Tag: Satellite Operators

  • SES sees robust first half

    SES sees robust first half

    MUMBAI: SES S.A., a leading worldwide satellite operator (NYSE Euronext Paris and Luxembourg Stock Exchange: SESG), reports financial results for the six months ended 30 June 2014.

        
    • H1 Revenue of EUR 938.9 million (2013: EUR 910.5 million)

    – An increase of 6.3% over the prior year period at constant exchange rates (“constant FX”)1

     

    • H1 EBITDA of EUR 693.8 million (2013: EUR 662.0 million)

    – An increase of 7.4% at constant FX over the prior year

    – EBITDA margin of 73.9% (2013: 72.7% as reported)

     

    • Operating profit rose to EUR 437.5 million, an increase of 9.4% at constant FX

     

    • H1 Profit of the group increased 8.5% to EUR 290.9 million (2013: EUR 268.0 million)

     

    • Contract backlog of EUR 7.2 billion at end of June 2014

     

    • Closing Net Debt / EBITDA ratio of 2.85 (30 June 2013: 3.07) Karim Michel Sabbagh, President and CEO, commented:

     

    “SES’s continuing successful development  and execution of the 2014 plan has delivered robust first half results that validate our strategy to address target regions and market verticals. Video remains core to our business. Europe and the International segments posted strong growth, while the North American  segment  continued  to be affected  by the U.S. Government  budget  sequester.  The 2014 financial guidance is reiterated.

     

    Three satellites were brought into service in the period, further developing our capabilities in Europe, MENA and Asia-Pacific.  Four more satellites are under construction,  including the newly announced SES-12, a hybrid satellite for the Asia-Pacific region, which will benefit from the dual innovations of an HTS  payload  and  all-electric  propulsion.  These  programmes,  all components  of our  medium  term CapEx  plan,  will  enhance  our  differentiated  positioning  in  the  developing  markets  that  we  are targeting.

     

    On 10 July 2014, O3b Networks, the satellite company building ‘Fibre in the Sky’, in which SES has a significant  interest,  successfully  launched  its  second  group  of  four  satellites.    O3b’s  full  suite  of commercial services will be offered once in-orbit testing is completed.   We look forward to O3b’s successful commercialisation  of its product range with customers across the underserved markets of the world.”

     

    Click here to read the financial highlights

  • TV industry targets heavy VOD buyers, TV valuable customer for commercials

    TV industry targets heavy VOD buyers, TV valuable customer for commercials

    NEW DELHI: Highly addressable advertising has been a long-standing plan for the TV business, which wants to rival the ad targeting available online, and the biggest beneficiary of addressable commercials so far may be the TV industry itself even as marketers want to make their spending more efficient.

    Cable networks like Starz and HBO have begun trying DirecTV’s addressable advertising platform to find specific viewers who they believe would actually be interested in their shows. Cable and satellite operators, meanwhile, are taking advantage of the system to more efficiently target specific customers and get current subscribers to upgrade.

    Such advertising could be most effective for the actual TV operators, said Visible World executive VP- marketing and research Claudio Marcus. Visible world provides targeting technology to Cablevision.

    According to the National Association of Broadcasters of the United States, this is partly because paid TV services do not want to waste sign-up ads on people who already shell out for the product. Other kinds of marketers have a greater interest in marketing to current customers, so they’ll stick with the brand for their next box of crackers or new smartphone.

    It can also be laborious to match specific households with the cars or packaged goods they buy but pay-TV operators like DirecTV know exactly which premium channels each of its households pays for.

    “People are telling us they have enough TV,” said Media Storm co-founder and managing partner Craig Woerz. Media Storm’s clients including WeTV and NFL Network use DirecTV’s addressable advertising. “We need to make it more personalised and break through the clutter. We don’t want to break through with everyone, just the right people, who will be highly engaged.”

    “Clients using addressable advertising are seeing a 20-40 per cent higher tune in rate than those not doing it,” informed Woerz.

    Addressable commercials let you plan a TV campaign the way you would plan digital, said Starz exec VP-marketing Nancy McGee, which has run two campaigns using DirecTV’s addressable system. “Addressable makes sense in light of how people are consuming TV, cherry-picking programming and networks,” she said.

    The premium cable channel tested a small campaign in March, urging viewers to add Starz, and followed up in June with a promotion for the premiere of the second season of “Magic City.”

    In the initial test, which ran over five days, Starz showed ads to non-subscribers who frequently bought movies on demand or who subscribed to other premium channels, groups that the network believed had a higher propensity to be won over.

    The network saw a 49 per cent higher jump in sales among viewers who saw the ads than in a control group, McGee said, adding that the system provides information on how many people were exposed to the campaign, how many watched it live and in playback, on which network they saw it and during which part of the day.

    HBO, too, has used the DirecTV system for a campaign pegged to Game of Thrones, showing commercials to consumers who met criteria such as frequent VOD orders, on the same logic that Starz applied. It will run a similar effort later this year for the return of Boardwalk Empire.

    HBO is still learning, according to HBO director, domestic network distribution Gina DeSantis. But the network intends to increase its investment in addressable ads next year, she said.

    Scripps Networks is early in its exploration of addressable advertising, using it to send programming messages to viewers based on geographic location, said VP, national accounts, content and marketing group Brent Scott.

    “There are so many shows and competitive networks, if you can pinpoint a specific customer you have a better chance of tune in,” he said. “Why advertise to DirecTV’s entire customer base of 20 million if 19 million of those have no interest. I’d rather reach a couple of hundred thousand that are interested.”

    “In a lot of ways what we are doing here is no different than what Spotify is doing, what Amazon has been doing for years,” said DirecTV exec VP- chief revenue and marketing officer Paul Guyardo. “They see what you like to purchase, they see the songs you like to listen to, and they serve up songs they think you might be interested in. We are only putting the commercials in homes of people that want to know more about new cars or a premiere of a particular show because it is a show they like to watch.”

    Auto, insurance and financial marketers have also been using the addressable technology, according to Guyardo, but the limits of the pay-TV systems’ reach have held back widespread adoption.

    Some in the TV business also worry about the impact of easy, highly targeted TV commercials. “There’s a fear factor,” said Marcus. “The concern is if media buys become more efficient, does money come out of the marketplace because advertisers can do more with less?”

    But the biggest challenge is educating the marketplace, with many media buyers and planners still thinking in traditional gross rating points, according to Guyardo.

    DirecTV is trying to overcome that by pitching directly to CMOs, especially those who are data-driven. “If they value and appreciate data and analytics and they have a good understanding of exactly who they want to target, the beauty of this addressable product is it provides all of the reach that they want without the waste,” Guyardo said.