Tag: Lukup Media

  • Lukup Media appoints Aniraj Ramabhadran & Dhiraj Chadha to top management team

    Lukup Media appoints Aniraj Ramabhadran & Dhiraj Chadha to top management team

    MUMBAI: Lukup Media has announced the appointment of Aniraj Ramabhadran and Dhiraj Chadha to its top management team. Ramabhadran joins Lukup Media as the head of systems and product delivery. While Chadha, the former head of brand at Voltas, has come on-board as the head of marketing.

    Commenting on the appointments, Lukup Media CEO Kallol Borah said, “I am very happy to have Aniraj and Dhiraj join us at this time when we are beginning to roll out services. With their experience and expertise, along with our ability to communicate Lukup Media’s value proposition, our ability to scale our delivery capabilities and meet customer expectations will get a big boost.”

    Ramabhadran hails with an expernice of 15 years in the industry and was the brain behind Reliance Big TV’s successful portfolio and life cycle management for consumer devices, for managed Pay-TV services. His area of expertise lies in product strategy, business intelligence and analytics, TV/ multimedia delivery, and hardware and software development and integration.

    Chadha has gained considerable experience and exposure in the industry over the past 12 years through handling the overall marketing and digital portfolio of Voltas Limited. In addition, he has taken the responsibility of setting direction for marketing plans, digital and social strategy for the consumer brand on a national level.

  • Lukup Media appoints Aniraj Ramabhadran & Dhiraj Chadha to top management team

    Lukup Media appoints Aniraj Ramabhadran & Dhiraj Chadha to top management team

    MUMBAI: Lukup Media has announced the appointment of Aniraj Ramabhadran and Dhiraj Chadha to its top management team. Ramabhadran joins Lukup Media as the head of systems and product delivery. While Chadha, the former head of brand at Voltas, has come on-board as the head of marketing.

    Commenting on the appointments, Lukup Media CEO Kallol Borah said, “I am very happy to have Aniraj and Dhiraj join us at this time when we are beginning to roll out services. With their experience and expertise, along with our ability to communicate Lukup Media’s value proposition, our ability to scale our delivery capabilities and meet customer expectations will get a big boost.”

    Ramabhadran hails with an expernice of 15 years in the industry and was the brain behind Reliance Big TV’s successful portfolio and life cycle management for consumer devices, for managed Pay-TV services. His area of expertise lies in product strategy, business intelligence and analytics, TV/ multimedia delivery, and hardware and software development and integration.

    Chadha has gained considerable experience and exposure in the industry over the past 12 years through handling the overall marketing and digital portfolio of Voltas Limited. In addition, he has taken the responsibility of setting direction for marketing plans, digital and social strategy for the consumer brand on a national level.

  • Tata Sky hires Arun Unni as senior vice president – content

    Tata Sky hires Arun Unni as senior vice president – content

    MUMBAI: Tata Sky has roped in Arun Unni as senior vice president – content. 

    Unni steps into the shoes on Mukund Sharma, who recently resigned to join Lukup Media.

    Unni has previously been a consultant with 14 years of experience in strategy development and operational improvement across B2C and B2B companies. 

    A source close to the development tells Indiantelevision.com that Unni will be reporting to Tata Sky chief content and business development officer Paolo Matteo Agostinelli. 

    “Arun has already joined the company and he will be heading content acquisition and strategy at Tata Sky,” the source added.

    Deeply passionate about TV and media, Unni is an avid follower of content and distribution models globally. A Civil engineer from IIT Mumbai and an IIM – Ahmedabad pass out, he is an early adopter of nearly all types of content distribution hardware – Tata Sky HD DVR, Chromecast, Xbox, Media players, Mobile apps etc. His earlier work stints have been with A.T. Kearney, KPMG and Arthur Andersen India.

  • Tata Sky hires Arun Unni as senior vice president – content

    Tata Sky hires Arun Unni as senior vice president – content

    MUMBAI: Tata Sky has roped in Arun Unni as senior vice president – content. 

    Unni steps into the shoes on Mukund Sharma, who recently resigned to join Lukup Media.

    Unni has previously been a consultant with 14 years of experience in strategy development and operational improvement across B2C and B2B companies. 

    A source close to the development tells Indiantelevision.com that Unni will be reporting to Tata Sky chief content and business development officer Paolo Matteo Agostinelli. 

    “Arun has already joined the company and he will be heading content acquisition and strategy at Tata Sky,” the source added.

    Deeply passionate about TV and media, Unni is an avid follower of content and distribution models globally. A Civil engineer from IIT Mumbai and an IIM – Ahmedabad pass out, he is an early adopter of nearly all types of content distribution hardware – Tata Sky HD DVR, Chromecast, Xbox, Media players, Mobile apps etc. His earlier work stints have been with A.T. Kearney, KPMG and Arthur Andersen India.

  • LukUp Media names Tata Sky’s Mukund Sharma as EVP

    LukUp Media names Tata Sky’s Mukund Sharma as EVP

    MUMBAI: Content specialist Mukund Sharma, who is currently serving his notice period at the direct to home (DTH) company Tata Sky, has been roped in by on-demand and multi-screen TV service provider Lukup Media as executive vice president content, services and commercial.

     

    Confirming the appointment, LukUp Media managing director Kallol Borah said, “Mukund will be joining us from February and will be leading our content services. He will be responsible for various innovations on the content front. He will also look after value added services and other innovations. I wish him best of luck in LukUp Media.”

     

    Sharma, who is currently VP content at Tata Sky, has been with the company since its inception in 2005. Prior to joining Tata Sky, Sharma worked as senior manager with Ten Sports where he looked after revenue, advertising sales & strategy. He also worked with CNBC–TV 18 as manager.

     

    Sharma moves to LukUp Media with over 17 years of experience.

  • Lukup Media receives unified license, commercial dual play services to start from Jan

    Lukup Media receives unified license, commercial dual play services to start from Jan

    MUMBAI: India’s first on-demand and multi-screen TV service provider Lukup Media has received the unified license to launch data services across the country. This will enable the company to offer internet access along with television, video on demand and other services through a single connection to consumers.

     

    Lukup Media is also running field trials on a new Gigabit wireless platform that operates outside the licensed spectrum and can be used to offer 1Gbps network connections to buildings and apartment complexes.

     

    According to the company, this is also expected to significantly reduce the cost of creating network infrastructure and thus lower the cost of internet access.

     

    “While we use optic fiber on the last mile managed by cable networks to reach homes now, the new Gigabit wireless platform will enable us to reach consumers where we do not have partnerships with local networks and will enable us to operate in semi-urban and rural areas where telecom network infrastructure is poor,” said Lukup founder and CEO Kallol Borah.

  • Lukup Media partners Euro Channel to bring on-demand international cinema to India

    Lukup Media partners Euro Channel to bring on-demand international cinema to India

    MUMBAI: Indian movie aficionados can now enjoy the best of international cinema by subscribing to Lukup Media’s on demand TV service. Through a strategic partnership with Euro Channel, Lukup Media is all set to bring Euro Channel to Indian shores, screening exclusive European cinema for Indian viewers. 

     

    Euro Channel will be a subscription based on-demand channel on the Lukup Media service. Subscription on demand TV channels appears along with linear broadcast TV channels on the TV Guide. Each subscription on demand channel has a catalog of content refreshed weekly that subscribers can view on demand. 

     

    The Euro Channel subscription is Rs 150 per month. The channel will have 15 new movies every month.

     

    This partnership further strengthens Lukup’s portfolio of content, with more than 3000 titles in its movie catalogue. Apart from cinema, Lukup Media subscribers can also choose from over 200 English and regional shows, 600 lifestyle shows and 1500 regional shows and movies.

     

    “We are excited to bring a selection of outstanding cinema from across Europe in partnership with Eurochannel on the Lukup Media platform. This partnership aligns with our objective of bringing international content and TV channels to Indian audiences and to present them with more choice of content,” said Lukup Media founder and CEO Kallol Borah.

     

    Elaborating on the partnership, Euro channel CEO Gustavo Vainstein added, “Eurochannel continues its vast expansion across international borders, thanks to the dynamic Video on Demand service launching in India. Our partnership with Lukup has proved indispensible for this recent launch, as we share the same vigor and collaborative spirit to bring quality entertainment to millions of residents throughout the country on a practical platform. Together, Lukup and Eurochannel will offer the best of European cinema.”

  • New opportunities from cable TV digitisation in India

    New opportunities from cable TV digitisation in India

    India is home to approximately 60,000 to 100,000 cable TV operators. Assuming 20 kilometres of cable laid by every operator on an average, India has 1.2 to 2 million kilometres of cable! With digitisation of cable TV, the cable networks are transitioning from coaxial to optic fiber in the last mile. So, with access to so much optic fiber in premises where people live and work, why is digitisation of cable TV still not leading to a large upswing in broadband availability, quality of connections, and consumer use? After all, optic fiber can carry a much larger amount of data and video than coaxial cable can.

    What is the Last Mile?

    The last mile is called the ‘access’ network. It is called so since this network is accessed by end-consumers. The last mile network stretches all the way from the cable operator’s control room (seen in the picture below to the left) to a junction box (picture below to the right) near the consumer premises. At the junction box, the electrical signals carried on the optic fiber are converted into RF signals that are then transmitter through coaxial cable for the final few metres to the set top box at the consumer premises.

     Caption: (L-R) Typical View of a Cable Operator’s Control Room and Junction Box near customer premises.

    In most places, the last mile network is in the form of an overhead cable, whilst sometimes it is laid underground.

    The missing ‘Middle Mile’

    Several last mile ‘access’ networks are aggregated at one point and then connected to the core network. This ‘aggregator’ network is where most challenges arise. Ranging from 0.5 kilometres to 3 kilometres and more in most cases, the aggregator network has to carry large amounts of traffic. Assuming a requirement of 2 Mbps per TV channel, a typical cable feed will have 400 channels or around 800 Mbps of video at any point in time. If we add any internet or data traffic to this, then the aggregator networks have to carry at least a few gigabits of data every second. Lack of rights of way for optic fiber and very high costs of laying any fiber running into a few lakhs of rupees for every 100 meters make fiber unviable commercially at low cable TV ARPU of Rs 200-300 per home per month. The missing ‘middle mile’ and the resulting adverse effect on monetization of the last mile networks is the bane of the cable TV industry today. Negative or zero returns on investment on last mile networks and set top boxes is the main reason behind the opposition digitization of cable TV in India has faced.

    Making the model commercially viable

    Investments in the last mile and advanced consumer premise equipment that deliver entertainment and a large number of other services can be justified only if monthly earnings per consumer or ARPU increase. This is possible only if the last mile carry internet/IP or data traffic which has better ARPU than cable TV. However, cable networks have to lay more optic fiber in the last mile for this data traffic to reach consumers. The only other solution is to turn the last mile network into an all IP network. However, this is not feasible in most cases since cable Multi-System Operator (MSO) networks transmit one-way RF feeds and not two-way IP feeds.

    The Lukup Media model

    This model relies on making the last mile network capable of carrying IP/data traffic along with RF traffic. The IP feed in this case carry both TV signals and Internet access, thereby potentially increasing the earnings from every connection the last mile network provides to consumers. This model also makes TV channels available on demand. Instead of broadcasting TV channels, on demand TV implies that channels are unicasted or streamed on demand. This reduces the stress on quality of service in the last mile network. This model also takes advantage of innovation in transporting IP traffic in the ‘middle mile’ by making it possible to transport gigabits of data per second without laying optic fiber or resorting to using unlicensed or lightly licensed microwave or wireless bands that do not guarantee quality of service for video traffic or assure availability of such large bandwidth.

    Additional Revenue opportunities for Cable operators

    In the scenario where the last mile carries IP/data traffic which enables cable operators to provide both TV and internet access through a single connection to consumers, vast revenue opportunities open up. In addition to TV revenue, cable operators can earn from providing internet access and services such as media storage in the cloud, delivery of educational content, high definition gaming, home automation and monitoring services and more.

    Just like the US market where digitized cable TV networks deliver 60 per cent of America’s data traffic, cable TV networks in India are also poised to evolve in a similar manner providing dual play and eventually triple play services to consumers.

     (These are purely personal views of Lukup Media chief executive officer Kallol Borah and Indiantelevision.com does not necessarily subscribe to these views.)