Monday, July 26, 2010

The hunger for knowledge ends at the couch


Network expansions, regional language feeds, India- focused programming, expanding markets and a steady growth in advertising volumes— that's the story of the non-fiction, non-news television in India, a genre referred to as 'infotainment' in television jargon. So if you thought that TV in India was just limited to unending saas-bahu sagas and never ending rounds of frivolous breaking news, it's time to think again, for networks like Discovery and National Geographic Channel (NGC) are finally coming of age in India to claim their share of the television pie.

According to PN Vasanti, director, Centre for Media Studies (CMS), Indian television is rapidly transforming as the country is going through a phase of growth and development, and that is serving as a Philip for this genre. "The world is opening up and as India is growing in terms of consumption, growth, economy as well as education, demand for high quality knowledge content is growing. You have to cater to the niche interests that are being created as a result and these channels are doing just that," she says adding that while these channels initially catered to the highly educated niche audience in the metros, they are fast expanding further than that.


The channels too find the trend encouraging. "Cable channels by themselves define programming and with growth in education, awareness, standard of living and evolving demographics and mindsets, unique content channels would most certainly grow in this space," says Rahul Johri, senior VP, Discovery India. According to Ramon Chibb, senior VP, content, NGC and Fox History & Entertainment, "the industry is hugely cluttered and therefore each channel needs to have a distinct identity and offerings to pull the audience. It is this clutter that makes channels like NGC stand out." Also, these channels are primarily targeting the young urban Indian. 

Thinking Indian
One strategy which seems to have worked wonders for these channels is simultaneous Hindi feeds and growth in India based content. This is evident from the fact that apart from launching three new channels earlier this year, Discovery also launched a simultaneous 24-hour feed in Tamil. "Our programming is commentary based and that is where the local language works. We are evaluating other language options as well," says Johri. Chibb concurs, "This (local feeds) is definitely a good penetration strategy and we are evaluating regional feeds too." According to Vasanti, "this is where the growth lies in the future. Even rural India has considerable wealth and people have the hunger to know and absorb as much as possible."

Going local works really well in India. "We have had shows like Paul Merton in India, MasterClass and My City My History recently on the channel that completely focus on the Indian sub-continent. It has worked really well for us. However, India is yet to match the quality of non-fiction programming that gets made in the Western world," says Chibb. However, the channels insist that these shows are not just meant for the Indian audience but also for international distribution. "Indian programming gives us more traction and the audience identifies more with the channel. But a lot of our India shows are also consumed by international audiences. Such as the Shah Rukh Khan series that we did on Discovery Travel & Living was a huge success in South East Asian countries also," says Johri. He also insists that instead of just focusing on Indianised content, the endeavour is to give the viewers a healthy mix of high quality content. In fact, the story of these channels to a certain extent mirrors that of kids and music channels in yester years. "Kids and music channels began feeds in Hindi and started providing a mix of Indian and international programming a few years ago. It was a huge success and you can see the same trend in infotainment as well," says a media expert. 


Statistically speaking
Apart from a steady growth in viewership in the infotainment genre amidst a fall in most others as reflected in TAM media research's data for the last four years, advertising volumes too have been steadily rising for infotainment channels. According to data by AdEX, a division of TAM that looks at the advertising market, the year on year ad volumes has grown by 4%, 15% and 20% in 2008, 2009 and 2010 (January to June). As for viewer ship, the infotainment genre's share in terms of viewership rose by 50% in the last three years, while English entertainment, English news, English movies and even sports saw a decline in viewership.

According to the latest available TAM data, the infotainment genre has 1.2% of the total viewership for Indian television. Amongst the infotainment channels, the 2009 TAM data places Discovery channel at 53%, NGC at 26%, Animal Planet at 17% and Fox History & Entertainment at 5%. 


Industry insiders believe that ad volumes are yet another indicator. "These channels have not been niche for quite sometime now and although they might not be as big as the larger Hindi general entertainment channels (GECs), they are certainly matching ratings of the mid-level GECs. Advertisers across the board are now advertising on these channels," says Punitha Arumugam, CEO of the Madison Media Group. "The language of their programming and their potential audience is universal, which obviously results in advertisers showing keen interest, right from FMCGs to telecom companies," she says. 


Clearly, infotainment can now be certainly considered a force to reckon with in the 134 mn strong Indian TV market. With a rapidly increasing and broadening viewership for infotainment channels, it's not just for the geeks anymore....

Saturday, July 3, 2010

3G: What does it mean to us?


If there is one term that is least understood but still continues to generate a lot of buzz, it has to be 3G. I'll demystify this jargon and find out exactly what it is and how we can benefit from it. 3G will also unleash an amazing number of new gadgets that will redefine the way we look at entertainment, education and communication.

3G stands for third generation, a wireless technology that helps to simultaneously transfer voice (telephone calls) and data (broadband Internet). 3G is an evolution of the existing 2G technologies that has limited capabilities, both on the device side and on the network side. The mobile connectivity we currently use runs on 2G network and it's plagued on two accounts. One is the limited network bandwidth which explains why our calls can't go through because of network congestion. The second is extremely lean data bandwidth, which explains why surfing on the mobile phone or the GPRS data card is so pathetically slow.

3G could be our solution. 3G offers a huge bandwidth which means that we no longer have to suffer from congestion. We can now benefit from superior voice quality, higher call connections and lower consumption of battery power.

Networks supporting 3G would have data transfer speeds up to 3 Mbps. This is a huge improvement over the extremely limited 144 Kbps we are used to so far. For example, if you chose to download a Tamil song over the existing setup, it would take you upwards of 10 minutes. But with a 3G connection, you will be done in under 15 seconds. One can take advantage of higher mega pixel cameras that come with the latest phones and upload both photos and videos online or even stream live. Higher bandwidth means easier way to listen to music, watch videos, do social networking and play advanced games.

3G makes video streaming applications such as Live TV, movie downloads, high speed data download possible on mobile phones. Higher bandwidth opens up many possibilities and thereby enables a common user to experience a host of advanced data services like mobile banking and micro finance. Now with such widespread mobile penetration, imagine the wide reach of banking.

A business user using 3G-enabled hand-held devices will be able to download large-sized files quickly; his email capabilities and Internet experience will increase considerably due to higher network speeds, thereby making 3G has immense potential in India. We are nearing 617 million mobile phone users in India and it is expected to double by 2012. Every month, we add over 20 million new users. We continue to be the fastest growing country in the world when it comes to mobile adoption. According to the data, the broadband subscriber base grew 2.67% from 9 million in april to 9.24 million in may 2010. The good news is that in India, there are at least 40 million 3G-enabled phones, which means India already has 5 times Singapore's population as a potential 3G market.

However, due to the government bureaucracy, red tapism and the haggling over the prices, the licenses for 3G have taken far longer than it should. The auction has been completed and the good news is that the private players will join in the fray very soon. When private players like Airtel, Reliance and Idea get into the fray, their marketing blitzkrieg will push adoption levels higher. But that's in the near future. Add to this the government player's long arm of reaching 700 cities, 3G is definite to take off.

For the present, only government players like BSNL and MTNL have been given licenses but their sales has been very disappointing so far. Analysts say that the big players have not marketed the services well.
Countries like Japan and Korea have made 3G a national agenda and have waived the huge license fees. This has drastically increased the adoption levels and the benefits of economy are for everyone to see. Its just a matter of time that India takes that path.
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This is the picture which showing video-conferencing with 3G technology