the industry shaping up in two years time in India?

    The industry is poised to grow at a healthy pace and a little bit of help from the government would make it a ferocious pace. India, for example, has got an opportunity to become a regional hub for the media (industry), but for that a more liberalized regulatory regime is needed.

    FDI norms should be further relaxed, some element of tax breaks also are needed as a concern for the media infrastructure is non-existent here. If you take the sops that are extended by Singapore, for instance, for setting up an uplink base there, you’d be amazed. India needs to take a leaf from such success stories.

  • LG’s Kim bags CETMA Super Achiever Award

    MUMBAI: LG Electronics India managing director (MD) K R Kim walked away with the Super Achievers Award organised by Consumer Electronics and TV Manufacturers Association (CETMA). The award has been given to Kim for the extraordinary success of LG Electronics in a short span of six years.
    Kim, who has experience of over 30 years with LG, has been with LG India as MD when it started in 1997. According to the release, Kim’s philosophy of innovation, openness and partnership has been the prime factor in propelling the brand towards its vision of becoming the No.1 consumer electronics and home appliance brand in India.
    The company, which is setting up its second manufacturing plant in Maharashtra, as per the release, claims that what worked for the company is its focus on technology, aggressive sales and marketing, providing value for money to the consumers and a slew of product launches from time to time.
    In India, LGE claims to have the numero uno position in colour televisions category with a market share of 18.2 per cent (Source: Jan-July 2003 Report of ORG GFK). In the category of flat TVs too, LGE claims to be the fastest growing brand, registering a growth of 283.7 per cent.

  • Govt. cuts customs duties on set top boxes

    NEW DELHI / MUMBAI: The government today took a huge step towards incentivising the rollout of set-top boxes into the market by cutting tariffs on the import of STBs to 5 per cent from the current level of 25 per cent basic customs duty.
    As per the bare bones information available with indiantelevision.com at the time of posting this report, the latest notification to be issued relating to the rollout of conditional access systems (CAS) in the country, states: Under Indian Customs Act 1962 Section 25 Subsection 4, duties on IRDs (integrated receiver decoders) also known as set-top boxes – Duty is 5 per cent.
    Interestingly the notification is dated 1 March 2003, which throws up the inevitable question of why the government kept quiet about it for just under three months.
    It may be recalled that at a meeting on 4 March among the Consumer Electronics Traders and Manufacturers Association (CETMA), the apex body of electronics goods manufacturers in India, information & broadcasting ministry officials and finance ministry officials, it was firmly conveyed that there would be no reduction in duties on STBs.
    If what the notification states is correct, total duties on STBs will come down from the present 51 per cent duty (25 per cent basic customs duty, 15 per cent countervailing duty and 4 per cent additional taxes), to 34 per cent. It needs stating herewith that this is an initial assessment that indiantelevision.com is making as further clarifications are still being sought.
    Full details of what this notification states and what its implications are will be posted as soon as they become available so stay tuned.

    Also Read:
    STB duties: finance ministry won’t budge

  • Star, Zee at odds on DTH set top specifications

    Star, Zee at odds on DTH set top specifications

    NEW DELHI: The issue of standardisation of set-top boxes for KU-band direct-to-home (DTH) television service continues to be a thorny issue contributing to a delay in the start of any such venture in India.
     
     
    The Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) — as it happened again in a meeting on Thursday — is finding it difficult to make any sort of recommendation to the Indian government on the STBs owing to a lack of consensus amongst the various stakeholders in the industry.

    “One of the main stumbling blocks has been the clause in the DTH policy guidelines that mandates an open architecture for the STBs,” a senior BIS official, on condition of anonymity, told indiantelevision.com after yesterday’s over two-hour meeting, adding that rival broadcasters have been staunchly sticking to their opposite stand on interoperability, amongst other issues, which is making the Bureau’s task difficult.

    Is interoperability possible, as has been mandated in the guidelines by the Indian government? Experts opine that that technically it is possible, but practically an ‘open’ box is rarely used for DTH anywhere in the world as it does not make huge investments in such projects a viable proposition.

    Yesterday’s meeting was attended by a strong team from Star, including the Hong Kong-based Altaf Ali Mohammed, president digital platforms group, who oversees its DTH project, representatives from ASC Enterprise/Zee and CETMA , among others.

    Since no decision could be arrived at yesterday, another meeting has been called for on 28 April where BIS has said it should be decided how things can be taken forward, including a consensus on interoperability. BIS is also of the viewpoint that it has to work within the limitations of the policy guidelines and things mandated therein.

    “If the DTH players are so upset with the guidelines, then they should petition the government to go in for modifications. BIS cannot recommend such a step and it will work within the framework of the policy,” the BIS official explained.

    The open architecture conundrum, as rightly pointed out by BIS, is the result of lack of consensus on the issue.

    At one end of the spectrum is media baron Rupert Murdoch’s pan-Asian venture Star Group that has applied to the Indian government for a DTH licence through a company called Space TV. Star’s stand from the beginning has been that open architecture is a non-starter and this clause should be changed if the BIS sub-committee, examining this issue at the behest of the information and broadcasting ministry, recommends so to the government.

    At the other end of the DTH spectrum is Murdoch’s one time Indian ally, Subhash Chandra, sometimes also referred to as Asia’s Rupert Murdoch by South-East Asia based newsmagazines.

    While Space TV is yet to get a nod from the government on the DTH licence issue, one of Chandra’s companies, ASC Enterprise, having got the green signal for DTH and the official letter from the I&B ministry recently, is taking a stand that it would do everything as per rules specified in the guidelines. This also includes going in for interoperability where the boxes are concerned.

    This divergent view has thrown a spanner in Star’s scheme of things, which has also been petitioning that another clause in the guidelines relating to revenue sharing with the government should be modified. And rightly so also.

    A typical DTH venture would attract investment between $ 400-500 million. Having invested such a sum, no media organisation would like to throw away the advantage of captive subscribers. Moreover, as Star has pointed out, since such ventures take a long time to break-even, the 10 per cent annual revenue sharing should be modified to profit sharing.

    In India, despite small steps forward, DTH at present continues to be DTN (direct to nowhere).

  • STB duties: finance ministry won’t budge

    STB duties: finance ministry won’t budge

    MUMBAI / NEW DELHI: After a “disappointing” budget, the Consumer Electronics Traders and Manufacturers Association (CETMA), the apex body of electronics goods manufacturers in India, had to listen to more bad news today

    A meeting among CETMA, information & broadcasting ministry officials and finance ministry officials ended today with it being firmly conveyed that there would be no reduction in duties on set top boxes, as was being sought by the electronics manufacturers.

    “At the moment it looks that STBs will have to be imported with 51 per cent duty (25 per cent basic customs duty, 15 per cent countervailing duty and 4 per cent additional taxes), CETMA’s Suresh Khanna told indiantelevision this evening, sounding dejected.

    According to Khanna in the initial phase of conditional access rollout, the whole set top box would have to be imported. It would only be later when demand picked up that semi-knock down kits and finally completely knocked down kits could be manufactured, Khanna said.

    Khanna had said immediately after finance minister Jaswant Singh presented his budget that CETMA would be petitioning the I&B ministry as also the finance ministry “at the first available opportunity” to push for review of the government (in)decision on STBs, especially at a time when the government is pushing aggressively the implementation of conditional access system.

    The manufacturers had been hoping that the budget would see basic customs duty on set top boxes being reduced to 10 per cent but that was not to be.

    CETMA had also asked for zero per cent excise duty on finished goods and components like RF modulators and the Network Interface Module.

    They had also demanded that sales tax be kept at four per cent, preventing fly by night operators and gray market from affecting legitimate sales of the Indian manufacturer. The association also wants a lead time of 90 days from the date of commercially clear purchase order for the delivery of the STBs.

  • CETMA for 10 per cent duty on STBs

    CETMA for 10 per cent duty on STBs

    MUMBAI: The Consumer Electronics Traders and Manufacturers Association wants basic customs duty on set top boxes to stay at 10 per cent which will prevent fly by night operators to enter and affect the Indian manufacturing industry.
     

    CETMA has also asked for zero per cent excise duty on finished goods and components like RF modulators and the Network Interface Module. This will lower upfront costs for the operators and hence subscribers, enable quicker penetration in metros and non metros and faster implementation, earn more revenue for the government from service charges and service taxes.

    CETMA would also like sales tax to be at four per cent, preventing fly by night operators and grey market from affecting legitimate sales of the Indian manufacturer. The association also wants a lead time of 90 days from the date of commercially clear purchase order for the delivery of the STBs. 

    The implementation committee, says CETMA, should comprise of all relevant and affected parties, like CETMA, broadcasters, MSOs, cable ops, government and consumer interest groups. As regards BIS compliance for the STBs, CETMA says self regulation by manufacturers is suggested by putting a sticker mentioning ‘BIS compliant’. BIS could then randomly pick up and test STBs deployed, says CETMA.

  • BIS puts off decision on STBs for DTH

    BIS puts off decision on STBs for DTH

    NEW DELHI: If the availability of set-top boxes (STBs) is one of the speed breakers to a smooth passage of implementation of conditional access system in the country, the same issue has become contentious in the case of KU-band direct-to-home television service too.

    After a meeting on specifications of STBs for DTH yesterday here at the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS), it seems BIS would not like to take a definite stand and is likely to put the ball back in the information and broadcasting ministry’s court to take a final shot at the issue.

    The task force of the BIS, set up to discuss the specifications of the STBs for DTH, yesterday failed to arrive at any sort of consensus as the Star/Space TV representative maintained that interoperability is not a workable model, while the others, including the Subhash Chandra-promoted ASC Enterprises, opined it is technically possible. 

    According to sources in the BIS, it has now been decided to collate the feedback on STBs for a month, including on whether interoperability is possible or not, from all stakeholders and pass it on to the ministry for “guidance and advice.”

    The dilemma of BIS is clear: it cannot come out in the open and say outright that interoperability or open architecture is not possible. Because it is. What it does is that the costs of STBs go up and, more importantly, there is no guarantee of the boxes being hack-proof.

    Yesterday’s meeting was attended, amongst others, by Star India, NDS (a News Corp company that has the technology for DTH and even CAS), Doordarshan, ASC Enterprises, CETMA and Siti Cable.

    Earlier this month, BIS had decided to form a task force to come up with recommendations on the specifications of set-top boxes for DTH. Star then also had said that interoperability, as suggested in the government guidelines, is not a workable model.

    What is making the work of task force – that has to come up with its recommendations for the main committee of the BIS – difficult is the fact that BIS’ viewpoint was that it has to operate within the broad framework of the policy guidelines which states that for KU-band DTH service, an open architecture has to be followed.

    Star’s stand has been that if in open architecture the government insists upon STB, then it would make the STB expensive and difficult for a would-be service provider to subsidise the boxes as exclusivity and captive consumers would not be assured.

    Thomson India and CETMA, the apex body of consumer electronics goods manufacturers in India, supported the stand of Star, said to be represented by the Mumbai-based head of the company’s DTH operations in India. The information and broadcasting ministry had referred to the BIS the issue of specifications for STBs for DTH last year.

    What does the government mean by an open architecture? In layman’s language, it means that if a consumer buys a STB for a KU-band DTH service in India, then the STB should be capable of working if the smart card of another DTH service provider is inserted in it. This theory is based on the presumption that there would be several DTH service providers in India, though globally this sector works best with monopoly or at best a duopoly.

  • CAS task force formed; to meet 7 Feb

    NEW DELHI: The government has completed the formation of the task force that will decide the pricing and composition of the basic tier of service in a conditional access regime and has called a meeting of the panel members on 7 February to discuss various issues.
    According to government sources, Rakesh Mohan, joint secretary (broadcasting) in the information and broadcasting ministry, would head the task force.
    Those from the industry who find a place in the 17-person panel include Suresh Khanna of CETMA, Sanjiv Kainth of Thomson India (a possible manufacturer of set-top boxes), ESPN India country head Manu Sawhney, Siti Cable chief Jawahar Goel, Sony Entertainment TV India’s distribution head Shantanu Aditya, Rajiv Vyas of HTMT (INCablenet), Asim Dutta of RPG and D Maran of the Sun TV group.
    The panel would also have an expert from Doordarshan and representatives of consumer rights groups.
    The terms of reference for the 8 February meeting are as follows:
    – Recommend the size and price of the basic tier of the notified free to air channels,
    – Recommend on rollout of addressability in other cities and towns (apart from the metros that are targeted in the first phase),
    – Any other issue that may be related to CAS and its rollout.
    The question doing the rounds of course is what is the stand that the I&B ministry will adopt now on the issue of CAS, considering that Sushma Swaraj is moving out of Shastri Bhawan (housing the ministry). How Ravi Shankar Prasad, who is moving in to replace her from coal and mines as minister of state with independent charge, approaches the issue will be eagerly watched..
    If Swaraj had taken it upon herself to see that CAS was pushed through Parliament and implemented as soon as possible, Prasad’s views on this are not known yet till the time of posting of this report.
    Questions around `whether Prasad will show as much zeal to push through CAS as Swaraj?’ are already being raised in industry and in government circles.
    Only Prasad can provide some answers. So keep tuned in for Prasad speak.

  • 100 per cent declaration unfeasible, says NCTA

    100 per cent declaration unfeasible, says NCTA

    MUMBAI: Underdeclaration has been the way out thus far; 100 per cent declaration is an impractical option. CAS is the effective solution in the foreseeable future. That about surmises what the New Delhi-based National Cable Telecommunication Association feels about the cable scenario in the country.

    In a presentation at the Consumer Electronics & TV Manufacturers’ Association (CETMA) seminar in Delhi on Thursday, NCTA’s Vikki Chaudhry outlined the independent cable TV operator’s side of the story, supplemented with statistics. If the cable op has to offer 100 per cent declaration to pay channel broadcasters, says Chaudhry, it would cost the subscriber Rs 402, a figure which Chaudhry claims the average subscriber can ill afford.

    On the other hand, cutting operating expenditure to accommodate pay channels and taxes means ‘frequent network breakdowns, poor picture quality, inferior distribution equipment and ineffective implementation of effective CAS’. Underdeclaration to pay channels has thus far entailed an average subscription of Rs 225 to Rs 250 per month, offering “commercial viability to the cable op with scope for upgradation and value service additions, but also some disruptions in pay channel services on issues of subscriber under-declaration,” says Chaudhry.

    The implementation of CAS, on the other hand, he says, will offer a basic tier at affordable rates to subscribers, more transparency in business with pay TV broadcasters, a level playing field for all players and additional revenue.

  • Many issues covered, little by way of solutions at CETMA seminar on CAS

    Many issues covered, little by way of solutions at CETMA seminar on CAS

    Do the amendments being sought in the Cable TV (Networks) regulation Act, 1995 address the issue of subscriber management system? Will there be a penalty for under-declaration of subscriber base by cable operators? Who will invest in the upgradation of head-ends when conditional access is implemented? What should be the business model in a post-CAS era? What should be the ideal technical specifications – open architecture or proprietary technology?

    There were more questions and concerns than answers and solutions. That, in a nutshell, was the outcome of a seminar on conditional access systems (CAS) and pay TV channels that had been organised by the Consumer Electronics & TV Manufacturers’ Association (CETMA) in Delhi today.

    After the seminar, a chief executive of a joint venture cable distribution company admitted in private that “too may issues and concerns were voiced with almost no solutions offered.”

    If Shantanu Aditya, head of Sony Entertainment TV Discovery Pvt Ltd, a cable distribution company, felt that the amendments which have been proposed in the Cable TV (Networks) regulation Act, 1995, would not help India leapfrog where technology is concerned and also does not address the issue of under-reporting by cable operators, Vikki Choudhry, an independent cable operator in Delhi was of the opinion that the broadcasters, most of the time, do not take into account the problems of cable operators which include financial ones too. “In such a scenario, CAS is a good thing for the whole industry as it will bring about some transparency,” he added.

    However, the three major concerns, which CETMA will apprise the government of after collating facts from the seminar, amongst others, are the following:

    1. The cost factor: higher duties on set top boxes (STBs) which at present total up to about 58.6 per cent, must be reduced drastically. According to Rajeev Karwal, senior vice-president (consumer electronics) of Philips India Ltd, “If the government really wishes to popularise CAS through STBs, then the various duties on STBs need to be reduced.”

    2. Safeguard against unauthorised re-distribution of pay channels after CAS is implemented. Explained Sanjiv Kainth, general manager, digital products, Thomson Multimedia India Pvt. Ltd: “The government has to ensure that after CAS is implemented, nobody illegally redistributes pay channels. This is very important as it will defeat the whole purpose of CAS.”

    3. The analog vs digital STB issue: With confusion prevailing in the Indian market whether India should go in for anlaog or digital STBs, Thomson’s Kainth said that various lobbies be damned as market forces, based on economic factors of the region serviced by cable operators will decide whether it will be analog or digital STBs. “As I see it, in all probability, it will be a mix of both with cable operators servicing more affluent areas having the option to go in for digital STBs,” he added. But differing with Kainth on this issue was Aditya who felt that analog STBs would be a “step backward.”

    K. Jayaraman, managing director of Hathaway & Datacom Cable, felt that CAS may address the issue of piracy which results in loss of revenue for everybody, but added that some pilot projects undertaken by his company has shown that digital STBs don’t seem to work very well in India.

    But it was Thomson’s Kainth, airing CETMA’s overall view, who came out with a splendid presentation on CAS and pay channels which covered the whole gamut of issues from investments to the business models to the technical specifications. 

    According to Kainth, investment between Rs 25 million to Rs 100 million would be needed in a headend that is distributing 40-odd digital channels and “ultimately it would be the cable operator who owns the subscriber and the subscribers themselves who will have to bear a major share of the investment pie.” A point of view also voiced by Dayanidhi Maran, chief executive of the Sun-owned Sumangali Cable Vision cable distribution company.

    Sunil Khanna, chief executive of Zee Turner Pvt. Ltd, referred to the idea of “headend in the sky” which will drastically reduce the cost of physical implementation of CAS throughout the country in various phases. 

    Head in the sky concept involves forming a platform of broadcasters who uplink from a common place where all the signals are encrypted after the various channel signals are passed through a box and then uplinked again in that format. The cable operator then downlinks the encrypted bunch of signals, mixes the free to air channels and re-distributes to consumers according to their needs. 

    But, countered, a senior executive from a hardware manufacturing firm, headend-in-the-sky concept sounds very good theoretically, but will remain a fantasy as in this case the broadcasters have to decide first to come together which looks a remote possibility.

    Then, of course, consumer activist and columnist Pushpa Girimaji, presenting the consumers’ viewpoint said that CAS is fine but the way everything has been framed it seems to limit the consumer’s options rather make it flexible.

    “The Bill on CAS takes away the people’s right of choice and gives the power to the government to decide what they should see. It curtails consumers choice and nobody should decide how many channels people should see (or not see),” Girimaji said while referring to the CAS and the basic tier of free to air channels being proposed by the government.