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Tam rolls out digital TV viewing data
 

Indiantelevision.com Team

(27 August 2008 7:00 am)

 

MUMBAI: Television ratings agency Tam is rolling out weekly digital TV viewing data from today, filling a gap in the industry that is expected to have a combine of nine million direct-to-home (DTH) and digital cable TV subscribers by 2008-end.

Broadcasters, particularly in the niche genres, will be able to monetise their upscale viewers better with the data drawn from a larger panel of a growing digital universe. Television channels who do not find prime space on analogue cable also stand to benefit, as preliminary data from Tam shows that their viewership is higher in digital platforms than what is being captured from the rating system's regular format.

"With digital riding high in many markets across India, measuring and reporting that data at a national level to the industry was the immediate task at hand. After careful study and quality check processes, starting this week, we will now start delivering the digital viewing data along with the regular weekly data. The last two years of measuring and studying digital TV viewing has been an interesting learning curve. Ever since we deployed TVMS Digital Peoplemeter (in Tam elite panel) and started generating digital TV viewing data from January 2007 onwards, some very interesting viewing differences started emerging," said Tam Media Research senior VP Pradeep Hejmadi.

The digital penetration in the Cas (conditional access system) belt is steadily rising. Out of the 1.63 million cable and satellite (C&S) homes in the Cas region, 38 per cent (640000) had moved to digital by 2007-end. In February of last year, 29 per cent (475000) of the Cas homes had stayed digital.

"Mumbai with 50 per cent has the highest digital penetration. The digital viewer also watches more channels and spends 20 per cent more time (186 minutes per day) than the analogue counterpart. Digitalisation is also leading to greater fragmentation as 80 per cent TV viewing is coming from 10 per cent more channels," said Tam Media Research CEO LV Krishnan.

Digitalisation, however, has to address three issues. "The individual or bouquet of pay channels pricing was not received well by audiences. The value added services, such as video-on-demand and interactivity, weren’t used frequently due to lack of education. The quickness in service is also a crying need," said Krishnan.

Tam is working on the STB return path data technology and hopes to launch it first in Mumbai. The sample size will be 10,000.

DTH scores over digital cable

Early Tam findings show that DTH is growing more rapidly than digital cable. While digital cable has deployed 1.3 million set-top boxes (till August 2007), DTH has jumped to 6.5 million subscribers (from 2.3 million in April 2006).

In urban India, DTH and digital cable have individually mopped up 0.9 million subscribers. But in the rural belt, DTH has a higher share with 5.6 million subscribers. Digital cable, on the other hand, has 0.4 million subscribers.

"We are seeing a trend where in rural India terrestrial homes are moving on to DTH. In urban areas, cable has given away to DTH," said Hejmadi.

DTH has grown across urban and rural markets while digital cable is seeing upsurge mainly in the Cas areas.

"Four states account for 52 per cent of the DTH homes. In Maharshtra, DTH and digital cable have grown. But in Gujarat, cable is taken over by DTH. Another trend is that while many cable STB homes had moved to DTH, the reverse has not been true," Hejmadi said.

Digitalisation to drive growth

The stakeholders across the value chain see huge growth potential in digitalisation. "Digital measurement will enable us to monetise better. It will expand the business for broadcasters and they will be in a position to pay more for content," said INX Media chairman Peter Mukerjea.

Speaking at a panel discussion on "Conquering the digital frontier," Mukerjea said digitalisation would make it possible for niche English channels to build business models around digital platforms.

Zee's international business head Bharat Ranga emphasised on the need to up the subscription and advertising pricing. "There are lessons to be learnt from abroad. The players here have to be clear about which channels are going to be free and which pay," he said while speaking at Blink, Tam's annual educative initiative.

Star India’s Paritosh Joshi warned that it is premature to draw a cause and effect at this stage based on numbers. Te industry has painted itself into a corner on the pricing issue, he added.

Digicable Network (India) MD and CEO Jagjit Singh Kohli felt it would be premature to compare DTH with digital cable at this stage. "There are 5000 headends in the country and the digital revolution has just begun,” he said.

Hathway Cable & Datacom MD and CEO K Jayaraman noted that the advent of DTH would add to consolidation in the cable sector. "The MSOs are not just buying analogue operators but are interested in digitalising the entire business. Even in non Cas areas, the progressive MSOs are pushing STBs at just Rs 500."

Private equity funds are getting attracted to the cable sector because of digitalisation. "The MSOs have received an investment of $400 -$500 million in form of private equity and debt. Digitalisation is the obvious attraction for them," said Jayaraman.

 
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