Tag: TV distribution

  • Harbour Rights bolsters summer content lineup with new titles

    Harbour Rights bolsters summer content lineup with new titles

    Mumbai: Hong Kong-based TV distribution company Harbour Rights has licensed three new wildlife titles to Canal+ Myanmar, including “Wild Caribbean,” “A Wild Quest In Scotland,” and “Becoming Butterfly.” The first episode of the collection focuses on the world of insects and bugs with the upcoming episodes that include “Realm of the Ants” and “Black Bees: Season 4.”

    Tokyovision acquired its social investigation “China, My Wife Has Social Credit” which unveils the newly introduced social credit system in China and how it affects intimate and social relationships, as well as “Oriental Express: The Ultimate Train Experience,” which is about a luxurious journey from Bangkok to Singapore on one of the most beautiful trains in the world. Both titles will be part of the special Nippon TV show “World Greatest TV.”

    NATV in Korea was interested in the development of civilisations that reflect on the evolution of nature and humanity throughout the world and acquiring “The Path of Men.”

    Just before French president Emmanuel Macron won his second term in office this week, newly launched Taiwan Plus acquired Macron’s “Road To Elysee” and “Brigitte Macron, A French Saga.”

    The former tells the inside story of how Macron came to power without the backing of a traditional political party in 2016, the latter reviews the secret side of France’s first lady, that made a name for herself in the political world.

  • Lifestyle channel FoodFood to go live on DD Free Dish starting 1 April

    Lifestyle channel FoodFood to go live on DD Free Dish starting 1 April

    Mumbai: Celebrity chef Sanjeev Kapoor’s food and lifestyle channel FoodFood is set to go live on Prasar Bharati’s free-to-air DTH service DD Free Dish from 1 April.

    With this development, FoodFood becomes the only speciality channel to be made available on the largest DTH platform of the country reaching over 40 million households, said the statement. After consolidating its position in the primary and focus markets in India, FoodFood has become a popular choice of channel across International destinations and geographies, the statement added.

    “FoodFood has always been at the forefront of breaking barriers in the industry as the first 24×7 food lifestyle programming and now again being the first to reach rural audiences,” stated Sanjeev Kapoor. “I firmly believe that food is a universal language that breaks all barriers of cultures, races, and borders. With FoodFood, I want to reach as many people as possible looking for relevant content on food to make taste buds tantalised and possibly their lives brighter.”

    FoodFood is currently distributed through Tata Play and leading MSO’s across the country.

     

  • Emergency plan in place, cable operators are prepared to counter Covid

    Emergency plan in place, cable operators are prepared to counter Covid

    KOLKATA: During the Covid2019 outbreak last year, cable operators in India served the country’s entertainment and infotainment needs as an essential service. It was not easy to operate in a lockdown for an industry that involves huge on-ground operation as well as close contact with consumers. From running out of inventories to fall in payment collection, the operators face an array of issues. Now, with the country feeling the heat of the second wave, the industry says it is better prepared than last year.

    Fastway Transmissions group CEO Prem Ojha said that the MSO is not facing any issue presently, because only a few parts of the country like Delhi and Mumbai have been significantly impacted. Most of the other geographies are normal right now, barring weekend and night curfews in some places. He noted that field activity gets very limited post 10 pm, right up to 6 am in the morning anyway. Hence, there is no such disruption as of now.

    Although Ojha is uncertain how things will pan out with cases on the rise, the leeway of being part of essential services will play in their favour. But partners and teams have to brave it out, risking their own health to continue to serve, added.  The company already has a contingency plan with the right amount of technical support and equipment in place should matters turn more critical.

    “There will be some hardship but the work will carry on. It will be a challenging scenario but nothing will get stalled. This time people are braver, more confident than last year. Uncertainty factor is lesser compared to last year,” he said.

    GTPL Hathway cable TV head & chief strategy officer Piyush Pankaj acknowledged that due to the looming possibility of a lockdown, certain problems are creeping back. But they have experience on how to deal with the crisis, and the company is well prepared for the situation, he asserted. Since Covid cases began to surge in late March, efforts are underway to cope with the issues.

    PPE kits are ready for staff, digital payments have been established. Moreover, customer communications are being taken care of through online and telephonic medium rather than in-person visits. “We have already taken precautions on ground. We are not facing the mounting problem that we faced last time,” he summed up.

    As of now, the situation on their end is under control, said Siti Networks CEO Anil Malhotra. While the Covid curve began peaking 10-15 days back, the MSO has not seen any major impact so far. However, more operators and staffs are getting affected. Unfortunately, people were not being cautious this time, which will further compound problems, he mused. The company has already started telling people how to take precautions, and is helping those who are suffering.

    “It can’t get worse than last year. We have learnt in 2020 how to work with little or skeleton staff. This time, I am more worried about our staffs and it would be great if the government can insure these people,” Maharashtra Cable Operators Federation president Arvind Prabhu highlighted.

    Despite the sector’s resolute outlook, operational challenges have already cropped up. Although the government has issued a notification where cable service is categorised as essential services, transport is becoming an issue. There is also the risk of infection. At present, operators are rotating the staffs so all of them don’t fall sick and in case someone falls sick, they have backup, Prabhu mentioned.

    Other than workforce issues, the industry faced shortage in inventory and other supply chain issues during lockdown. The same situation is playing out again; there was no disposable income to purchase stock in advance, as cable operators took a 40 per cent hit in revenue last year, Prabhu pointed out. Apart from some of the big players, no one else has kept inventory ready.

    Fastway’s Ojha highlighted a significant trend. With more offices being closed again, the incremental demand for broadband is going up. That traction is visible now, Ojha added. The demand will further go upwards, and therefore the operator is ensuring inventory and other things are in place so they can meet the demand.

    Some of the major MSOs have started work-from-home provision again. One-third of GTPL Hathway’s staff is working from home currently. Siti Networks has also initiated WFH option for non-critical employees and is providing necessary apparatus for that. While all Fastway workers are operating from home, the company is being flexible with employees who are travelling from containment zones or showing any Covid symptom. All of them are ready to ask more staff to work from home if the situation deteriorates.

  • The TRAI broadcasting & cable tariff order simplified

    The TRAI broadcasting & cable tariff order simplified

    MUMBAI: The industry could not have asked for a better Dusshera gift. On the eve of 11 October 2016, India’s telecom and TV distribution regulator  The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) announced two draft legislations  – The Telecommunication (Broadcasting and Cable Services) (Eighth) (Addressable Systems) Tariff Order, 2016 and Standards of Quality of Service and Consumer Protection (Digital Addressable Systems) Regulations, 2016 – that definitely look like progressing the stuck-in-quicksand-of-uncertainty broadcast TV and cable TV sector. More than that, they could possibly inject a modicum of organization, professionalism and structure to an otherwise disorganized-free-for-all TV distribution business.

    The first of the draft legislation attempts to put in place a pricing framework for the heavily conflicted cable TV distribution sector. The second seeks to upgrade the quality of services that MSOs, cable TV operators provide to the consumers. Both have been much-awaited pieces of legislation.

    The third which seeks to iron out the much-maligned and disputed subscription revenue stream that flows between broadcasters, MSOs, cable TV operators and consumers is expected to be announced soon.

    Let’s look at the pricing draft whose purpose TRAI says is to ensure:

    –       transparency, non-discrimination, non-exclusivity for all stakeholders in value chain
    –       affordable TV services for customers
    –       adequate choice to consumers
    –       balance the commercial interests of broadcasters and distributors of television  channels to enable the distributors of television channels to recover their network cost and the broadcasters to recover their content cost.

    The TRAI wants the new Tariff Order or the MRP pricing regime to become effective from 1 April 2017.In the new scheme, the authority has in detail defined the role of  broadcasters, LCOs and MSOs or HITS operators. This is an attempt to simplify the order for everyone to be able to understand it.

    The role of the broadcaster

    Under this, broadcasters will have to first declare their channels as a pay channel or a free to air channel, on an a  la carte basis, and in one of the following seven genres: devotional, general entertainment, infotainment, kids, movies, news and current affairs and sports. The TRAI has defined a ceiling on the maximum retail price (MRP) for each of the genres: devotional (Rs 3), general entertainment (Rs 12), infotainment (Rs 9), kids (Rs 7), movies (Rs 10), news and current affairs (Rs 5) and sports (Rs 19).

    Each pay channel has to have a MRP  that can vary depending on the region, but which cannot be changed before the expiry of six months of it being declared. These rates will be platform agnostic – that is, uniform across the platforms (cable TV, DTH, HITS and IPTV) across a relevant geographical market, and will have to be declared on each broadcaster’s website and be transparently available to the TRAI, TV distributors and consumers.

    The pay channels of a network or its subsidiary or holding company or subsidiary of the holding company can be packaged into a bouquet. This can be done while taking the precaution that the bouquet’s MRP is not less than 85 per cent of the sum of the MRPs of the a la carte pay channels forming a part of the bouquet. Similar conditions of holding prices for six months and in geographical areas also apply to bouquets.

    The TRAI has introduced a category called a premium channel. Broadcasters are free to notify any channel as premium channel in their reference interconnect order (RIO). There shall be no price cap on maximum retail price notified by broadcasters for customers. For HD channels, the regulatory authority has, however, stated the price cannot be more than three times the MRP of the corresponding channel transmitted in SD. For those HD channels that do not have a corresponding SD channel, the benchmark will be the ceiling on the MRP of the genre it is in. These independent HD channels will have a price ceiling of three times the ceiling of the MRP of the genre.

    As far as pay per view or VOD goes, the TRAI says it will bring it under its purview at a later date as these services are in their infancy in India and have minimal adoption.

    The television distributor’s role

    On the television distributor side, the TRAI has made them responsible to provide all channels on a la carte basis and it has also  proposed to formalize  a minimum subscription fee of Rs 130 per month per set top box from a subscriber for 100 SD channels.  Now if an HD channel is included in this, it will be equal to 2 SD channels.

    The TRAI has stated that TV distributors cannot change the bouquets formed by broadcasters or its price, but they can form bouquets themselves of pay channels of different broadcasters provided that their price is not less than 85 per cent of the sum of the MRPs of the pay channels forming part of the bouquet. Free to air, HD and SD variants of the same channel and premium channels are not permitted to be included in these bouquets.

    The authority says that the composition of the 100 channel basic tier should be left to the subscriber’s volition. It can consist of FTA, pay, premium channels, broadcast bouquets or even television distributor package bouquets. But it has to have the government mandated channels and at least five channels of each of the seven genres. If the subscriber opts for pay TV or premium or HD channels or broadcast or TV distributor bouquets, he will have to pay the retail price for these separately.

    Subscribers wanting channels beyond the basic tier can opt for other channels by paying the TV distributor Rs 20 – excluding taxes-  for each slab of 25 channels and the broadcaster the MRP of each channel.

    The TV distributors also have another responsibility. The electronic programming guide on the network must display the details of all channels and their MRP genre wise for easy navigation. Broadcasters who are relying on TV distributors to collect and remit the pay channel revenues will provide a 20 per cent distribution fee to them, which the latter can share with the LCOs who are actually doing the collection. Additionally, TV channels can also offer a maximum 15 per cent MRP discount to TV distributors to encourage them. Parameters for discounts will be disclosed by broadcasters in the RIOs that will be transparent and uniform for all distributors of television channels.

     

  • The TRAI broadcasting & cable tariff order simplified

    The TRAI broadcasting & cable tariff order simplified

    MUMBAI: The industry could not have asked for a better Dusshera gift. On the eve of 11 October 2016, India’s telecom and TV distribution regulator  The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) announced two draft legislations  – The Telecommunication (Broadcasting and Cable Services) (Eighth) (Addressable Systems) Tariff Order, 2016 and Standards of Quality of Service and Consumer Protection (Digital Addressable Systems) Regulations, 2016 – that definitely look like progressing the stuck-in-quicksand-of-uncertainty broadcast TV and cable TV sector. More than that, they could possibly inject a modicum of organization, professionalism and structure to an otherwise disorganized-free-for-all TV distribution business.

    The first of the draft legislation attempts to put in place a pricing framework for the heavily conflicted cable TV distribution sector. The second seeks to upgrade the quality of services that MSOs, cable TV operators provide to the consumers. Both have been much-awaited pieces of legislation.

    The third which seeks to iron out the much-maligned and disputed subscription revenue stream that flows between broadcasters, MSOs, cable TV operators and consumers is expected to be announced soon.

    Let’s look at the pricing draft whose purpose TRAI says is to ensure:

    –       transparency, non-discrimination, non-exclusivity for all stakeholders in value chain
    –       affordable TV services for customers
    –       adequate choice to consumers
    –       balance the commercial interests of broadcasters and distributors of television  channels to enable the distributors of television channels to recover their network cost and the broadcasters to recover their content cost.

    The TRAI wants the new Tariff Order or the MRP pricing regime to become effective from 1 April 2017.In the new scheme, the authority has in detail defined the role of  broadcasters, LCOs and MSOs or HITS operators. This is an attempt to simplify the order for everyone to be able to understand it.

    The role of the broadcaster

    Under this, broadcasters will have to first declare their channels as a pay channel or a free to air channel, on an a  la carte basis, and in one of the following seven genres: devotional, general entertainment, infotainment, kids, movies, news and current affairs and sports. The TRAI has defined a ceiling on the maximum retail price (MRP) for each of the genres: devotional (Rs 3), general entertainment (Rs 12), infotainment (Rs 9), kids (Rs 7), movies (Rs 10), news and current affairs (Rs 5) and sports (Rs 19).

    Each pay channel has to have a MRP  that can vary depending on the region, but which cannot be changed before the expiry of six months of it being declared. These rates will be platform agnostic – that is, uniform across the platforms (cable TV, DTH, HITS and IPTV) across a relevant geographical market, and will have to be declared on each broadcaster’s website and be transparently available to the TRAI, TV distributors and consumers.

    The pay channels of a network or its subsidiary or holding company or subsidiary of the holding company can be packaged into a bouquet. This can be done while taking the precaution that the bouquet’s MRP is not less than 85 per cent of the sum of the MRPs of the a la carte pay channels forming a part of the bouquet. Similar conditions of holding prices for six months and in geographical areas also apply to bouquets.

    The TRAI has introduced a category called a premium channel. Broadcasters are free to notify any channel as premium channel in their reference interconnect order (RIO). There shall be no price cap on maximum retail price notified by broadcasters for customers. For HD channels, the regulatory authority has, however, stated the price cannot be more than three times the MRP of the corresponding channel transmitted in SD. For those HD channels that do not have a corresponding SD channel, the benchmark will be the ceiling on the MRP of the genre it is in. These independent HD channels will have a price ceiling of three times the ceiling of the MRP of the genre.

    As far as pay per view or VOD goes, the TRAI says it will bring it under its purview at a later date as these services are in their infancy in India and have minimal adoption.

    The television distributor’s role

    On the television distributor side, the TRAI has made them responsible to provide all channels on a la carte basis and it has also  proposed to formalize  a minimum subscription fee of Rs 130 per month per set top box from a subscriber for 100 SD channels.  Now if an HD channel is included in this, it will be equal to 2 SD channels.

    The TRAI has stated that TV distributors cannot change the bouquets formed by broadcasters or its price, but they can form bouquets themselves of pay channels of different broadcasters provided that their price is not less than 85 per cent of the sum of the MRPs of the pay channels forming part of the bouquet. Free to air, HD and SD variants of the same channel and premium channels are not permitted to be included in these bouquets.

    The authority says that the composition of the 100 channel basic tier should be left to the subscriber’s volition. It can consist of FTA, pay, premium channels, broadcast bouquets or even television distributor package bouquets. But it has to have the government mandated channels and at least five channels of each of the seven genres. If the subscriber opts for pay TV or premium or HD channels or broadcast or TV distributor bouquets, he will have to pay the retail price for these separately.

    Subscribers wanting channels beyond the basic tier can opt for other channels by paying the TV distributor Rs 20 – excluding taxes-  for each slab of 25 channels and the broadcaster the MRP of each channel.

    The TV distributors also have another responsibility. The electronic programming guide on the network must display the details of all channels and their MRP genre wise for easy navigation. Broadcasters who are relying on TV distributors to collect and remit the pay channel revenues will provide a 20 per cent distribution fee to them, which the latter can share with the LCOs who are actually doing the collection. Additionally, TV channels can also offer a maximum 15 per cent MRP discount to TV distributors to encourage them. Parameters for discounts will be disclosed by broadcasters in the RIOs that will be transparent and uniform for all distributors of television channels.

     

  • 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.