Tag: Ortel Communications

  • Laqshya Media promotes Satyabrata Das to chief alliance officer

    Laqshya Media promotes Satyabrata Das to chief alliance officer

    MUMBAI: There could only be one place he could go: up. And so he has. In his seventh year,  at Laqshya Media group, strategic alliances specialist/COO MediaKeys Satyabrata Das has been elevated to chief alliance officer.

    The Alok Jalan-run Laqshya Media group, is involved in various activities tight from outdoor, experiential marketing to events.

    Satyabrata Das has many stripes to his credit during his 26-year long career. He worked in cable TV at Ortel Communications after finishing his education, then moved on to ETV, followed up with short stays at SAB TV, and then Zee Telefilms. It was on to Laqshya Media group for four years where he ended up as national business coordinator. STPL was his next stop followed by working in consulting as an executive advisor for 11 years. 

     Laqshya Media was his next destination where he has been for seven years.

     

  • Ortel CFO Satyanarayan Jena steps down

    Ortel CFO Satyanarayan Jena steps down

    MUMBAI: Satyanarayan Jena, the chief financial officer of the MSO Ortel Communications has stepped down. The resignation of the executive was effective from yesterday.

    “We hereby inform you that Satyanarayan Jena, has resigned from the post of chief financial officer of the company. The company has accepted his resignation and he will be relieved of his responsibilities effective from close of business hours on 28 February 2019,”  the company said in a BSE filing. Jena was elevated as CFO back in 2017 when Manoj Kumar Patra resigned from his position. He was associated with the company since 12 November 2015.  

    Ortel Communications is undergoing corporate insolvency resolution process (CIRP) and as on 27 November 2018, the National Company Law Tribunal passed an order for comencement of CIRP in last November. Sony Pictures Networks India( SPNI), an operational creditor of Ortel filed the application.

  • Ortel takes on competition with new broadband plans

    Ortel takes on competition with new broadband plans

    MUMBAI: Taking a big step towards recovery, battered cable television and broadband services company Ortel Communications Limited (Ortel) has unveiled its new unlimited data plans starting from Rs 99 per month.

    Ortel, with its operations focused in Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh, Telengana, West Bengal, and Madhya Pradesh, has been a trendsetter in offering customer-centric broadband plans in accordance to the ever-changing internet ecospace in India. With its new range of unlimited plans, the company has taken the big telecom players head-on.

    The Rs.99 plan has 500 MB data limit per day @ 2Mbps, although the customer can continue browsing even after reaching the daily limit, at post FUP speed. The New Unlimited FUP Broadband Plans also have options of 1 GB daily data limit at Rs.129 per month and a multi-month package at Rs.349 wherein subscribers can enjoy 1 GB data per day at 2 Mbps speed for 3 months. These plans would cover the needs of first time users, social networking users and the price sensitive segment.

    The ‘Below 100’ plan would also enable Ortel to increase the penetration of internet ready home passes which are already available in most of the markets where it operates. With the proliferation of smartphones and other smart internet devices, consumers can use the same devices to connect to Ortel Home Wi-Fi solutions at a cheaper price and better in house speeds. The plans directly compete with the Telecom Players who offer 3G and 4G on Mobile Devices. Customers also have the option of free installation if Multi Month Subscription is paid in advance. Broadband would become more of a utility than luxury and the plans would make right to broadband access closer to reality.

    Ortel had already withdrawn the plans below 1 Mbps in the month of April 2017. With the launch of new plans, it has now withdrawn all the plans below 2 Mbps. It has introduced Unlimited FUP plans in the speed range of 5 Mbps, 10 Mbps, 20 Mbps, 50 Mbps and 100 Mbps with monthly data limits ranging from 40 GB to 1 Terabyte at very affordable price points.  

    Commenting on the development Ortel Communications president and CEO Bibhu Prasad Rath said, “Looking at the huge data consumption that is taking place in the country today, we have decided to take full advantage of this opportunity and therefore launched Unlimited Data Plan at just Rs. 99 per month. We are already providing high data limits to our customers, but now with the aggressive pricing which is even better than most of the telecom players, we aim to provide an excellent value for money to our subscribers. The objective is to increase the overall average data consumption of customers from 18 GB to 100 GB per month at pocket friendly prices.”

    Ortel is the first MSO and ISP to offer wireless broadband service at public places for its wired broadband subscribers without any additional  WiFi  Hotspot  access  charges.  Ortel Communications is a pioneer in providing convergence communication services in the country. It has revolutionized the entertainment and broadband technology in India. It has always been the Company’s  vision  to  provide  Cable  TV  and  Data  Service  on  a  single  cable  platform  to households. The Company has invested in laying its own network with reverse path compatibility making it capable of providing Triple play services including broadband and VoIP services with enormous advantages and superiority in the network. Ortel provides connection to customers directly and has full control over its ‘last mile’ network.

    Also read:

    Multiple challenges weaken Ortel numbers in second quarter

    MSO Ortel strengthens digital payment services

    Ortel elevates Satyanaryan Jena as CFO as Manoj Kumar Patra resigns

  • Going a la carte with Star and Indiacast has helped: Bibhu Prasad Rath

    Going a la carte with Star and Indiacast has helped: Bibhu Prasad Rath

    Bhibu Rath heads one of the small regional cable TV players in the TV distribution business: Ortel Communications. The MSO began as a local player in the state of Odisha. But, it has since spread into neighboring states such as Chattishgarh, West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. In fact, it is one of a handful of cable TV distribution companies which went in for an IPO and are listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange.

    Rath has been with Ortel since 1999 and no one probably knows the company and the business it operates better than he does. Hence, he has focused on building a two-way state-of-the-art communication network enabled for ‘triple play’ services (video, data, and voice capabilities) with control over the ‘last mile’ over the last few years. That regulation has stymied his VoIP ambitions, has not been a stumbling block. In fact, it has emboldened him to move aggressively in the direction of broadband.

    Rath was one of the key note speakers at IDOS 2016 here. And, he had a one-on-one conversation with the Indiantelevision.com CEO and Editor-in-Chief Anil Wanvari. He was forthcoming and transparent on a range of issues. Read on to find out what he had to say:

    Are you at an advantage or disadvantage of being a niche player ?

    It’s a great advantage actually. You need to understand that why we are a regional player.  Because, we have always believed in depth and not in width. So, we are actually a last-mile player unlike other national MSOs. In a lighter vein, in fact, I keep telling people that we are not a MSO, we are the largest LCO. So, if you are  doing a last-mile network, you have limitations of national presence. So, we have consistently focused on the regional markets and, even within regional market, we have consistently focused on Phase III markets – tier 2, tier 3 markets. Not on the metros.  Like we are there in Telangana but not in Hyderabad. So, currently, we are focusing on four states even though we are present in six states  — that is Odisha, Chattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. And, we have a small presence in West Bengal and Madhya Pradesh. So, it gives us a great advantage that we are focused, we are localized, we are last mile, we are going directly to the consumer.

    Your non-Odisha market is around 233,000 subscribers and your major part, that is, 770,000 subscribers, are in Odisha. Is non-Odisha market going to grow or Odisha?

    That’s (non-Odisha) the one which is growing. In March 2015, when we went public we had half a million subs. Today, we are close to 800,000. Our guidance to the market has been — we will get to a million by March 2017.  If you see the growth in the last five quarters — that is four quarters of last year and Q1 of this year — you will see 70-75 per cent incremental growth has come from outside Odisha, and they are mostly in Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Chhattisgarh. So that’s the trend going to continue and most of the growth will come from outside Odisha.

    Your analog and digital ARPUs are at Rs 141 and Rs 169 a month, but your digital ARPUs have come down. Why is that and where do you see it going?

    Well, digital ARPUs have come down marginally. But, the mix of analog and digital has gone up. So, digital as a percentage of cable TV swap has gone up very significantly in last five quarters. As of June-end, it was 45 per cent. That’s the reason why ARPU has marginally gone down.

    I have a slightly different view from the rest of the people from the industry. We don’t think this is a great ARPU-driven business. You need to realize that this is a wireline business — not wireless like DTH. So, the wireless guys like DTH have an inherent advantage that they can choose and pick their customer. 5,000 customers in Delhi, 50,000 in Odisha – it’s the same for them. We are in the wireline business. We are laying cable in front of homes and its extremely capex-heavy unlike the MSOs model. If you keep aside the STB, the last mile model is capex-heavy as compared to the MSO-LCO model, because a large part of the network is actually built by the LCO. Whereas, here we deal with it ourselves.

    Now, say, you network 100 homes. My objective is to get as as many of these 100 homes as I can as my customers instead of trying to raise my ARPU by Rs 10. I would prefer to operate at a moderate to low ARPU but I increase my market share and penetration ratio and make up through the number of customers than trying to increase the ARPUs.  So, if you see my penetration ratio: 770,000 customers I have 1.2 million home passes – that is like 60 per cent. To my mind that is a more important metric in the business than just the ARPU numbers. Having said that ARPU will increase – but only marginally, I am not a great believer invery high level of ARPU increase.

    Even in the context of digitization, I kept saying that its objective is not to increase ARPU. Why would the government and the regulator do something wherein the cost to the customer would go up? That’s just the antithesis of what the government does. The government would like to do what helps the consumers, and what helps the consumers is to give them choice, not raise prices.

    So, in doing digitization, give the choice to the consumer — let the consumer pick up at Rs 99, and let someone else pick up at Rs 500. Let your average be at Rs 150-200. Hence, we operate at high penetration, and moderate ARPUs.

    Being a regional player, do you have enough negotiating power? You recently concluded deals with Star and Indiacast which were challenging. Has it become easier for you to deal with the broadcaster?

    It’s a relationship  with the broadcasters — which has been going on but recently we have tried to bring a major shift in the relationship. The two deals which you mentioned with Indiacast and Star TV – they are two of the top half a dozen bouquets operating in India. What we tried to do actually is we tried to test and implement the true spirit of digitization. This means consumer should decide. Whether he wants a channel or not, he should decide and if he should pay.

    With these two deals, we said we will go a la carte. And, as you know, a la carte prices are extremely high. The effective price that a broadcaster gets from the consumers is typically between 10–15 per cent of a la carte price.

    So, for example, the Star TV bouquet – the a la carte prices are at Rs 200, the bouquet prices are typically at Rs 25-26. Despite the a la carte being high, we decided to try it. And we decided to offer it to our viewers and consumers, and allowed them to decide. And, to my surprise, the results have been fantastic.

    Being a last mile model, I don’t have issues of packaging, etc. So, we have complete packaging on our network. We have a backend which can activate a channel. A consumer can send an SMS and get his channel in two minutes via a call centre as well. The payout to me has come down significantly – very significantly — on these two bouquets. But, for consumers, it has gone up, for some it has gone down. So, it’s working very well. This is the way forward. Having done these two deals, I don’t want to do any more soon. I would like to stabilize these two first.

    Has your revenue been impacted because of this?

    Not at all, because when you put a channel on a la carte, there are two models that have been implemented. One is we have put a la carte add-on – that is consumers pay and take it. In another experiment I did, I just threw open the channels to consumers. I said you don’t have to pay anything extra, just decide what you want.  There are
    consumers who will be happy to pay a significant amount for the channels like Fox Life, CNBC, TLC and that’s beauty of doing a la carte, instead of dumping a CNBC channel on the entire base.

    In our markets, 90-95 per cent of the viewers don’t watch CNBC or Fox Life. Why should I dump it? Instead, let me give it to these 2-3 per cent consumers, and let them pay.

    So my revenue has not gone down and my costs have reduced. I am even ready to let go my revenue because these two are interrelated. Whether I increase the ARPU by Rs 10  or I reduce my cost by Rs 10, it doesn’t matter to my ROC. The whole idea is to move on to a pass on the model where consumers decide. The revenue may increase or decrease, only time will tell.

    The MIB says that 93 per cent of Phase III has been digitized whereas you have stated in your areas it is 50-55 per cent. Where lies the truth?

    I don’t want to comment on the MIB numbers because I actually don’t know where the numbers are coming from. We are below 50 per cent. As regards the litigation of DAS Phase III, we are one of the guys who went to court and got a stay. And, that hearing for case is coming up in October.

    That does not mean I did not want to digitize. I definitely want to godigital. I definitely want to get to 100 per cent but we wanted time. And, in many parts of the country, analogue was running in the month of January, and it is running even today. And I can safely tell you, if there was no stay order, analogue would have continued for some more time. I wanted legal cover that If I am doing analogue, I am not doing something illegal. I am pursuing digital in the true spirit. And, the offtake of digital has been very good actually. And, I don’t expect the court order to continue for a very long period. Irrespective of what happens in court, I am pursuing it and I will complete digitalization. We are fully committed to it.

    Your content cost has come down to Rs 50 or so is it because of Star and Indiacast deals or is it because of other factors? Do you expect them to go down further?

    I expect content costs to go down little further. It has been the combination of a couple of factors;  it is not because I got better deals with  broadcasters. The content cost has come down is because of two factors — one is the deal with Star TV and Indiacast on a la carte basis. But, this cost will go up in the long run because consumers will adopt more and more channels and we are mentally prepared that this will go up.

    And, at some point, even a la carte may actually exceed and go beyond what I was paying on a fixed-fee model. It will take time. But, we should be prepared to pay more on a la carte model. But, by then, consumers should also take more a la carte channels and my revenue should also go up.

    The other reason is that we are expanding a lot to other markets and, our expansion strategy has been to acquire LCOs  and the local MSOs. So, we basically do a lump sum, lock stock and barrel buyout. And, those guys we take over have been extremely efficient as compared to what we were doing in terms of negotiating with the broadcaster – their costs are low. Their costs essentially get passed on to us. So that counts for a little cheaper price. But, it will increase.

    You will not set up digital headends rather will go with opex model by taking intercity bandwidth. Is it a way forward for smaller players rather than investing in digital headends which are expensive?

    I think it cost around Rs 10 lakhs a year per link – that’s the deal I have.  I am sure Hathway, Den and Siti must be having better deals because of the size.. So we have taken a view that we will go on opex model. It will be like we will have one head end in Odisha and one for Andhra and Telangana  and one for Bengal and Chhattisgarh because they have language issues and content mix is different. That’s the way forward for the smaller guys.  But when you talk about the smaller guys, they may not have multiple locations to take link actually one of the reason the cable community in Phase III and Phase IV are finding difficult to execute digitization is essentially this.

    Because of this in Phase III you have markets with a million population and you have markets with 10,000 population. If you see the list that the government has issued, there are markets with 10,000-15,000 population at the low end. There are some states which have removed those lists and there are some states which never reacted.

    I have seen the Telangana, Andhra Pradesh list. There are homes with 10,00-20,000  population. For 20,000 population places,  that is about 4,000-5,000 homes. Out of this, 1,000 will be on DTH. You will have 3,000-4,000 cable customers. How does one actually do digital? Hathway, DEN, Siti and I can do it. Because, I have many other locations, I can take a link for Rs 10 lakh.

    But, if there is an independent guy, it is simply not possible, not viable from his perspective to set up a headend. The link is not an option for the smaller guys. That is one of the fundamental reasons why there has been a resistance to digitalization in Phase III and Phase IV. So that’s slowly getting sorted out. The link costs are coming down. The headend costs are coming down. The awareness is going up. So I am sure it will happen.

    You are investing  Rs 120 crore in coming year?

    When I did my IPO on 15 March, I had a two-year capex plan for FY-16 and FY-17. For FY-16 and FY-17, my plan was to go from half a million to one million by  FY17. So, to add this 500,000 customers, we had to put a capex of Rs 250 crore in these two years. Maybe this year’s numbers are part of it. So, if you are asking me, where is this going – in video, broadband or cable? In technology, nothing is called video or broadband, everything is based on the packet. So, given that we are a last mile player, our entire money goes into the network or buying out the LCO. And, even when I buy out an LCO, I dismantle the entire network and build my own network. So, the entire money goes into the network, creating the homes passed.

    Your broadband ARPUs are Rs 400. Are they going to up? Are the markets resistant to ARPU hikes in broadband?

    On the broadband side, the story is different. Video operates on a high penetration ratio. Broadband is on low penetration.  And, I believe that Broadband ARPUs will grow faster than cable TV ARPUs. Simply because there is a lot of upgradation change happening in the product itself. Earlier, we were on DOCSIS 2.0. We could provide 10 MBPs. Most of the consumers were on 512 KBPs or 1 MBPS or 2 MBPS. Now we have started DOCSIS 3.0. The technical spec is 300 MBPs. On the ground, we are able to deliver 100 MBPs. And the offers we have are 10 MBPS, 20 MBPs, 50 MBPS, and 100MBPs. This number is very less. This ratio between DOCSIS 2.0 and DCOSIS 3.0 is going to change. Increasing the speed will obviously lead to more downloads and streaming online. Hence, these ARPUS will increase.

    What we also have been doing is build mobility into the wire line. For example, you have a home wifi modem, you can use it to make your home wireless. You don’t need to put a separate router, the cable models of DOCSIS 3.0 have inbuilt routers. We are also building public hotspots. A KFC or a coffee shop — where consumers spend an hour or so. So you use the public hot spot and use your login and password to continue enjoy all the broadband speeds you enjoy at home. All these factors will lead to our broadband ARPUs going up.

  • Going a la carte with Star and Indiacast has helped: Bibhu Prasad Rath

    Going a la carte with Star and Indiacast has helped: Bibhu Prasad Rath

    Bhibu Rath heads one of the small regional cable TV players in the TV distribution business: Ortel Communications. The MSO began as a local player in the state of Odisha. But, it has since spread into neighboring states such as Chattishgarh, West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. In fact, it is one of a handful of cable TV distribution companies which went in for an IPO and are listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange.

    Rath has been with Ortel since 1999 and no one probably knows the company and the business it operates better than he does. Hence, he has focused on building a two-way state-of-the-art communication network enabled for ‘triple play’ services (video, data, and voice capabilities) with control over the ‘last mile’ over the last few years. That regulation has stymied his VoIP ambitions, has not been a stumbling block. In fact, it has emboldened him to move aggressively in the direction of broadband.

    Rath was one of the key note speakers at IDOS 2016 here. And, he had a one-on-one conversation with the Indiantelevision.com CEO and Editor-in-Chief Anil Wanvari. He was forthcoming and transparent on a range of issues. Read on to find out what he had to say:

    Are you at an advantage or disadvantage of being a niche player ?

    It’s a great advantage actually. You need to understand that why we are a regional player.  Because, we have always believed in depth and not in width. So, we are actually a last-mile player unlike other national MSOs. In a lighter vein, in fact, I keep telling people that we are not a MSO, we are the largest LCO. So, if you are  doing a last-mile network, you have limitations of national presence. So, we have consistently focused on the regional markets and, even within regional market, we have consistently focused on Phase III markets – tier 2, tier 3 markets. Not on the metros.  Like we are there in Telangana but not in Hyderabad. So, currently, we are focusing on four states even though we are present in six states  — that is Odisha, Chattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. And, we have a small presence in West Bengal and Madhya Pradesh. So, it gives us a great advantage that we are focused, we are localized, we are last mile, we are going directly to the consumer.

    Your non-Odisha market is around 233,000 subscribers and your major part, that is, 770,000 subscribers, are in Odisha. Is non-Odisha market going to grow or Odisha?

    That’s (non-Odisha) the one which is growing. In March 2015, when we went public we had half a million subs. Today, we are close to 800,000. Our guidance to the market has been — we will get to a million by March 2017.  If you see the growth in the last five quarters — that is four quarters of last year and Q1 of this year — you will see 70-75 per cent incremental growth has come from outside Odisha, and they are mostly in Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Chhattisgarh. So that’s the trend going to continue and most of the growth will come from outside Odisha.

    Your analog and digital ARPUs are at Rs 141 and Rs 169 a month, but your digital ARPUs have come down. Why is that and where do you see it going?

    Well, digital ARPUs have come down marginally. But, the mix of analog and digital has gone up. So, digital as a percentage of cable TV swap has gone up very significantly in last five quarters. As of June-end, it was 45 per cent. That’s the reason why ARPU has marginally gone down.

    I have a slightly different view from the rest of the people from the industry. We don’t think this is a great ARPU-driven business. You need to realize that this is a wireline business — not wireless like DTH. So, the wireless guys like DTH have an inherent advantage that they can choose and pick their customer. 5,000 customers in Delhi, 50,000 in Odisha – it’s the same for them. We are in the wireline business. We are laying cable in front of homes and its extremely capex-heavy unlike the MSOs model. If you keep aside the STB, the last mile model is capex-heavy as compared to the MSO-LCO model, because a large part of the network is actually built by the LCO. Whereas, here we deal with it ourselves.

    Now, say, you network 100 homes. My objective is to get as as many of these 100 homes as I can as my customers instead of trying to raise my ARPU by Rs 10. I would prefer to operate at a moderate to low ARPU but I increase my market share and penetration ratio and make up through the number of customers than trying to increase the ARPUs.  So, if you see my penetration ratio: 770,000 customers I have 1.2 million home passes – that is like 60 per cent. To my mind that is a more important metric in the business than just the ARPU numbers. Having said that ARPU will increase – but only marginally, I am not a great believer invery high level of ARPU increase.

    Even in the context of digitization, I kept saying that its objective is not to increase ARPU. Why would the government and the regulator do something wherein the cost to the customer would go up? That’s just the antithesis of what the government does. The government would like to do what helps the consumers, and what helps the consumers is to give them choice, not raise prices.

    So, in doing digitization, give the choice to the consumer — let the consumer pick up at Rs 99, and let someone else pick up at Rs 500. Let your average be at Rs 150-200. Hence, we operate at high penetration, and moderate ARPUs.

    Being a regional player, do you have enough negotiating power? You recently concluded deals with Star and Indiacast which were challenging. Has it become easier for you to deal with the broadcaster?

    It’s a relationship  with the broadcasters — which has been going on but recently we have tried to bring a major shift in the relationship. The two deals which you mentioned with Indiacast and Star TV – they are two of the top half a dozen bouquets operating in India. What we tried to do actually is we tried to test and implement the true spirit of digitization. This means consumer should decide. Whether he wants a channel or not, he should decide and if he should pay.

    With these two deals, we said we will go a la carte. And, as you know, a la carte prices are extremely high. The effective price that a broadcaster gets from the consumers is typically between 10–15 per cent of a la carte price.

    So, for example, the Star TV bouquet – the a la carte prices are at Rs 200, the bouquet prices are typically at Rs 25-26. Despite the a la carte being high, we decided to try it. And we decided to offer it to our viewers and consumers, and allowed them to decide. And, to my surprise, the results have been fantastic.

    Being a last mile model, I don’t have issues of packaging, etc. So, we have complete packaging on our network. We have a backend which can activate a channel. A consumer can send an SMS and get his channel in two minutes via a call centre as well. The payout to me has come down significantly – very significantly — on these two bouquets. But, for consumers, it has gone up, for some it has gone down. So, it’s working very well. This is the way forward. Having done these two deals, I don’t want to do any more soon. I would like to stabilize these two first.

    Has your revenue been impacted because of this?

    Not at all, because when you put a channel on a la carte, there are two models that have been implemented. One is we have put a la carte add-on – that is consumers pay and take it. In another experiment I did, I just threw open the channels to consumers. I said you don’t have to pay anything extra, just decide what you want.  There are
    consumers who will be happy to pay a significant amount for the channels like Fox Life, CNBC, TLC and that’s beauty of doing a la carte, instead of dumping a CNBC channel on the entire base.

    In our markets, 90-95 per cent of the viewers don’t watch CNBC or Fox Life. Why should I dump it? Instead, let me give it to these 2-3 per cent consumers, and let them pay.

    So my revenue has not gone down and my costs have reduced. I am even ready to let go my revenue because these two are interrelated. Whether I increase the ARPU by Rs 10  or I reduce my cost by Rs 10, it doesn’t matter to my ROC. The whole idea is to move on to a pass on the model where consumers decide. The revenue may increase or decrease, only time will tell.

    The MIB says that 93 per cent of Phase III has been digitized whereas you have stated in your areas it is 50-55 per cent. Where lies the truth?

    I don’t want to comment on the MIB numbers because I actually don’t know where the numbers are coming from. We are below 50 per cent. As regards the litigation of DAS Phase III, we are one of the guys who went to court and got a stay. And, that hearing for case is coming up in October.

    That does not mean I did not want to digitize. I definitely want to godigital. I definitely want to get to 100 per cent but we wanted time. And, in many parts of the country, analogue was running in the month of January, and it is running even today. And I can safely tell you, if there was no stay order, analogue would have continued for some more time. I wanted legal cover that If I am doing analogue, I am not doing something illegal. I am pursuing digital in the true spirit. And, the offtake of digital has been very good actually. And, I don’t expect the court order to continue for a very long period. Irrespective of what happens in court, I am pursuing it and I will complete digitalization. We are fully committed to it.

    Your content cost has come down to Rs 50 or so is it because of Star and Indiacast deals or is it because of other factors? Do you expect them to go down further?

    I expect content costs to go down little further. It has been the combination of a couple of factors;  it is not because I got better deals with  broadcasters. The content cost has come down is because of two factors — one is the deal with Star TV and Indiacast on a la carte basis. But, this cost will go up in the long run because consumers will adopt more and more channels and we are mentally prepared that this will go up.

    And, at some point, even a la carte may actually exceed and go beyond what I was paying on a fixed-fee model. It will take time. But, we should be prepared to pay more on a la carte model. But, by then, consumers should also take more a la carte channels and my revenue should also go up.

    The other reason is that we are expanding a lot to other markets and, our expansion strategy has been to acquire LCOs  and the local MSOs. So, we basically do a lump sum, lock stock and barrel buyout. And, those guys we take over have been extremely efficient as compared to what we were doing in terms of negotiating with the broadcaster – their costs are low. Their costs essentially get passed on to us. So that counts for a little cheaper price. But, it will increase.

    You will not set up digital headends rather will go with opex model by taking intercity bandwidth. Is it a way forward for smaller players rather than investing in digital headends which are expensive?

    I think it cost around Rs 10 lakhs a year per link – that’s the deal I have.  I am sure Hathway, Den and Siti must be having better deals because of the size.. So we have taken a view that we will go on opex model. It will be like we will have one head end in Odisha and one for Andhra and Telangana  and one for Bengal and Chhattisgarh because they have language issues and content mix is different. That’s the way forward for the smaller guys.  But when you talk about the smaller guys, they may not have multiple locations to take link actually one of the reason the cable community in Phase III and Phase IV are finding difficult to execute digitization is essentially this.

    Because of this in Phase III you have markets with a million population and you have markets with 10,000 population. If you see the list that the government has issued, there are markets with 10,000-15,000 population at the low end. There are some states which have removed those lists and there are some states which never reacted.

    I have seen the Telangana, Andhra Pradesh list. There are homes with 10,00-20,000  population. For 20,000 population places,  that is about 4,000-5,000 homes. Out of this, 1,000 will be on DTH. You will have 3,000-4,000 cable customers. How does one actually do digital? Hathway, DEN, Siti and I can do it. Because, I have many other locations, I can take a link for Rs 10 lakh.

    But, if there is an independent guy, it is simply not possible, not viable from his perspective to set up a headend. The link is not an option for the smaller guys. That is one of the fundamental reasons why there has been a resistance to digitalization in Phase III and Phase IV. So that’s slowly getting sorted out. The link costs are coming down. The headend costs are coming down. The awareness is going up. So I am sure it will happen.

    You are investing  Rs 120 crore in coming year?

    When I did my IPO on 15 March, I had a two-year capex plan for FY-16 and FY-17. For FY-16 and FY-17, my plan was to go from half a million to one million by  FY17. So, to add this 500,000 customers, we had to put a capex of Rs 250 crore in these two years. Maybe this year’s numbers are part of it. So, if you are asking me, where is this going – in video, broadband or cable? In technology, nothing is called video or broadband, everything is based on the packet. So, given that we are a last mile player, our entire money goes into the network or buying out the LCO. And, even when I buy out an LCO, I dismantle the entire network and build my own network. So, the entire money goes into the network, creating the homes passed.

    Your broadband ARPUs are Rs 400. Are they going to up? Are the markets resistant to ARPU hikes in broadband?

    On the broadband side, the story is different. Video operates on a high penetration ratio. Broadband is on low penetration.  And, I believe that Broadband ARPUs will grow faster than cable TV ARPUs. Simply because there is a lot of upgradation change happening in the product itself. Earlier, we were on DOCSIS 2.0. We could provide 10 MBPs. Most of the consumers were on 512 KBPs or 1 MBPS or 2 MBPS. Now we have started DOCSIS 3.0. The technical spec is 300 MBPs. On the ground, we are able to deliver 100 MBPs. And the offers we have are 10 MBPS, 20 MBPs, 50 MBPS, and 100MBPs. This number is very less. This ratio between DOCSIS 2.0 and DCOSIS 3.0 is going to change. Increasing the speed will obviously lead to more downloads and streaming online. Hence, these ARPUS will increase.

    What we also have been doing is build mobility into the wire line. For example, you have a home wifi modem, you can use it to make your home wireless. You don’t need to put a separate router, the cable models of DOCSIS 3.0 have inbuilt routers. We are also building public hotspots. A KFC or a coffee shop — where consumers spend an hour or so. So you use the public hot spot and use your login and password to continue enjoy all the broadband speeds you enjoy at home. All these factors will lead to our broadband ARPUs going up.

  • TDSAT asks Ortel to adhere to time schedule in payments to IndiaCast, stop piracy

    TDSAT asks Ortel to adhere to time schedule in payments to IndiaCast, stop piracy

    NEW DELHI:Ortel Communications has been asked by the Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal to adhere to the time schedule for furnishing SMS report to IndiaCast Distribution by the seventh of the succeeding month and will also adhere to the payment schedule for the same.

    Member B B Srivastava In his order of 9 August 2016 also directed that Ortel should file its reply with regards to the allegation of piracy within 10 days and a rejoinder, if any, may be filed within one week thereafter.

    Listing the matter for 1 September, the Tribunal said the matter regarding IRD boxes must be settled, as submitted before the Tribunal, within 10 days.

    IndiaCast counsel Kunal Tandon said a reply in the main petition has been filed and so Ortel was asked to file its rejoinder within two weeks.

    The orders came on a miscellaneous application filed by IndiaCast to restrain Ortel from retransmitting the former’s signals in Jaleswar, Jagatsinghpur, Rambha, Chatrapur and Balugaon in unauthorized and illegal manner, and for directions to Ortel to clear entire outstanding dues to the tune of Rs 4,15,180 for the illegal dissemination of the signals in the areas of Berhampur, Rourkela, Jagatsinghpur, Puri, Jaleswar, Nimapara, Bhadarak Town, Rambha, Chatrapur and Balugaon for the relevant period during which the signals have been illegally and in unauthorized manner and/or continues to be illegally retransmitted by Ortel.

    Tandon made submissions with regard to non-compliance of the direction of the Tribunal regarding payment of May and June 2016 as well as regarding clarification of issues with regard to IRD boxes. He again re-emphasized the issue of piracy by Ortel in areas where they are not permitted to retransmit the signals. However, this issue relating to piracy was disputed by Ortel and assured the payment of the monthly subscription fee for the months of May and June in view of the order of 25 April 2016.

  • TDSAT asks Ortel to adhere to time schedule in payments to IndiaCast, stop piracy

    TDSAT asks Ortel to adhere to time schedule in payments to IndiaCast, stop piracy

    NEW DELHI:Ortel Communications has been asked by the Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal to adhere to the time schedule for furnishing SMS report to IndiaCast Distribution by the seventh of the succeeding month and will also adhere to the payment schedule for the same.

    Member B B Srivastava In his order of 9 August 2016 also directed that Ortel should file its reply with regards to the allegation of piracy within 10 days and a rejoinder, if any, may be filed within one week thereafter.

    Listing the matter for 1 September, the Tribunal said the matter regarding IRD boxes must be settled, as submitted before the Tribunal, within 10 days.

    IndiaCast counsel Kunal Tandon said a reply in the main petition has been filed and so Ortel was asked to file its rejoinder within two weeks.

    The orders came on a miscellaneous application filed by IndiaCast to restrain Ortel from retransmitting the former’s signals in Jaleswar, Jagatsinghpur, Rambha, Chatrapur and Balugaon in unauthorized and illegal manner, and for directions to Ortel to clear entire outstanding dues to the tune of Rs 4,15,180 for the illegal dissemination of the signals in the areas of Berhampur, Rourkela, Jagatsinghpur, Puri, Jaleswar, Nimapara, Bhadarak Town, Rambha, Chatrapur and Balugaon for the relevant period during which the signals have been illegally and in unauthorized manner and/or continues to be illegally retransmitted by Ortel.

    Tandon made submissions with regard to non-compliance of the direction of the Tribunal regarding payment of May and June 2016 as well as regarding clarification of issues with regard to IRD boxes. He again re-emphasized the issue of piracy by Ortel in areas where they are not permitted to retransmit the signals. However, this issue relating to piracy was disputed by Ortel and assured the payment of the monthly subscription fee for the months of May and June in view of the order of 25 April 2016.

  • TDSAT directs Star India to reconnect signals to Ortel on receipt of half of due amount

    TDSAT directs Star India to reconnect signals to Ortel on receipt of half of due amount

    NEW DELHI: Star India was directed by the Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal to reconnect the signals to Ortel Communications within 24 hours as Ortel counsel gave cheques for Rs 3,34,93,967 to Star India counsel Rajsekhar Rao.

    The petition had been filed against disconnection of signals by Star with effect from 2 July 2016 in view of various notices issued under relevant regulations for both DAS and non-DAS areas.

    In his order, member B B Srivastava on 11 July 2016 said Ortel was desirous to have the interconnect agreement renewed but on RIO terms of Star.

    The cheques submitted were for 50% of the outstanding amount till June 2016 (Rs 6,77,71,172). The balance amount of Rs.342,77,205 as well as the installment agreed to be paid by 31 July 2016, will be paid by 25 July 2016 and 31 July 2016 respectively. The petitioner would a lso adhere to the payment schedule as agreed to earlier.

    The petitioner’s desire to have a fresh agreement on RIO basis for DAS areas would be on the basis of RIO and for non-DAS areas, the two sides will negotiate and sign an appropriate interconnect agreement as per TRAI Regulations within two weeks.

    In the meanwhile, the terms and conditions of the old agreement would continue to govern the relationship between the petitioner and the respondent and the petitioner will abide by the payment schedule and other terms of the previous agreement.

    Ortel meanwhile denied any charges of piracy for which FIRs had been lodged.

    Earlier, the petitioner had come before the Tribunal against these notices and when the matter was taken up on 27 May 2016, the petitioner submitted that the parties had arrived at an agreement and therefore, it withdrew the petition.

    The mutual agreement arrived at between the parties had been documented in the form of emails dated 26 May 2016 and a communication to the petitioner on 17 June 2016.

    However, the matter came up again in view of the amount of Rs 6,77,71,172 of which half was paid by chequest which the Bank refused to accept as there was “stop payment” instructions by the petitioner to the bank in view of the disconnection.

    (Updated on 20 July 2016 6:25 pm)

  • TDSAT directs Star India to reconnect signals to Ortel on receipt of half of due amount

    TDSAT directs Star India to reconnect signals to Ortel on receipt of half of due amount

    NEW DELHI: Star India was directed by the Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal to reconnect the signals to Ortel Communications within 24 hours as Ortel counsel gave cheques for Rs 3,34,93,967 to Star India counsel Rajsekhar Rao.

    The petition had been filed against disconnection of signals by Star with effect from 2 July 2016 in view of various notices issued under relevant regulations for both DAS and non-DAS areas.

    In his order, member B B Srivastava on 11 July 2016 said Ortel was desirous to have the interconnect agreement renewed but on RIO terms of Star.

    The cheques submitted were for 50% of the outstanding amount till June 2016 (Rs 6,77,71,172). The balance amount of Rs.342,77,205 as well as the installment agreed to be paid by 31 July 2016, will be paid by 25 July 2016 and 31 July 2016 respectively. The petitioner would a lso adhere to the payment schedule as agreed to earlier.

    The petitioner’s desire to have a fresh agreement on RIO basis for DAS areas would be on the basis of RIO and for non-DAS areas, the two sides will negotiate and sign an appropriate interconnect agreement as per TRAI Regulations within two weeks.

    In the meanwhile, the terms and conditions of the old agreement would continue to govern the relationship between the petitioner and the respondent and the petitioner will abide by the payment schedule and other terms of the previous agreement.

    Ortel meanwhile denied any charges of piracy for which FIRs had been lodged.

    Earlier, the petitioner had come before the Tribunal against these notices and when the matter was taken up on 27 May 2016, the petitioner submitted that the parties had arrived at an agreement and therefore, it withdrew the petition.

    The mutual agreement arrived at between the parties had been documented in the form of emails dated 26 May 2016 and a communication to the petitioner on 17 June 2016.

    However, the matter came up again in view of the amount of Rs 6,77,71,172 of which half was paid by chequest which the Bank refused to accept as there was “stop payment” instructions by the petitioner to the bank in view of the disconnection.

    (Updated on 20 July 2016 6:25 pm)

  • TDSAT: IndiaCast to restore signals to Ortel against interim payment

    TDSAT: IndiaCast to restore signals to Ortel against interim payment

    NEW DELHI: IndiaCast Distribution Pvt Ltd has been directed by the Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal to restore signals to Ortel Communications Ltd on receipt of a sum of Rs one crore as an interim measure. Chairman justice Aftab Alam and member B B Srivastava said that both parties should reconcile their accounts and Ortel will make the balance payment within two weeks thereof.

    The matter has been listed for further hearing on 30 May, while noting that Ortel counsel Navin Chawla did not seriously dispute the amounts due,but wanted the signals to be restored and was willing to sign a new interconnect agreement on IndiaCast’s RIO terms.

    Ortel had approached the tribunal against the disconnection notice. According to IndiaCast, Ortel had dues amounting to Rs 1.96 crore as on 31 March when the interconnect agreement came to an end and so the signal was disconnected on 28 March.

    IndiaCast counsel Ramji Srinivasan contended that Ortel had continued to disseminate the signals of his client even after 28 March and should be asked to pay for that as well. However, Chawla contested any allegation of unauthorized transmission.

    The tribunal said this issue could be raised during the reconciliation of accounts and if there was no agreement between the parties, they would have to abide by the order of the tribunal. On restoration of signals, IndiaCast was also free to hold an audit of the headends of Ortel.

    The tribunal also made it clear that after the restoration of signals, the subscription to be paid would be according to IndiaCast RIO terms expected by 1 May, subject to the final order of the tribunal. India Cast was free to disconnect in the event of failure to make payments as directed by the tribunal or non-cooperation during the reconciliation.