By Alexander Cameron, Managing Director, Digital TX Ltd.
The very first bandwagon that new proprietors of digital media
platforms tend to jump on once they have made the quantum leap of
understanding that IPTV is about entertainment, not infrastructure, is
that they want movies. Lots of them. Hollywood's best. Everything
they can get their hands on. Viewers will see their fantastic movies
and come running in their droves to the temple of consumer
indulgence they have built.
So they spend months trying to find their way into the studios and
being ignored. It's a very small world, and one that you don't get into
without a multi-million dollar budget and trusted introductions. Los
Angeles' traditional Jewish roots still provide the foundation of the
industry today and although times may have change, old conventions
still linger. The mass market nature of the pictures, their hundred
million dollar marketing budgets and enduring popularity means that
the industry is never short of new business.
The first and so called "golden" rule of video on-demand is that it is
the primary driver and revenue-raiser for digital TV platforms – the
"killer app" that brings in the ARPU from each home that the platform
needs to survive. The assumption is that these movies are watched
every second of every day, like DVDs are. The whole US TV market
(and coincidentally, the BSkyB model) is based on paid sales, rather
than the British model of advertising.
This illustrates the serious danger of assumption, because nothing
could be further from the truth. You need to see pay-per-view
statistics to believe them. If you did, you wouldn't be basing your
business plan and platform development strategy on it. By the time
you find out, it will be too late. Most services have a few thousand
movies to choose from, of which less than 20 or so are the cream of
the crop. They would have been available in a DVD store a while ago
and of course, are the same price, or even more expensive.
There is a curious phenomenon at work with pay-per-view. Although it
may drive us to subscribe, and even though we may like the option of
having those premium movies, we don't actually watch many of them
at all.
And the truth shall set you free. So what is that truth? It's a lot worse
in real life than it sounds. Platform owners are the only people who
are able to understand how many movies a household watches per
year, and they don't like telling anyone. They don't tell the studios
either. The bizarre sales reporting model they use is called a "buy
rate" and relates to, wait for it, the total number of purchases made
over the year expressed as a percentage of the total number of
subscribers the platform has.
Let's say platform X has 100,000 subscribers. If 10,000 pay-per-view
purchases were made over the year, that gives the platform a 10%
buy rate. Sounds simple, doesn't it? The trouble is absolutely no-one
gets a 10% buy rate. Not even close. The average movie studio tends
to get a 1-3% buy rate. There are 5 in total, so the maximum you
could get would be 15% or so, or 15,000 purchases for our fictional
example.
You can quickly begin to see why studios like platforms that have lots
of subscribers, and aren't interested in small players.
And if you think that's bad, hold onto to your coffee. PC download
statistics are even worse, if it's even possible. The average buy rate
for these services is currently 0.02 – 0.05%. No really. That means
platform X averages a maximum of 500 downloads a year. Silly
window-busting schemes like DRM-riddled download to own services
just aren't selling. Even iTunes' sales are down by 65% this year.
Whatever is going on, the current formula isn't right. Consumers aren't
amused and piracy is winning the day easily. You need volume to
make money.
To fully appreciate the dire economic situation, it's necessary to
understand how a VoD distribution deal works. To get in the door, you
need an audience to make the buy rate attractive. The first thing you
need to pay is the up-front sales guarantee. It's all about the advance.
The riskiest you look, the more you're going to pay. It's essentially a
fat bribe to get the studio's interest and a golden handshake to get
your hands on the goods. No advance, no deal. You're going to need
£500k or so per studio at the very least, and if you're in the Eastern
block or somewhere like Vietnam, just forget it altogether and do a
deal with the little guy who comes round in restaurants selling illegally
copied DVDs.
The normal type of deal done on an on-demand platform is a form of
revenue-sharing agreement. The studio serve you up a hard drive of
electronic files pre-encoded in their preferred conditional access or
digital rights management system, all to the MPAA guidelines. For
independent producers, you will traditionally see a 50:50 split revenue
agreement, and for the majors, its 70:30 in favour of the rightsholder.
When the sale is done and the operator recoups from their customer,
you remove VAT or sales tax. If the studio are hard-nosed, they will
demand the whole 70% immediately. If they're remotely kind, they'll
share the admin and distribution costs (card processing, CRM,
support, bandwidth etc) and then take their share.
If we go back to our fictional example, Platform X, we had 10,000
purchases. To make it more realistic, we'll use a typical 1% buy rate
(1000 purchases in a year for one studio). With each title costing
£3.75, our gross revenue for the year is £3750. Less VAT, we are
down to £3093.75. Even with the most favourable deal, the studio
60% take–home is £1856.25, and the platform's remaining 40%
equates to £1237.5. From that, we need to deduct costs to reach our
net revenue.
Not exactly impressive is it? If we scale that to include the five main
studios each on a 1% buy rate, platform X would make £6187.5 in a
year from their premium pay-per-view movies. This is why the studios
like Sky Digital and cable and don't pay a whole lot of attention to
IPTV systems. Sky Box Office can give you anything up to 1.5 million
purchases a year, and in the American market, there are 270 million
people who have been conditioned for decades to buy movies on
cable at outrageous prices. It might also go some way to explain
exactly why Homechoice has suffered so much, and why BT might
find themselves in some trouble soon.
If we gradually work ourselves back, chronologically speaking, the
picture of adversity to digital media reveals itself. If premium movies
need volume, these new platforms can't deliver it just yet. There's no
reason to spend anything more than experimental budget on putting
content onto new technological systems. Movie studios are essentially
fast-return investment bankers. Like venture capital, for every 10
movies that are produced, 7 will flop, 2 will break even, and 1 will
make money.
When you're spending hundreds of millions of dollars on a production,
you need to be aggressive to make a return on your investment. The
massively complex and never-ending chain of intellectual property
rights (from the reproduction of an actors' likeness to the artwork on a
DVD), the legal and commercial muscle needed just to get something
to market is spectacular. All for 2 hours. After that, they bin it, take it
back to the shop or forget about it.
Theatrical and cinema release recoups a significant proportion of your
revenue, but the pot of gold under the rainbow is DVD sales. The
lucrative market for DVD purchase and home video scales into the
multiple billions, and the frightening truth is that it underpins the vast
majority of the film industry. To eat into that means suicide in an
already risky market. But to not change is a bigger risk. Piracy is a
business model like any other, and it has volume. You can't sell ads
on premium films that equate to rental value, so there is a glaring gap,
even with the deduction of physical fulfilment costs for physical
packaging.
Forget the premium movies, as unless you are a massive TV platform
or a bored billionaire with a pet project who has a few million to bung
his buddy on the golf course, you won't be getting them. Approach the
studios with a way to monetise the rubbish nobody buys anymore in
their back catalogue. If you want to do niche, tell them you're going to
do niche. If you want to offer premium movies, there will always be a
Walmart or Tesco that will outsell you even on a loss-leading basis, as
they already know the power of these products to provide an incentive
to get the shoppers through the door.
The opportunity is there for someone to solve it. It needs the
willingness of the studios to listen and change, and for an operator to
deliver the revenue that returns the investment.
The lesson for operators and retailers is very, very clear. When you
are working through your profit & loss account (income statement),
premium pay-per-view needs to be in it as a marketing overhead, not
a form of sales revenue.
Digital TX offers a great value one-day workshop course on IPTV and
Video On-Demand (VoD) specifically for web and media
professionals. It can help you get up to speed on the latest
technologies, content deals, operators and applications across the
world, and offer immense value in identifying both new opportunities
and threats for your business and personal career. If you would like
more information, call Alex on 07986 37317, email
iptvworkshop@digitaltx.tv or visit www.iptvworkshop.co.uk. Readers
who quote this publication as their source will receive a 10% discount
on the course fees.
About Digital TX Limited
Formed in early 2004, privately owned and based in London (UK),
Digital TX Limited are IPTV/VoD consultants for interactive digital
television and broadband media. Some of the keywords you might
associate with us are IPTV, Video On-Demand, Triple Play,
Broadband Entertainment, Video Over IP, Interactive TV, Network
Video Gaming and Telco TV.
Digital TX Limited has worked with many leading blue chip
communications providers and can help catalyse your route to market
for IPTV services by working with you to design your next-generation
multimedia network, build your commercial deployment model and
broker relationships with vendors, rightsholders, partners and
customers. If we can be of any assistance please don’t hesitate to
contact Alexander Cameron on +44 (0) 7986 373177 or via email on
alex.cameron@digitaltx.tv.
http://www.digitaltx.tv