Telecom: Content Competition - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Telecom: Content Competition

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Title: Telecom: Content Competition


1
Telecom Content Competition
  • "The Future of Competition and
  • the Evolution of the Marketplace
  • Insight Conference 7th Annual
  • Telecommunications Forum
  • Nov 9, 2010
  • David Keeble
  • www.davidkeeble.com

2
Vertical Integration
3 - play
OTT
Wireless
Shaw
Quebecor
Telus
Rogers
Bell
Incumbents
Telephony
New Entrants
Mobility
ISP
Online Aggregator
BDU
Broadcaster
Producer
3
New entrant competition
  • New entrants can compete in content IF
  • They become BDUs,
  • Regulated, facilities-based
  • or
  • An open Internet/mobile platform becomes the main
    video delivery means.

4
The Baseline according to Nielsen
Each week the typical American consumes almost
35 hours of TV, 2 hrs of timeshifted DVR TV, 4
hrs of internet, 22 minutes of online video and 4
minutes of mobile video.
June '99
5
And yet
  • Right now, internet/mobile video usage is quite
    low, compared to other platforms
  • 1.5 of all video usage
  • And yet video delivery is said to occupy over 50
    of the total capacity of the Internet
  • Partly because on-demand is a very inefficient
    delivery method compared to broadcast.
  • Prediction
  • Linear TV will survive, because the industry is
    not going to expand the capacity of the Internet
    by 30x to provide the same services consumers are
    already paying for.

6
Usage Prediction
  • Aggressive scenario
  • Internet-delivered VOD business model improves
    because
  • piracy is discouraged by ISPs,
  • content providers make more content available,
  • encouraging growth of internet-delivered VOD
  • 4x growth over 5 years
  • Is there enough to pay for this, given other
    on-demand platforms?

7
The Value of Vertical Integration
  • Vertically integrated incumbents can create a
    unique consumer value deal via
  • The 4-play bundle
  • Ownership of many robust networks
  • Serving home, mobile, car
  • Note DTV mobile
  • Many forms of on-demand, not just one
  • Exclusive rights to unique content
  • Consumers buy content, not pipes

8
The CRTCs Role
  • Canadians do NOT want to subscribe to two content
    bundles to get a complete service.
  • NHL playoffs available only on Carrier X is
    acceptable when usage is small, and other
    platforms dominate, but .
  • Can CRTC afford to allow content to be held
    exclusively within proprietary delivery systems?

9
Exclusive Content?
  • TV services use exclusive program rights
  • but TV services must be generally available to
    all BDUs.
  • Category 2 services may not be carried on all
    BDUs.
  • When BDUs themselves obtain content directly for
    VOD, they do so non-exclusively.
  • But there is no regulation of Internet or
    mobile delivery.
  • OTT Netflix, Google unregulated
  • Suspicion that telecom content plays are designed
    to create exclusive content deals for their
    portals
  • Or better bargaining cross-silo

10
Defining the internet!
  • Services delivered and accessed over the
    Internet are exempt from regulation
  • Reckoning that the Internet was an open platform
    that could not be regulated
  • But it never defined the Internet?
  • If content is only available to subscribers to
    one proprietary delivery network, is it still
    accessed over the Internet?
  • Commission must decide what Internet means.
  • Federal Court ISPs are not broadcasters - as
    long as they have no control or input over the
    content made available to Internet users.

11
Exclusive Content on an ISP?
  • Joining Rogers on Demand Online
  • Everyone
  • Can watch hundreds of full length TV shows and
    movies for FREE.
  • All Rogers Customers
  • Can access exclusive content simply by joining.
  • Rogers Cable TV Customers
  • Can watch shows from their specialty channels by
    joining.

12
CRTC Proceedings
  • Exclusive content is not specifically raised in
    the vertical integration proceeding (2010-783)
  • Indirectly, via
  • General possible anti-competitive behaviour by
    BDUs
  • How to define when a BDU has conferred an undue
    preference on itself.
  • The conditions of licence for VOD proceeding
    prohibits exclusive rights for VOD
  • Possible amendment exclusive content allowable
    if service is available to all BDUs.
  • But neither proceeding deals with Internet
    providers e.g. the ISP portals, Netflix or Google
    TV.

13
Conclusion
  • As telcos move into content area, the competitive
    environment will depend in part on the regulatory
    treatment of exclusive content rights.
  • Stay tuned, CRTC may have to re-engage
  • if the market does not encourage
  • Cross-silo provision
  • New entrants.

David Keeble www.davidkeeble.com
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