Over-the-Top Video Continues Rapid Growth

49% of the consumers surveyed in Accenture’s Pulse of Media Consumer Survey are watching OTT video through a broadband connection on their TVs in addition to the content they traditionally watch via cable or satellite. Accenture polled 2,010 consumers (1,003 in the US and 1,007 in the UK), ages 18 and up, for this study.

Younger consumers are leading the way in using new technologies to view video content, according to the study. In the US, 82% of consumers between the ages of 18 and 24 watch some OTT video, with 60% watching at least a quarter of their video over-the-top (compared to 32% of US consumers overall). Younger viewers are also more tuned in socially, with 35% of 18- to 24-year-olds showing an interest in “social newsfeeds of videos” that their friends have watched, compared to just 11% of consumers 45 and up. Other findings from the report include:

In the US, 27% of those surveyed subscribe to OTT services such as Netflix; 28% subscribe to satellite.

16% of US consumers subscribe to gaming console-based video delivery services and 4% subscribe to STB-based services such as Apple TV, Boxee, or Google TV.

While TV is still king for long-form content such as full-length TV episodes, consumers are also flocking to mobile devices to watch other types of video content: 24% of respondents do so to watch short videos and clips; 15% to watch user-generated content; 6% to watch live content; and 4% to watch full-length movies and TV.

Over the Top fueled through TV consumption

There has been a sharp increase in out-of-the-box video viewing for over-the-top television.

With the growth of Netflix and other services, a new Accenture survey indicates that 49% of U.S. and U.K. consumers are viewing some over-the-top (OTT) video through a broadband connection via their TV sets.

The researcher says the 49% level represents a sharp increase in OTT video consumption from the 8% level that Accenture last measured among viewers in March 2011.

In terms of actual subscriptions for the likes of Netflix and other services, the research says in the U.S., 27% of those surveyed subscribe to OTT services, with subscriptions in the U.K. at 26%.

Young consumers are way ahead of older TV viewers. Eighty-two percent of U.S. viewers between the ages of 18 and 24 are watching some OTT video via broadband through TVs, and about 60% are watching 25% of all their video consumption via over-the-top, broadband means on TV sets. Looking at all U.S. consumers, 32% watch a quarter of their video via OTT.

The numbers are a bit lower in the U.K. — where 75% of young consumers watch some OTT, with 54% watching at least 25% of all their video. This compares with 28% of TV viewers in the U.K. who watch 25% of all their video via OTT.

When it comes to mobile devices, Accenture says 24% of consumers are using these to watch short videos and clips; 15% to watch user-generated content; 6% to watch live content; and 4% to watch full-length movies.

Read more: http://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/188002/out-of-the-box-fuels-over-the-top-broadband-vies.html?edition=53899#ixzz2DWRoEFrR

YouTube Scales Back Original Content Partnerships

YouTube is planning on reinvesting in only about 40% of the current original channels on the video site. This doesn’t mean that the channels that are cut off will be kicked off the site, just that they will no longer be an active part of YouTube’s original content initiative.

The new deals will most likely be similar to the original ones, in that YouTube will front up to $5 million to produce original content, will recoup that money via advertising, after which the site and the content owners will split ad revenues 50/50. According to AllThingsD, for all the channels that haven’t yet earned back all of the money YouTube invested in them, the video giant will continue to collect all of the ad revenue generated by those channels.

There’s also an understanding that any content that is produced as part of the original content initiative will be exclusive to YouTube for a year

New Insights on Consumer Video Streaming Habits

TVGuide.com released findings from a survey of TV viewers on their video consumption habits, the findings indicate that while cord cutting is one of the reasons why consumers are increasingly watching TV content online and on mobile devices, it’s not the biggest reason.

Per Ad Age, 42% of respondents said they watched more streamed TV content in 2011 when compared to 2011. 73% of those who streamed more content said they did so to catch up on missed episodes, while 8% answered because it was of “cutting back on cable” and 10% because they had canceled their TV subscription. Other notable findings include:

Among respondents who pay for video services like Netflix and Hulu Plus, 30% said they are watching more content now on them than in 2011.

Mobile users are paying for 10% of the content they watch on smartphones and tablets.

47% of respondents said they have “co-viewed” TV at home, as in one family member watching TV on the TV and another member watching TV content on a mobile device, while in the same room and at the same time.

CBS Interactive Cooks Up Food Programming on YouTube

CBS Interactive’s foodie site CHOW.com has unveiled its first-ever weekly video programming lineup, adding four new series, two of which will be available exclusively through CHOW’s YouTube channel.
The lineup of new shows, which join existing ones like Supertaster, CHOW Tips, and The Easiest Way, is as follows:

Sundays: MDRN KTCHN, in which hosted Scott Heimendinger of Modernist Cuisine discusses food and ingredients used in a modernist kitchen.

Mondays: Musical Video Recipes, one of the YouTube exclusives, the show offers instructional “CHOW-approved” recipes performed to original pop songs.

Tuesdays: My Food Thing, the second YouTube exclusive, this show follows a celebrity as they discuss their favorite a private “food thing,” such as a musician dishing on favorite places to eat on tour.

Fridays: CHOW Happy Hour, in which famed SF bartender Martin Cate teaches viewers new cocktail recipes.

YouTube Continues Focus on Original Programming

According to new numbers released by YouTube: The top 25 original channels average over a million views a week; 800 million viewers are watching 4 billion hours every month; the number of subscribers has doubled year-over-year; and channel partners are reaching the 100,000 subscriber milestone five times faster than they did two years ago (this presumably includes partner channels before the initiative officially launched last year).

The video company now plans to expand the program globally by launching 60 new channels from media companies in France, Germany, the UK, and yes also the US. These new channels, which add to the approximately 100 that are already available, span categories from local cuisine to sports, animation, comedy, and news.

Cable Cord Cutting outpaces new subscribers

According to a recent Ericsson ConsumerLab report, there are more people in the US (21% of US-based pay-TV subscribers) who have either reduced or canceled their pay-TV subscription packages than there are those who have increased their spending (12% of US-based respondents). Of those Americans who have reduced or canceled their TV packages, 56% cited “wanting to save money,” 16% pointed to “using free internet services,” and 12% named “no suitable package” as reasons why. The global report consisted of 14 in-home interviews (10 in Chicago and 4 in Sweden) and 12,000 online interviews (1,000 per country), across multiple regions, including the US, UK, China, Spain, Sweden, and Germany.

Color this as unsurprising, but Twitter users like to share photos and videos. A recent eMarketer report took a look at July 2012 data from website analysis company Diffbot, which analyzed over 750,000 links posted to Twitter across the globe and found that 36% were of images, 16% led to articles, and 9% directed users to videos. On the video front, in other unsurprising news, Diffbot data found that YouTube accounted for 60% of all video links on Twitter. As a note, eMarketer forecasts that US adult Twitter users will hit 31.8 million in 2013, a 14.9% increase from 27.7 million in 2012.

The Future of Cable TV?

Even as cable/satellite TV carriers like Comcast and DirecTV squabble over dollars and cents with broadcast and cable networks like NBC and Viacom, the very structure of their decades-old business model is under attack from new Internet technologies and services, as well as new government regulations. At stake is the future of how people watch and pay for television and video – and who controls the experience.

With plot twists like last-minute negotiations ending in content blackouts, regulatory changes that could derail well-established business models, and brand new technologies delivering video content in brand new ways, this TV-delivery drama should be a blockbuster.

The question is, what surprises will the next episode bring? The search for possible spoilers brings up a wide range of theories from all over the industry, as various players, regulators and observers try to figure out what happens next.

Kevin Lockett, Digital Media Analyst from Lockett Media, says the result will be a fundamentally changed cable industry – one that will have to be far more transparent and flexible in order to keep its customers from defecting to new Internet-based options. If and when the general public figures out that it now has real alternatives, Locket says, “the cable companies are in trouble.”

Previously On Cable TV…
For two decades, cable TV, joined later by satellite providers, has been the dominant force in delivering video content to homes and businesses in the US. Lately that dominance has been challenged from within by cable TV’s own business practices and from without by Internet video providers like YouTube and streaming Internet TV delivered to special set-top boxes with weird names like Roku and Boxee, or Blu-Ray DVD players, or even “Smart” TVs themselves.

This new class of technology is hard to label, since there are so many variations on delivery devices, but over the top (OTT) platforms is one name that seems to be getting some traction. OTT is a broad term that describes not only the devices that receive and display Internet TV, but also the online services that deliver them. A tablet, then, is not an OTT device in itself, but it can receive OTT-delivered content, such as that from Hulu and iTunes.

OTT devices vary in form, but they share the function of bringing in video content over existing Internet connections through service providers like Hulu, Amazon Instant Video, and Netflix. Such services feature on-demand video programming at monthly rates that are typically much lower than cable subscription rates (for a more limited range of content, of course).

Who’s Gone Over The Top (OTT)?
How much attention is OTT getting? The Interpret LLC’s New Media Measure syndicated report sets the number of US consumers age 18-65 that own an Internet-enabled set top box (like a Roku player, Apple TV, Slingbox, Vudu box, etc.) at 13.6%, reported a company spokesperson.

Less than 14% may not sound like much, but OTT has been around for only three years. And Interpret’s numbers don’t include the millions of users watching alternate video sources like YouTube and Vimeo.

The other half of the squeeze on the cable TV industry comes from the ossified business practices of the industry itself. Cliffhanger battles for carriage rights that lead content creators to pull their programming from cable and satellite systems if they can’t get a deal they like is shooting the industry in the foot.

Frustrated with what appear to be more frequent content blackouts and ever-rising rates, consumers – and lawmakers – are applying pressure for less bundled programming and more à la carte-style programming. Content providers like Viacom and Disney rely on channel bundles to keep alive channels that consumers might not otherwise pay for.

Bundling Is The New Villain
The animosity over channel bundling is building. During the recent dispute with Viacom that led to a content blackout of Viacom channels for 26 million viewers, DirecTV laid it all out for the New York Times:

“Programmers like Viacom typically won’t allow anyone to buy their channels individually, but we hope to change that,” DirecTV told the Times. “We currently pay them hundreds of millions of dollars every year already, and if Viacom thinks their networks are worth a billion more, then you have to be able to select what’s most important in your own living room.”

DirecTV was willing to endure public blowback for dropping popular Viacom channels lilke Comedy Central and Nickelodeon because it was more afraid of bundling. In the past, customers had little choice but to pay for channels they didn’t watch to get the ones they were interested in.

But things are changing. Now customers can go to competing cable companies in the same town, or buy a satellite dish. Or leave the game completely to use OTT devices and services. Suddenly, the cable companies are pushing back at bundling demands from content producers.

Finding the Plot Motivation
As vice president of Accedo, a software vendor that builds apps and application interfaces for OTT devices, David Adams knows first hand about the changes in the cable TV industry.

“We’ve moved from just a few services in there with their toes in the water, to these services actually driving strategy,” Adams explains.

Ironically, though, the barriers to sweeping change within the existing cable TV industry are the same factors driving the change: business models and technology. Even as content takes new paths producer to consumer, Adams says, “when you have these 10-year, long-term carriage agreements in place, it’s hard for the [cable TV] industry to respond.”

Deeply ingrained ways of doing business show up even when cable providers or broadcasters try to adapt to the growing presence of OTT. A classic example is HBO Go, which offers on-demand programming over the Internet – but only to existing HBO customers. “They’re trying to adapt, but their business model isn’t changing,” Adams says. Instead, “they are looking to become more competitive with OTT.”

The real potential for OTT may come if it can combine the full-screen ad experience of traditional television with the targeted marketing promised by OTT technologies.

According to Adams, though, that combination is not yet mature enough to attract major advertiser interest and jump start adoption of OTT.

Is Cable Doomed?
“We’ll always be able to choose cable,” analyst Lockett predicts. “It’s in their best interests to appeal to their customer base and they eventually will.”

But even as non-technical people learn more about OTT, Lockett doesn’t see the complete abandonment of cable practices like channel bundling. Unbundling or better bundling won’t be the only thing keeping cable TV alive – instead, cable will have to find a new role. “AM radio is still around after all these years,” Lockett notes, albeit serving a more limited niche.

Adams, too, doesn’t predict the demise of cable. Customers are still dedicated to the big, full-screen watching experience, he believes, and cable remains one of the best ways to get that experience.

Instead, he sees the most revolutionary changes coming TV consumption from the use of tablets and other mobile devices in conjunction with TVs.

A Starring Role for the Second Screen
“The second-screen experience is something the content producers in Hollywood are playing around with now,” Adams explains. “The combination of tablets and TV will change the way we view television forever.”

Tablets and smartphones already provide a range of second-screen experiences – from following Twitter reactions to the Olympic opening ceremonies to show-specific apps like one launched last winter for the popular Fox reality show “American Idol” or the additional show content delivered in the form of a graphic novel for USA Network’s “Burn Notice.”

Meanwhile, companies like Shazam are trying to ease the need for viewers to hunt for apps and content related to a given show. The music-recognition app recognizes the soundtrack from a shows and downloads related content or apps chosen by the show’s producers.

Far from a challenge to cable TV, the second-screen could actually help save it. Cable TV providers could use the second screen to enhance viewing of primary video content and deliver even more targeted advertising – helping to offset income lost from the decline of bundling. That, in turn, would help cable TV service providers hold down subscription costs, and stem the bleeding of customers looking for less expensive alternatives.

Cable TV’s ratings may fall as OTT becomes more popular, but don’t cancel cable’s season just because the plot is getting a major rewrite.

More Viewers Interested in Watching TV on Mobile Devices

The “TV Everywhere” push by cable networks is matched by increased demand by consumers to watch programming on smartphones and tablets.

Interest in viewing television on mobile devices among adults climbed to 31% in 2012 from 22% in 2011, according to a new survey by Beta Research.

Among younger adults, ages 18 to 34, 50% said they were interested in viewing TV on mobile devices, up from 39% a year ago. And among teens 12 to 17, 47% said they were interested in using tablets and mobile phones to watch TV, up from 43%.

Beta said that 19% of adults said they actually viewed TV on a smartphone or tablet in the past 30 days.

Beta also asked about what digital basic and mid-sized networks viewers were interested in watching. Most getting the highest marks were: National Geographic Channel, ID Investigation Discovery, Nat Geo Wild, Cooking Channel and Science.

 

Mobile is rapidly changing the way we watch TV

The day is coming when more TV viewing will be done over a mobile device (tablet or smartphone) than via cable or satellite. The implications of the change from one pipeline to another will have tremendous ramifications throughout the $70 billion TV advertising industry that will positively impact consumers, marketers and networks.

Various industry forecasts show that TV consumption habits will soon be changing. ComScore reported that in April, 181 million U.S. Internet users watched nearly 37 billion online videos. Cisco projects that IP traffic used worldwide will grow fourfold by 2016, driven by a proliferation of connected devices, ever-increasing broadband connectivity and greater adoption of IP video worldwide. Furthermore, estimates suggest that Apple will sell as many as 60 million iPads in 2012. The latest iPad innovations largely focused around improving video consumption included a better screen and a faster microprocessor. According to Pew Research Center, as of the first quarter of 2012, 29 percent of U.S. adults owned a tablet computer or eReader, up nearly 15-fold since April 2009. Lastly, Rhythm NewMedia recently reported that viewers consistently watch 50 percent to 175 percent more videos on tablets than on smartphones on a per-viewer basis.

All of these facts point to consumers who are changing the face of how video is consumed from a TV in their living room to their mobile device. While we are just in the beginning of this trend, the adoption rate could gain traction even faster if it is coupled with access to live TV content on a mobile device.

In the last year, we have seen more evidence that live TV will likely become available online. The first few major sporting events have been streamed live on the Internet to whet consumers’ appetites for live TV content on their mobile devices. The Super Bowl was broadcast live over the Internet for the first time, while also registering its highest rating. The Masters.com streamed several different live feeds, with no apparent negative impact on ratings. This summer, NBC will stream all Olympic events live, in hopes of both satiating demand and improving TV ratings. Bloomberg Television launched an app so viewers can watch the network live on a mobile device. The growing consensus, as NBC cited in its Olympic announcement, is that streaming live does not cannibalize TV ratings and may very likely increase them.

The more networks provide access to live TV content, the more likely they are to improve ratings and monetize their content. For example, consumers could watch CNBC live at their desks on the Internet, and, in turn, CNBC could monetize their out-of-home audience more effectively.

Another implication of the transformation of TV is the dynamic between advertiser and network. There could be a dramatic shift in the way TV inventory is bought from an upfront marketplace, which takes place three to 15 months in advance of the commercial airing, to a more dynamic and accountable marketplace, as more TV content gets viewed with a mobile device. As long as video is consumed over a mobile device, that inventory can be sold, in theory, on an exchange using improved targeting, real-time bidding, customization and optimization.

Various estimates expect that at least 200-225 million tablets will be bought by U.S. consumers by the end of 2013, and the demand for quality video will only increase. Consumer demand for TV content will be hard for networks to ignore. At some point, TV networks will have to choose between providing live Internet access or losing ratings to competitors who are allowing live access.

All the buzz about Apple changing TV with a new product launch this fall may well happen, but it is how consumers think of their iPads as mobile TVs that will truly transform TV.