Tag: chrome data

  • Bihar govt trebles cable TV entertainment tax to Rs 50

    Bihar govt trebles cable TV entertainment tax to Rs 50

    MUMBAI: Even as the government is working on subsuming entertainment and other incidental taxes into a goods and service tax (GST) which would be around 18 per cent, cable TV subscribers in Bihar are about to be delivered a blow to their wallets. A couple of days ago, the state’s cabinet stamped its approval on a proposal to hike entertainment tax from Rs 15 to Rs 50 per subscriber.

    That’s a 200-plus per cent escalation, and it places the state amongst the top entertainment tax-levying states in India. According to earlier statistics released by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), Bihar accounts for about three per cent of the cable TV subscribers in India. That means the state has anywhere between two million and three million subs.

    According to data released by cable TV tracking firm Chrome Data, Bihar had achieved only 68 per cent digitization by February 2016. Additionally, TV viewers in the state had been opting for DTH, rather than cable with the DTH subscriber base, jumping 32 per cent in just one month, following the imposition of digitization. Estimates are that only the city of Patna has a 400,000 cable TV subscribers.

    Currently, TV viewers’ cable bills are anywhere between Rs 250 and Rs 350 per month for their cable TV connection. With the Rs 50 entertainment tax levy, cable TV MSOs are expecting these to rise to between Rs 300 and Rs 400.

    The Times of India has stated that the Bihar government is taking this step to plug the revenue gap that has sprung up following the imposition of prohibition. It says the government had a shortfall of Rs 5,000 crore. Additionally, the commercial taxes department has been set a tax collection target of Rs 22,000 crore for fiscal 2016-2017. And, of course, cable TV is an easy target.

    However, with disclosures from the fragmented cable TV trade being as they are, observers wonder whether the tax hike will yield the desired results.

  • Bihar govt trebles cable TV entertainment tax to Rs 50

    Bihar govt trebles cable TV entertainment tax to Rs 50

    MUMBAI: Even as the government is working on subsuming entertainment and other incidental taxes into a goods and service tax (GST) which would be around 18 per cent, cable TV subscribers in Bihar are about to be delivered a blow to their wallets. A couple of days ago, the state’s cabinet stamped its approval on a proposal to hike entertainment tax from Rs 15 to Rs 50 per subscriber.

    That’s a 200-plus per cent escalation, and it places the state amongst the top entertainment tax-levying states in India. According to earlier statistics released by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), Bihar accounts for about three per cent of the cable TV subscribers in India. That means the state has anywhere between two million and three million subs.

    According to data released by cable TV tracking firm Chrome Data, Bihar had achieved only 68 per cent digitization by February 2016. Additionally, TV viewers in the state had been opting for DTH, rather than cable with the DTH subscriber base, jumping 32 per cent in just one month, following the imposition of digitization. Estimates are that only the city of Patna has a 400,000 cable TV subscribers.

    Currently, TV viewers’ cable bills are anywhere between Rs 250 and Rs 350 per month for their cable TV connection. With the Rs 50 entertainment tax levy, cable TV MSOs are expecting these to rise to between Rs 300 and Rs 400.

    The Times of India has stated that the Bihar government is taking this step to plug the revenue gap that has sprung up following the imposition of prohibition. It says the government had a shortfall of Rs 5,000 crore. Additionally, the commercial taxes department has been set a tax collection target of Rs 22,000 crore for fiscal 2016-2017. And, of course, cable TV is an easy target.

    However, with disclosures from the fragmented cable TV trade being as they are, observers wonder whether the tax hike will yield the desired results.

  • English Entertainment TV channels: At inflection point?

    English Entertainment TV channels: At inflection point?

    MUMBAI: In George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion, Professor Higgins tells his acquaintance Colonel Pickering that he can make the colloquial sounding flower girl Eliza Dolittle speak like a duchess by teaching her how to speak proper English.

    Times Network CEO MK Anand is playing the role of Professor Higgins these days as far as the English language is concerned. He wants advertisers, those working in the 30-odd English language channels, agencies to look at the genre differently.  He believes that it has viewers in smaller towns, and even in the heartlands. That it is not just a six metro phenomenon; it is touching the masses.  Hence, it deserves that much more respect. And that the genre has only one way to go – up.

    Says Anand: “The entire idea of English being niche has been propagated by advertisers at some level. They have talked to us and have coached us and probably mesmerised and hypnotised us and we also started believing it. It’s like a self fulfilling prophecy which has led us to consider it is as so called niche. I don’t think we are niche at all. Someone started it with by saying that Hindi is predominant  prominent everywhere especially in rural. Then people thought that English is only focused on the six metros, which is no longer true.”

    Indeed English language broadcasters are and have been focusing on pushing their services in non-metros.  According to cable TV tracker Chrome Data, EECs used to get 80 per cent of their viewers from the six metros; 20 per cent from non-metros not so long ago. With digital addressable systems and set top boxes spreading in phase II and phase III areas of India, the pendulum has swung in the direction of the non-metros. Today, 60 per cent of the viewership is from the six metros; while 40 per cent is from non-metros.

    The 30 channels mentioned above account for a genre viewership share of just 0.5 per cent, according to the Ficci-KPMG 2016 report; as against Hindi GEC’s giant share  of 58 per cent.  According to another study, the average monthly reach of English language is around 208 million domestically. And the ad revenue all of English Entertainment TV channels generated last year was Rs 400 crore.

    What bodes well for this genre?  Well, for one, the fact that understanding and speaking English is very aspirational in smaller towns and in rural areas in the new India that is opening up economically to the world. Knowledge of English puts you at an immediate advantage over non-English speakers.  

    And the cult of Hollywood is beginning to spread nationally with American films being distributed theatrically in more screens with different language dubs over the past few years. These movies have started challenging Bollywood films in India in terms of theatrical business. Films like Fast and Furious 7, Avengers: Age Of Ultron, Jurassic World, Batman vs. Superman – Dawn Of Justice, etc. have opened higher than many big ticket Hindi releases.  The seventh edition of the Fast and Furious franchise racked up Rs 120 crore at the India box office.

    “Younger audiences are consuming English movies and entertainment more than Bollywood movies. At least, in some areas nationally.  Bollywood is no longer the predominant attraction there,” says media veteran Cyrus Oshidar.

    What’s additionally helping English TV channels get a hold on newer audiences in non-metros are the language subtitles. A study revealed that 79 per cent of viewers said that they find subtitles on English movie channels extremely useful. Explains AXN and Sony Pix business head Saurabh Yagnik: “Subtitles not only help viewers to follow the content better buts also boosts their language. Many players have also started dubbing shows for this reason.”

    Even as the audience for Hollywood movies on English channels has gone up, the viewership for English TV shows is not keeping pace and has gone down.  Shows such as Game of Thrones attract only niche audiences.

    According to Helios Media CEO Divya Radhakrishnan, that’s because the content, the format of American TV shows and their language don’t go down well Indian TV viewers in the interiors, because of the one TV household phenomenon there.

    Adds media analyst and IIM Calcutta professor  Chandradeep (CD) Mitra: “If the content is heavy and serious, people might not understand it. The content should be easy to follow and should be appealing with simple dialogues.”

    Finally, there is the issue of piracy. Audiences in metros are unwilling to wait for the delayed release of prize-winning TV series on Indian TV as compared to the first airing on American or British TV. “Piracy is a major worry for TV shows and with internet broadband and data costs coming down, more and more shows are being downloaded from torrent sites and watched on computers or on mobile devices,” says a media watcher.

    However, action channels are an exception as they continue to lure the young audiences, reveals Mitra.

    Overall English Entertainment channels  have been hit by rising content costs which are being demanded by international studios and distributors. A source points out that content acquisition costs for English entertainment have increased by 150 per cent as compared to three years’ ago. An estimate is that the cost per hour for an international  TV series comes close to Rs 4.5 lakh to Rs 6 lakh, irrespective of whether it is a hit overseas or not.

    English GECs attract premium brands who do large inventory deals as advertisers.. TV spot rates on an average are around Rs 4,000 for 10 seconds during weekdays while they could go up to Rs 40,000 for the weekend marathons.
    But advertising spends on the English entertainment genre is growing by 10-15 per cent annually, which is what makes it attractive. Observers expect new entrants to come in as the potential is only going to grow with increasing digitization.

    Says Vibrant Advertising VP Kartik Lakshminarayan: “I think it will increase in one year’s time with the push the genre gets from digital and social media.”

    “It is a vast market and the reach will get broader and broader with time,” adds Oshidhar.

    “Digitization is a natural tonic for them. The channels will get a better potential to distribute and the major part of the revenue is going to come out of distribution over time. By the end of this year, Indian broadcast and new media will obtain the wave for English  entertainment channels to grow so much that it will only explode from there,” concludes Anand.

    What is the reach of the English entertainment genre? Take a look at the following numbers to get an understanding.

    * It is but natural that the English entertainment channels have a amazing reach in India’s commercial capital Mumbai. AXN has a reach of 60 per cent, Zee Cafe attains 61 per cent,  Colors Infinity, Comedy Central have 63 per cent. Star World reaches 54 percent and FX reaches 53 per cent..

    * Star World has the maximum reach of 46 per cent households in Bangalore followed by AXN with 46 percent and Comedy Central with 45 per cent. Colors Infinity reaches out to 28 per cent while FX accounts for 22 per cent reach.

    * In India’s capital,  Star World has a  44 per cent reach making it the undisputed champ. Comedy Central has a grip of 34 percent, while FX,  Colors Infinity, and AXN manage a score  33 per cent, 32 per cent and 30 per cent respectively.

    * Down east in Kolkata,  Zee Cafe and Colors Infinity reach  35 per cent of the households, whereas Star World and Comedy Central are in the 33 per cent range.  FX and AXN have 31 per cent  and 30 per cent reach respectively.

    * The recently launched Colors Infinity has a major stake in the Chennai region with 51 per cent reach whereas Star World’s figure is at  48 per cent. AXN, Comedy Central, Zee Café, FX have a reach of  36 per cent, 33 per cent, 29 and 19 per cent respectively.

    * Coming to the non-metros, AXN and Star World are the two leaders with a 47 per cent reach each. Comedy central has a hold of 33 per cent while old timer Zee Café Colors and FX reach 27 per cent of huseholds each. Colors  Infinity is the straggler at approximately  24 per cent.

  • English Entertainment TV channels: At inflection point?

    English Entertainment TV channels: At inflection point?

    MUMBAI: In George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion, Professor Higgins tells his acquaintance Colonel Pickering that he can make the colloquial sounding flower girl Eliza Dolittle speak like a duchess by teaching her how to speak proper English.

    Times Network CEO MK Anand is playing the role of Professor Higgins these days as far as the English language is concerned. He wants advertisers, those working in the 30-odd English language channels, agencies to look at the genre differently.  He believes that it has viewers in smaller towns, and even in the heartlands. That it is not just a six metro phenomenon; it is touching the masses.  Hence, it deserves that much more respect. And that the genre has only one way to go – up.

    Says Anand: “The entire idea of English being niche has been propagated by advertisers at some level. They have talked to us and have coached us and probably mesmerised and hypnotised us and we also started believing it. It’s like a self fulfilling prophecy which has led us to consider it is as so called niche. I don’t think we are niche at all. Someone started it with by saying that Hindi is predominant  prominent everywhere especially in rural. Then people thought that English is only focused on the six metros, which is no longer true.”

    Indeed English language broadcasters are and have been focusing on pushing their services in non-metros.  According to cable TV tracker Chrome Data, EECs used to get 80 per cent of their viewers from the six metros; 20 per cent from non-metros not so long ago. With digital addressable systems and set top boxes spreading in phase II and phase III areas of India, the pendulum has swung in the direction of the non-metros. Today, 60 per cent of the viewership is from the six metros; while 40 per cent is from non-metros.

    The 30 channels mentioned above account for a genre viewership share of just 0.5 per cent, according to the Ficci-KPMG 2016 report; as against Hindi GEC’s giant share  of 58 per cent.  According to another study, the average monthly reach of English language is around 208 million domestically. And the ad revenue all of English Entertainment TV channels generated last year was Rs 400 crore.

    What bodes well for this genre?  Well, for one, the fact that understanding and speaking English is very aspirational in smaller towns and in rural areas in the new India that is opening up economically to the world. Knowledge of English puts you at an immediate advantage over non-English speakers.  

    And the cult of Hollywood is beginning to spread nationally with American films being distributed theatrically in more screens with different language dubs over the past few years. These movies have started challenging Bollywood films in India in terms of theatrical business. Films like Fast and Furious 7, Avengers: Age Of Ultron, Jurassic World, Batman vs. Superman – Dawn Of Justice, etc. have opened higher than many big ticket Hindi releases.  The seventh edition of the Fast and Furious franchise racked up Rs 120 crore at the India box office.

    “Younger audiences are consuming English movies and entertainment more than Bollywood movies. At least, in some areas nationally.  Bollywood is no longer the predominant attraction there,” says media veteran Cyrus Oshidar.

    What’s additionally helping English TV channels get a hold on newer audiences in non-metros are the language subtitles. A study revealed that 79 per cent of viewers said that they find subtitles on English movie channels extremely useful. Explains AXN and Sony Pix business head Saurabh Yagnik: “Subtitles not only help viewers to follow the content better buts also boosts their language. Many players have also started dubbing shows for this reason.”

    Even as the audience for Hollywood movies on English channels has gone up, the viewership for English TV shows is not keeping pace and has gone down.  Shows such as Game of Thrones attract only niche audiences.

    According to Helios Media CEO Divya Radhakrishnan, that’s because the content, the format of American TV shows and their language don’t go down well Indian TV viewers in the interiors, because of the one TV household phenomenon there.

    Adds media analyst and IIM Calcutta professor  Chandradeep (CD) Mitra: “If the content is heavy and serious, people might not understand it. The content should be easy to follow and should be appealing with simple dialogues.”

    Finally, there is the issue of piracy. Audiences in metros are unwilling to wait for the delayed release of prize-winning TV series on Indian TV as compared to the first airing on American or British TV. “Piracy is a major worry for TV shows and with internet broadband and data costs coming down, more and more shows are being downloaded from torrent sites and watched on computers or on mobile devices,” says a media watcher.

    However, action channels are an exception as they continue to lure the young audiences, reveals Mitra.

    Overall English Entertainment channels  have been hit by rising content costs which are being demanded by international studios and distributors. A source points out that content acquisition costs for English entertainment have increased by 150 per cent as compared to three years’ ago. An estimate is that the cost per hour for an international  TV series comes close to Rs 4.5 lakh to Rs 6 lakh, irrespective of whether it is a hit overseas or not.

    English GECs attract premium brands who do large inventory deals as advertisers.. TV spot rates on an average are around Rs 4,000 for 10 seconds during weekdays while they could go up to Rs 40,000 for the weekend marathons.
    But advertising spends on the English entertainment genre is growing by 10-15 per cent annually, which is what makes it attractive. Observers expect new entrants to come in as the potential is only going to grow with increasing digitization.

    Says Vibrant Advertising VP Kartik Lakshminarayan: “I think it will increase in one year’s time with the push the genre gets from digital and social media.”

    “It is a vast market and the reach will get broader and broader with time,” adds Oshidhar.

    “Digitization is a natural tonic for them. The channels will get a better potential to distribute and the major part of the revenue is going to come out of distribution over time. By the end of this year, Indian broadcast and new media will obtain the wave for English  entertainment channels to grow so much that it will only explode from there,” concludes Anand.

    What is the reach of the English entertainment genre? Take a look at the following numbers to get an understanding.

    * It is but natural that the English entertainment channels have a amazing reach in India’s commercial capital Mumbai. AXN has a reach of 60 per cent, Zee Cafe attains 61 per cent,  Colors Infinity, Comedy Central have 63 per cent. Star World reaches 54 percent and FX reaches 53 per cent..

    * Star World has the maximum reach of 46 per cent households in Bangalore followed by AXN with 46 percent and Comedy Central with 45 per cent. Colors Infinity reaches out to 28 per cent while FX accounts for 22 per cent reach.

    * In India’s capital,  Star World has a  44 per cent reach making it the undisputed champ. Comedy Central has a grip of 34 percent, while FX,  Colors Infinity, and AXN manage a score  33 per cent, 32 per cent and 30 per cent respectively.

    * Down east in Kolkata,  Zee Cafe and Colors Infinity reach  35 per cent of the households, whereas Star World and Comedy Central are in the 33 per cent range.  FX and AXN have 31 per cent  and 30 per cent reach respectively.

    * The recently launched Colors Infinity has a major stake in the Chennai region with 51 per cent reach whereas Star World’s figure is at  48 per cent. AXN, Comedy Central, Zee Café, FX have a reach of  36 per cent, 33 per cent, 29 and 19 per cent respectively.

    * Coming to the non-metros, AXN and Star World are the two leaders with a 47 per cent reach each. Comedy central has a hold of 33 per cent while old timer Zee Café Colors and FX reach 27 per cent of huseholds each. Colors  Infinity is the straggler at approximately  24 per cent.

  • Chrome Week 37: English Entertainment genre leads with 9.3% growth

    Chrome Week 37: English Entertainment genre leads with 9.3% growth

    MUMBAI: English Entertainment genre led the pack in the six metros with growth of 9.3 per cent with Comedy Central at the top of the chart with 49.4 per cent opportunity to see (OTS) in week 37 of OTS data collated by Chrome Data, Analytics and Media.
     
    Second on the list is the English Movies genre in six metros, which witnessed three per cent growth. Movies Now bagged the pole position in the section with 60.3 per cent OTS.

     

    Infotainment genre secured third berth across India with 0.8 per cent OTS with History TV18 leading in the genre with 81.6 per cent OTS.

     

    In Hindi Speaking Market (HSM), Hindi Movies genre grabbed fourth position with 0.6 per cent, with Zee Cinema topping the list with 92.7 per cent OTS.

     
    Amongst the losers this week were Business news, sports and music channels.

     

    Business News section in six metros witnessed a drop by 0.4 per cent with CNBC Awaaz securing the first position with 79.5 per cent OTS.

     

    Sports genre across India dropped by 0.3 per cent and saw DD Sports securing the top slot with 74 per cent OTS.

     

    Music genre in HSM dropped by 0.2 per cent. 9XM with 88.1 per cent emerged as the most affected channel in the genre.

  • Chrome Data: English news genre gain maximum in week 26

    Chrome Data: English news genre gain maximum in week 26

    MUMBAI: In the week 26 of opportunity to see (OTS) collated by Chrome Data Analytics & Media, English news genre in the eight metros clocked 3 per cent growth with Times Now holding the numero uno position with 76.2 per cent OTS.

     

    English movies genre in the eight metros observed 2.5 per cent growth. Movies Now topped the chart with 61.0 per cent OTS. Business news in the eight metros garnered 0.7 per cent growth followed by religious genre in the Hindi Speaking markets (HSM) with 0.5 per cent growth. CNBC Awaaz with 80.1 per cent OTS and Aastha with 94.6 per cent OTS topped the respective categories.

     

    On the other hand, Infotainment genre across all India observed a fall of 0.7 per cent with Discovery ruling the roost with 82.1 per cent OTS. Hindi news genre in HSM markets noted 0.5 per cent drop with ABP News leading the chart with 94.3 per cent OTS.

     

    Music genre too witnessed 0.2 per cent fall followed by Hindi movies with 0.1 per drop in the HSM markets. MTV secured the first position with 90.4 per cent OTS, while Max stood at number one with 94.6 per cent OTS. 

  • Chrome Data: English News channels continue to gain in week 8

    Chrome Data: English News channels continue to gain in week 8

    MUMBAI: In week eight of opportunity to see (OTS) collated by Chrome Data Analytics & Media, English News channels in the eight metros gained the maximum.

     

    With 3.4 per cent growth, the genre saw Times Now retaining its supremacy with 79.1 per cent OTS. 

     

    Sports channels across India gained 3.2 per cent. 

     

    Next in the line were Business News channels in the eight metros with 2.2 per cent jump and Music channels in the Hindi speaking market (HSM) with 0.7 per cent. CNBC Awaaz with 80.6 per cent OTS and 9XM with 90.6 per cent OTS topped in their respective genres. 

     

    As for the losers, English Entertainment channels in eight metros saw the maximum drop of 4.9 per cent. Comedy Central with 52.5 per cent OTS topped the category. 

     

    Kids channels across India and Hindi movie channels in HSM markets saw a drop of 0.9 per cent and 0.7 per cent respectively. Cartoon Network with 79.9 per cent OTS and Max with 95.5 per cent OTS scored the maximum in their respective genre. 

     

    Last but not the least, English Movies in the eight metros observed a fall of 0.5 per cent. Movies Now topped the chart with 67.1 per cent OTS.

  • Chrome Data: Insignificant gain in week seven

    Chrome Data: Insignificant gain in week seven

    MUMBAI: In week seven of opportunity to see (OTS) collated by Chrome Data Analytics & Media, the only gainer were Hindi general entertainment channels (GECs) in the Hindi speaking market (HSM). 

     

    The genre saw an insignificant jump of 0.1 per cent with DD National topping the chart with 96.7 per cent OTS.

     

    As for the losers, the eight metros saw the maximum fall. English Entertainment channels in the eight metros led the way with 2.7 per cent fall. Comedy Central with 55.1 OTS topped the genre.

     

    Kids channels across the country witnessed a drop of one per cent with Cartoon Network continuing its reign in the genre with 80.2 per cent OTS.

     

    English Movies and English News both saw a drop of 1.8 per cent in the eight metros. Movies Now with 65.5 per cent OTS and Times Now with 77.3 per cent OTS topped their respective genres.

  • Chrome Data: Sports channels witness maximum growth

    Chrome Data: Sports channels witness maximum growth

    MUMBAI: Sports channels across India saw the highest jump of 1.7 per cent when it comes to opportunity to see (OTS) collated by Chrome Data Analytics & Media.

     

    DD Sports with 74.4 per cent OTS led the charge in the category.

     

    English Entertainment channels in the eight metros and Infotainment channels across India witnessed 0.5 per cent jump. In their respective categories, Comedy Central with 60 per cent OTS and Discovery with 84.9 per cent OTS topped the charts.

     

    In the Hindi speaking marketing (HSM), Hindi Movie channels saw a 0.4 per cent hike. Zee Cinema with 95.3 per cent OTS gained the most in the genre.

     

    As for the losers, Hindi GECs in the HSM and English News in the eight metros saw a marginal drop of 0.4 per cent.

     

    Star Plus with 97 per cent OTS and Times Now with 79.8 per cent OTS reigned their respective genres.

  • Chrome Data: Channels see marginal jump in week 3

    Chrome Data: Channels see marginal jump in week 3

    MUMBAI: The opportunity to see (OTS) collated by Chrome Data Analytics & Media didn’t see a major hike in the third week of the year.

     

    Across India, kids channels saw a minor jump of 0.3 per cent followed by Hindi News in the Hindi speaking market (HSM) with 0.2 per cent.

     

    Cartoon Network with 80.9 per cent OTS and ABP News with 94.7 per cent OTS gained the most in their respective genres.

     

    As for the losers, Hindi News in the HSM witnessed the loss of 1.3 per cent. Max, with 95.8 per cent OTS, ruled the genre. 

     

    English Entertainment and English Movies in the eight metros saw a drop of 1.2 per cent and 0.6 per cent, respectively. 

     

    Comedy Central, with 60 per cent OTS and Romedy Now with 69 per cent OTS, gained the most in their categories.

     

    In the HSM, Religious channels too saw a drop 0.6 per cent. Aastha with 96.9 per cent OTS continued its reign in the genre.