#e4mexclusive DTH operators spar with broadcasters over pay channels on DD Free Dish
Operators, who have lost millions of low paying subscribers to Free Dish, allege that the practice goes against the principles of NTO 2.0 meant to provide a level-playing field and parity

Private direct to home (DTH) operators have renewed their demands to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) to act against broadcasters who are offering pay channels to Prasar Bharati's free DTH platform DD Free Dish. In the recent past, Dish TV, Bharti Telemedia, and Tata Sky have written to TRAI to look into the issue and restrain pay broadcasters from offering pay channels to DD Free Dish. The TRAI is yet to take any action in the matter.
The DTH operators have alleged that the availability of pay channels for free on DD Free Dish is discriminatory and goes against the basic principles of the new tariff regime, which provides for a level-playing field and parity. As per the New Tariff Order (NTO), broadcasters have to designate channels either as free to air (FTA) or pay and the two set of channels cannot be bundled. The MRP of pay channels will have to be uniform across all distribution platforms. It is pertinent to note that DD Free Dish being a free platform doesn't come under the tariff framework.
DD Free Dish, which reaches an estimated 40+ million TV homes, has emerged as a magnet for broadcasters to reach rural viewers. At present, DD Free Dish has 161 channels, of which 20 are pay channels. The number of pay channels on the platform has seen a steady increase as broadcasters chase eyeballs and ad revenue.
Private broadcasters and DD Free Dish are feeding off each other as the availability of quality content at no cost helps the free DTH operator to increase its adoption. This phenomenon has raised concern among pay DTH players, who are seeing the migration of customers to DD Free Dish. In the last few years, DTH operators have lost millions of low paying subscribers to DD Free Dish.
Tata Sky MD and CEO Harit Nagpal asserts that he loves DD Free Dish as a platform since it is a stepping stone for free TV users to someday migrate to pay platforms. His grouse is with the pay broadcasters, who are discriminating between DD Free Dish and pay platforms like Tata Sky. Channels like Star Utsav, Zee Anmol, Colors Rishtey, and Sony Pal are available as pay channels on private distribution platforms and as free channels on DD Free Dish.
“The purpose of NTO was to create a level playing field and transparency. Broadcasters had to decide the price of the channel, what is the margin to the distributor, and it remains constant across distribution platforms. What can be bundled and what cannot be bundled was also determined based on the fact whether you are Free to Air (FTA) or pay. So you had to first decide whether you are FTA or Pay and then if you are FTA then it will have zero cost. If you are pay then you decide the price, and you have to sell everybody at the same price so that everybody sells it to the customer at the same price,” Nagpal noted.
In June 2020, Star Utsav, Sony Pal, Colors Rishtey, and Zee Anmol had made a comeback to the DD Free Dish after exiting the platform in March 2019 to comply with the NTO. “Last year, we discovered that there were a bunch of channels which were part of our platform as pay channels with a specified MRP which we are charging to our customers. They were also part of broadcaster bundles. The same channels were appearing on DD Free Dish as free channels. Not only were they free to customers of DD Free Dish, but they were also paying Rs 10-12 crore per channel for getting those channels carried on the platform,” he added.
On 10th July, Tata Sky shot off a letter to the TRAI to mandate that any channel that is available on DD Free Dish be declared FTA. “We officially wrote to TRAI at that time and said that here are these 16 channels which are priced anywhere between 10 paise to Rs 3 on my platform, so please decide whether these are FTA or pay and then act accordingly. If they are FTA, they should be FTA on my platform also. I am not saying you make them pay or withdraw from DD Free Dish. If they want to be on DD Free Dish let them be on DD Free Dish we have no problems, but the treatment to customers should be the same,” Nagpal averred.
He noted that the TRAI has not taken any action even after a year has passed by since the DTH operator wrote to the regulator. “It's been over a year, but there has been no action and no notice has been issued to anybody. Today that list has gone up from 16 to 20. My only point is it is unfair to customers in the country if you have got a national tariff order whose objective is to create parity and transparency. This is not something that you need an audit for, as this is visible to everyone,” Nagpal added.
According to a TRAI official, there has been no change in the regulator's stance that DD Free Dish is not covered under the NTO since it is unencrypted. However, the official added that the issue is under active consideration of the TRAI. “As a regulator, we don't look at issues in a piecemeal manner. If and when we initiate a consultation on this matter, we will also look at the impact of OTT on the distribution sector. We want to look at things holistically. As things stand today, our view is that DD Free Dish doesn't come under the NTO framework,” the official stated.
According to a senior official with a top 3 DTH company, DD Free Dish has increased subscriber churn in the pay-TV market. More channels are getting attracted to DD Free Dish due to the platform's reach, which helps in ad revenue monetisation, he added.
“DD Free Dish today is available in 4.5-5 crore homes. Airtel, Tata Sky and Dish TV all three platforms have got impacted. Pay DTH operators are getting weaker due to DD Free Dish. Even cable operators have started to feel the heat from DD Free Dish. Then there is the challenge of OTT. The entire TV distribution ecosystem is getting impacted due to DD Free Dish and OTT platforms. Low data cost is also leading to higher churn among TV distribution platforms. Cord-cutting has become a reality,” the official said.
According to a senior lawyer in the TMT space, DD Free Dish has been envisaged as a free DPO from a consumer standpoint. He further stated that if a pay channel is available for free on another platform, then there can be an issue raised by a private DTH operator that they need parity. “But they are not saying that they are going to offer for free these channels to their subscribers. If they offer these channels to their subscribers and get a reach that broadcasters want because that's what gets them ad revenue, then it's a different matter. They are only complaining about one part that broadcasters are giving it for free, but they are not saying anything about the second and the most important part that public is getting it for free,” he added.
The lawyer stated that private DTH operators can challenge the decision of pay broadcasters on the basis of discrimination. “They have to challenge the action of the broadcaster that they are discriminating. More than the broadcasters, they have to challenge the action of Prasar Bharati to offer this for free,” he averred.
Offering a broadcasters' perspective, a senior official with a leading broadcasting company said that there is no law that prohibits channels from participating in the DD Free Dish auction and placing channels on the platform. He also said that the Pay TV broadcasters are cross-subsidising and offering content to DD Free Dish customers. Moreover, the pay channels that are also available on DD Free Dish are priced nominally even for pay platforms.
“Say a channel is priced at Rs 1, but we never get that Rs 1 because the channel is available as a bundled offering to distributors. Why are pay-TV operators making a big deal about it? If we make these channels FTA to ensure parity, there are two problems. 1) We will not be able to put FTA channels in bouquet because our other channels are pay; 2) If these channels become FTA then distribution platforms will put it in their base pack which is NCF + taxes. They are not going to share the NCF with us,” the official noted.
He also argued that the broadcasters are not getting subscription from DD Free Dish as the platform is not collecting anything from consumers. “Both the broadcaster and the operator are giving it for free. DD Free Dish doesn't collect Network Capacity Fee (NCF) whereas pay platforms collect NCF.”
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Sun TV Network revenue up 6% to Rs 795.58 crore in Q2 FY2019
Total income for the quarter stood at Rs 867.72 crore as against Rs 811.67 crore for the corresponding quarter last year
Sun TV Network Limited, the Indian television broadcasters that operates Satellite Television Channels across four languages of Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam, airs FM radio stations across India and owns the SunRisers Hyderabad Cricket Franchise of the Indian Premier League.
For the quarter ended 30th September 2019, the company reported increased revenue by 6% at Rs 795.58 crores, as against Rs 749.55 crores for the corresponding quarter ended 30th September 2018. The Total Income for the quarter ended 30th September 20 19 also was higher by around 7% at Rs 867.72 crores as against Rs 811.67 crores for the corresponding quarter ended 301 h September 2018.
Subscription revenues for the quarter were up by approximately 17% at Rs 39 7.3 l crores as against Rs 339.79 crores for the corresponding quarter ended 30th September 2018. EBITDA for the quarter ended 30th September'2019 was Rs 468 .74 crores as against Rs 553.97 crores for the corresponding quarter ended 30th September 2018. The Profit after taxes for the current quarter was up by approximately 4% at Rs 366.5 1 crores as against Rs 351.32 crores for the corresponding quarter ended 30th September 2018.
After accounting for the other comprehensive income (net of taxes), the Total Comprehensive Income for the quarter ended 301 h September 2019 was up 4 % at Rs 366.29 crores as against Rs 351.38 crores for the corresponding quarter ended 30th September 2018.
At the Board Meeting held today, November 12th, the Board of Directors have declared an Interim Dividend of Rs. 2.50 per share (50 %) on a face value of Rs.5.00 per share.
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TRAI must stop consultation on placement, marketing & DPO- broadcaster pacts: IBF.
These agreements are beyond TRAI’s jurisdiction, the Indian Broadcasting Foundation has said
The Indian Broadcasting Foundation has asked the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India not to go ahead with consultation on placement, marketing and agreements between DPOs and broadcasters, media reports said.
These agreements are beyond TRAI’s jurisdiction, the IBF has said.
TRAI cannot regulate aspects of the DPO-broadcaster relationship if they are not related to distribution of TV channel signals, the IBF is reported to have said.
The foundation has said in respect to the issue of misuse of target market criteria by DPOs that regional channels cannot be restricted only to states where the particular language is being predominantly spoken. Availability of all channels must be determined ad per choice of consumers across the country.
IBF has also said that TRAI should stop the requirement of having 5% subscriber for being aired by a DPO.
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Sony Pictures Network India reports total revenue of Rs 6,309 crore
The company has witnessed digital and licensing income increase by 136.36% to Rs 847.1 crore
Sony Pictures Network India posted total revenue of Rs 6309.9 crore in the financial year 2018-19 as compared to Rs 6428.0 crore during the previous years. The broadcaster witnessed a decrease of 1.84% in total revenue.
The company recorded profit after tax was Rs. 3,46.4 crore for the year as against a profit after tax of Rs. 4,47.2 crore in the previous year, a fall of 22.54%. According to the financial statement by The Ministry of Corporate Affairs, SPNI recorded consolidated revenue of Rs. 64,25.3 crore and consolidated profit after tax Rs. 4,14.3 crore for the year.
SPNI has not responded to the query sent by exchange4media at the time of filing this report.
In FY 19, the broadcaster’s revenue from operations decreased by 0.85 to Rs 6223.7 crore from Rs 62,77.2 crore in FY 2018. Advertising income declined 13.55% to Rs 31,78.6 crore while subscription income declined 1.9% to Rs 1962.9 crore. Further, the company's revenue from distribution and advertising time has increased by 5.58 % to Rs 219.6 crore from Rs 208 crore. Also, the revenues were up 136.36% to Rs 847.1 crore from Rs 358.4 crore in digital and licensing income. In distribution and licensing of movies, the company registered a fall 55.16 % to Rs 15.2 crore of revenue.
During the financial year 2018-19, the company launched its first Marathi language general entertainment channel- Sony Marathi. The statement said, “The channel's opening was encouraging with 21% reach and 30 GRPs in the launch week. The content was well received by the audience and several of the programs have won accolades.”
The company is also focusing on the production of its own content. It is producing Kashmiri and Marathi versions of its famous show Kaun Banega Crorepati, besides the Hindi version. The company is also producing content for third party streaming platforms
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I've been in media for 30 years and it feels like I'm just getting started: Uday Shankar
Uday Shankar, President, The Walt Disney Company, Asia Pacific, and Chairman, Star and Disney India, shared vignettes of his journey while delivering the AAAI Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture 2019
Amidst an audience packed with the who’s who of the media industry, Uday Shankar, President, The Walt Disney Company, Asia Pacific, and Chairman, Star and Disney India, delivered the AAAI Subhas Ghosal Memorial Lecture 2019.
“Three decades ago, when I was starting out as a newspaper journalist, I hadn’t imagined that someday the most distinguished of my peers would be interested in what I might have to say.” But then, 30 years ago, I had no idea that I wasn’t just starting out to earn a living; I was embarking on a discovery of India and that I would get to know this country in a way that probably no other profession would allow me to,” Shankar exclaimed as he delved deeper into his journey so far.
Starting his career first as a journalist and then as a broader media professional let Shankar observe and understand the country deeply, objectively and uniquely. “As I slowly discovered, my profession also equipped me with an ability to impact this country and its people – both individually and collectively – in a way that few professions could have,” he remarked.
The industry leader shared some vignettes of his journey to illustrate this point. Recollecting an incident when he was barely a few weeks into The Times of India, Shankar said his Editor had asked him to do a review of the immunisation mission that the Government of India had launched to vaccinate people against preventable diseases. “Here I thought that a career in journalism would give me a chance to hobnob with the high and the mighty but my Editor obviously had other plans.”
Shankar said his brief was to examine the real impact that the immunisation mission was making on the lives of ordinary people and this landed him in Purnea, a district in the northeastern part of Bihar, where he spent a week trudging through villages crippled by extreme poverty.
And what he saw there changed his worldview forever. “I saw how a vaccine, worth less than what I paid for a meal at the Nirula’s restaurant in Delhi, could make a permanent difference to the future of a child and often a family. And this wasn’t true for only one or a few families… I saw villages after villages and I saw them day after day. On the other hand, I also saw how difficult it was…even with the best of intent...to deliver that vaccine to someone that could change a life. I saw some of the most dedicated and driven healthcare professionals with no expectations of any returns. Of course, there were slackers and even crooks, but I saw an overwhelming number of ordinary professionals who were driven by a sense of duty and a desire to help the helpless. This was all very different from what I, as a firebrand student and activist in JNU, had believed and argued about,” Shankar said.
He noted that the real India was a lot more layered and nuanced and the worst mistake one could make was to try to put it into stereotypes and clichéd ideological categories. That experience went on to become one of Shankar’s critical lenses for looking at India for the rest of his life. “The reality is complex… very complex… whether for a journalist or for a businessman or a politician. The ones who succeed are those who are able to grapple with all elements of the complexities and do not rush to hasty conclusions,” he asserted.
Sharing more about his experiences, Shankar said: “I could go on about the experiences that have shaped my understanding of India and built in me a life-long desire to examine the facts for myself and not be swayed by claimed superior wisdom. But not everyone has the luxury or the facility to dive into facts or situations themselves. That is why they come to us, the media folks – the journalists, the advertisers and the story tellers because they believe that we can help them make sense of their world. They trust us and our assessment and our judgement.”
How critical is that trust was brought home to him one winter morning almost 20 years ago when he was running Aaj Tak, a 24-hour news channel that he had helped launch for the India Today Group. “We had run a news break on Aaj Tak about a school bus accident in Noida. The information was only partially correct. We were right about the accident but the school that we mentioned had many branches and we had mentioned the wrong branch. We recognised our mistake and corrected it within 20-30 minutes. Throughout that day, I was getting calls from a woman who was working for the government. My assistant said she was very keen to speak to me but maintained that the call was personal. Finally, after several hours I returned her call. She thanked me and was very polite but what she told me still haunts me. It seems she was a war widow who was supporting her two kids who went to the same school whose bus we had mistakenly claimed was involved in the accident. The accident had happened near her house. She told me that since she lost her husband in Kargil, she was always fearful of something happening somewhere, due to which she might lose whatever remained of her fractured world. She told me Aaj Tak was her window to the world and at her home the channel was always on because she believed it always alerted her about what lay ahead.
“She said, for a moment, Aaj Tak had brought her world crashing down. For a few minutes, the channel that was her most trusted ally in this fearful world had turned her world upside down...falsely. In a very calm voice, she told me she thought we were always to be trusted and were even infallible, but we broke her trust with that mistake. And that she could never trust us again. For a moment, I thought she was overreacting, after all we were human too. But as her world slowly sank in, I understood what she meant. She had given me the most valuable lesson about the centrality of trust and credibility in our business. While she was talking about news, this is no different in entertainment or in advertising or in any other part of our business. For the last 20 years, her words still echo in my years… and even now she often serves as voice of caution to me. Am I breaking someone’s trust to promote my business or my self-interest. I hope I don’t fail her again,” Shankar said as he opened up.
During the speech, he also looked back at an incident that changed the course of his career in a big way. Shankar acknowledged that even as a newspaper reporter he was smitten by TV. “The year was 1991, and the event was the First Gulf War being telecast on CNN - just my idea of love at first sight! I just wanted to do TV news. One day, my wife said that instead of just wishing that I had an opportunity why didn’t I do something about it. I was well settled, a senior editor at a niche but respected publication called Down To Earth, but my wife’s words had the right effect on me and the next day I quit my job.”
After struggling without a regular income for over six months, during which his wife’s earning was the only thing to go by, Shankar found a job at a news bulletin that Zee was launching. But there was a difficult trade-off – he had to take a salary cut of more than 50 per cent. “A journalist’s salary wasn’t very high anyway, but a 50 per cent cut! That hurt. But I took it,” he said. What followed was a period of incredible financial challenges for about five years, then came Aaj Tak and his personal situation also became comfortable. “Aroon Purie is a fair employer. But this period of struggle was of a series of learnings – personal and professional. However, the most important lesson that I learnt was to follow my heart, hear my inner voice and not worry too much about the consequences when one is convinced that this is the right thing to do. I have followed that ever since... and it has held me in good stead,” Shankar asserted.
Revealing another life lesson that he had picked up along the way, Shankar recounted the time when he had been running Aaj Tak for a few years and was incredibly successful and comfortable. “But a question began to nag me – how much of the success of Aaj Tak was mine and how much of it came to me because I happened to be at the right place at the right time. The only way was to test myself once again,” he said.
Along came an offer from Star News and Shankar took it. “On the face of it, it was a bad decision. Star News was at the bottom of the heap and wasn’t falling further because there was no further depth to fall. Once I took over, I realised that content, which I understood and had been brought in to do, was just one of its problems - its marketing, distribution, sales, morale, leadership and whatever else that you can think of had gone wrong. The problem was that I didn’t know anything about any of this and there was no one else who cared or was willing to help. Star News was as messed up as anything could ever be. All the success and equity that I had created for myself was at risk. I should have run for my life. Instead, I decided to dive headlong and took over as CEO. Everyone thought I was going to break all the previous records for the most disastrous stint as a media CEO. The problem was that even I couldn’t disagree with that forecast. I knew nothing of running a business, let alone fixing a broken business. But as a journalist I had learnt one thing – that when you don’t know something, go to people who understand it better than you. That’s what I did. I went on and hired some good people. People who were good at their jobs but made me look really stupid in that area. Of course, content was my forte. So I focused on content and hiring good talent, and I focused on not being defensive about what I didn’t know. I also asked them many questions… I challenged them to think different. Slowly we turned the tide. Star News moved from the bottom of the pile to the top. It also got me the offer from the then NewsCorp to run Star India. This was by far the most coveted and prestigious job for a media professional. It was a great reward for what I had done so far,” Shankar revealed.
He contended that there were many who found NewsCorp and the Murdochs’ decision pretty shocking. “In all honesty, I too wondered why would I be offered that job? Star then was much smaller but was still one of the biggest media companies in India. At Star News, at least content was my forte. Here I had no such advantage. I had no experience of entertainment content... and even less of other areas of business. I recall discussing this with me wife and my daughter, who was very young then. I asked them if I was taking a risk. Very innocently, my daughter asked me what risk did I think I was taking? She said ‘aren’t the Murdochs the ones who are taking the risk?’ So that was the context in which I walked in,” said Shankar.
What didn’t seem to help matters was that there was an exodus from the company because two of the most formidable former executives of Star were launching their own channels and clearly the staff at Star India had more faith in them than in me.
“First and foremost, from my journalistic experience, I was aware that a crisis could be a tremendous opportunity and what I had walked into Star was a crisis,” remarked Shankar. However, instead of putting a patchwork to quickly fix it he decided to play the long game and do the right things. “A lot of very good and senior people had left. I decided I shall over-index on intelligence, youthfulness and irreverence. I also decided to discount experience. Oxymoronic as it might sound...in my experience... cliched thinking and laziness come with the package called experience. By the way, no one in my leadership had any previous media experience either. But I was convinced that between the people at Star and me, there was enough understanding of media in the company,” he recounted.
This unleashed really powerful forces in the company. “The new talent questioned ways of doing things in media… and the media veterans at Star questioned them. I had set one ground rule: we won’t follow you because of who you are. You have to convince the room with facts and arguments. I asked a lot of questions to everyone and also pushed everyone to question me and others. Challenging and questioning the status quo or the dominant thinking became the culture of Star. That, I would like to believe, is still how it is. Hindi was the most profitable market in entertainment and Star was its leader. Even as our leadership was under pressure from new challengers, we were going into regional markets and once again, with the same approach – to disrupt the status quo in each of those markets, except perhaps in Kerala where we were the market,” continued Shankar.
Another aspect the maestro revealed was what he had learnt from cricket - that in a winning team everyone, including the captain, must have a very clear role and not just to that person but to everyone. “As we were rebuilding Star, it was very clear who would deliver what. Unfortunately, in a winning team, it’s also possible for a person to just do the odd job and get by because the team is winning. Culturally, that is probably more destructive than anything. I have tried to guard against that. Honestly, it can be a big challenge in bigger and successful companies,” Shankar said.
He further pointed out that one would be surprised to know how few content companies have content at their core. “At Star, I have tried to push that several years ago to disrupt Star Plus itself, to challenge Star Plus, to shut down wildly successful shows to try out new story tellers... and above all to tell stories that did not fit in the usually “experienced” understanding of good stories. The best example of that is - Satyamev Jayate. It was a show that everyone thought didn’t belong on an entertainment channel. After all, who in their right mind would advise an entertainment channel to run a show on the Sunday morning slot, discussing delicate social issues with the entire family sitting around? But in the hindsight, Satyamev Jayate made a real impact on shaping our society, and I say this with a touch of pride.”
Then there was sports…famously the graveyard of media companies…but Star decided to get into sports. “We doubled down on cricket – ICC, BCCI and then IPL. No media company had ever invented so much in cricket or perhaps in any one sport as we had. Then we decided to double down on Indian languages. As if that wasn’t enough, we decided to risk our destiny on such sports as kabaddi. It’s worked out well…our sports business is still very much work in progress, as is the sports consciousness in India. But we are surely building one of the most exciting franchises in the world,” Shankar added.
But the next adventure was even crazier. “When India was dismissed as a data dark market and mobile was a device only for talking, we decided to launch Hotstar. Everyone thought that we were crazy…we certainly were. But we believed in this country…it’s surprising ability to leapfrog and we believed in ourselves. With Hotstar, once again we went by our playbook – get the best talent that you could and disrupt the ecosystem. Streaming was still supposed to be a catch-up medium. We decided to put all our live sports on it, we even decided to put our entertainment content on Hotstar ahead of its airing on our channels.”
Shankar also spoke about the advertising campaign that said ‘Get Over TV’. “India’s biggest TV company was talking about getting over TV, and that too, the campaign ran most aggressively on our own TV channels. The verdict was that this time our craziness had crossed all limits, even our colleagues at Star were aghast and upset this time. Maybe we went too far but without that we couldn’t have created the most successful video streaming platform outside of the US and China, that too in a country which was not supposed to be ready for streaming. When we were launching Hotstar, a senior executive at one of the global tech and video giants had warned us – ‘go ahead and try it… you will lose a lot of money and effort and then you will come to us begging to host your content. Don’t worry... we will be kind.’ Now they can’t get tired of hiring our talent… not just one company, any global tech and media company that’s active in India seems to have just one destination to pick up talent – Star India. It is annoying but it is also a tribute to the team that we have at Star India. Thanks to Hotstar, people of this country can consume high quality drama, movies and sports on their 30 dollar mobile phones, no matter where they are. Of course, Jio has been an incredible partner in that journey,” he shared.
“I am in media for 30 years and it feels like I am just getting started. Because the media industry has allowed me to not only understand and experience India in an unbelievable way, but over the years we have become change agents for India. At Star, we don’t just believe in a better India, we believe in our duty to participate and shape that India. Of course, when a company like the Walt Disney Company values and embraces the business we have built, the feeling is immensely gratifying,” Shankar said as he signed off.
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Why TV distribution firms have taken the OTT plunge
Apart from providing TV channels to OTT players, distribution operators are also acquiring and launching their own digital platforms
The rise of digital consumption has led to fierce competition in the media industry in the bid to acquire new customers and retain existing ones. Apart from broadcasters getting into content generation, TV distribution companies have taken the plunge into acquisition of new content, launching of new digital platforms along with distribution of TV and OTT content.
For instance, Tata Sky's DTH (Direct-To-Home) service provider partnered with OTT platforms like Hotstar, Sun NXT and Eros Now to launch its digital content service - Tata Binge - and the service was priced at Rs 249 per month. The viewers can watch thousands of movies, TV shows, curated short videos and missed episodes of TV shows aired in the last seven days. In 2018, Tata Sky signed a deal with London-based TV channel Shorts TV and made its content available on the Tata Sky app. Dish TV, too, has forged partnerships with OTT platforms and launched its own OTT app Watcho this April. The platform offers 1,000 hours of library content, including movies and short films.
Cable operators too have joined the space of providing OTT content to consumers. For instance, Hathway has partnered with Netflix and offers free subscription to Play Box (OTT set top box) users. Users can avail 12 months’ subscription of Sun NXT.
According to Sukhpreet Singh, Corporate Head-Marketing, Dish TV, “The consumption behaviour of consumers is changing. Distributors believe their main job is to provide the best of content and entertainment to subscribers. We all want to consume online entertainment, whether it is from free or paid sources or from various apps.”
In partnership with Amazon Fire TV, Tata Sky aims to redefine the future of entertainment for millions of Indians by extending the ‘Tata Sky experience’ to the world of apps with Tata Sky Binge.
Pallavi Puri, Chief Commercial Officer, Tata Sky, says: “Through this partnership we are giving customers the Amazon Fire TV - Tata Sky edition without any additional cost to enjoy Tata Sky Binge.”
Bringing a variety of content on one platform, distributors are not only keeping up with the changing audience but also competition from telecom companies, which have started to become a major provider of content through data streams.
There has been an increase in the number of consumers watching video online, and the infrastructure too has evolved in terms of affordable Smart TVs bringing digital videos to people’s living rooms. This has led to DTH operators too trying to evolve to stay relevant in the future.
Girish Menon, Partner and Head, Media & Entertainment, KPMG in India, said: “Traditional television distribution in India is definitely likely to face headwinds from digital distributors such as telecom operators and ISPs.”
Currently, most DTH operators are tying up with OTT platforms and providing access to online content on Smart TVs through hardware enablers such as Set up Boxes or Smart Sticks. DTH players are also trying to tap the currently underserved wired broadband market and bundling both access and content in one package, helping them acquire new customers. “Access to online content as a strategic initiative will help control churn for DTH operators and act as an important customer retention tool,” Menon explained.
Post implementation of New Tariff Order (NTO), there was a disruption in the broadcast industry. “The disruption happened because of a change in pricing and packages. Life has been very tough for the consumer. The disruption has had some effect on the consumers and that is what has led to consumers to opt for OTT, especially when OTT provides linear channels at a much lower rate or no cost at all,” said industry expert Shaji Mathews, former CEO of Kerala MSO KCCL.
But are these profitable for distribution operators? “If you monetise well, it could be profitable,” says Mathews. “Regulation is also needed in such circumstances as you cannot continue giving free content,” he added.
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NBSA reiterates guidelines for news channels on Ayodhya matter
The NBSA urged news channels to adhere to the Code of Ethics & Broadcasting Standards and exercise caution to ensure coverage of the matter is not sensational, inflammatory or provocative in nature
The News Broadcasting Standards Authority (NBSA) has issued a special advisory laying out strict guidelines for news channels to follow while reporting on the Ayodhya case matter. The Supreme Court is expected to pronounce its ruling on the matter today November 9th, 2019.
The NBSA urged news channels to strictly adhere to the Code of Ethics and Broadcasting Standards and exercise extra caution to ensure that broadcasting of the news is not sensational, inflammatory or provocative in nature.
According to the advisory, "No broadcast should be made in any speculative manner in respect of the present proceedings before the Hon'ble Supreme Court nor of the judgment before it is pronounced; and of its likely consequence thereafter which may be sensational, inflammatory or provocative".
It goes on to say "No footage of the demolition of the Babri Masjid is to be shown in any news item relating to the Ayodhya matter".
See below the full advisory issued by the NBSA
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