Mobile TV

Friday, March 30, 2007

Mobile TV: ‘Customers will pay for content’

(c) Digital Spy

Customers will pay for mobile TV services, says 3’s marketing director, Graeme Oxby.

Speaking at the Broadcast Mobile TV Congress in London this morning, the network’s marketing head said that future of mobile was promising, as many of its customers in the UK were already users of the service.

Of 3’s 3.9 million subscribers across all services, 20% are using mobile TV services in any one month.

Oxby also pointed to 3’s success with music downloads, and its position as the second most popular service after Apple's iTunes, as an indicator of where it would be with mobile TV in 18 months time.

"People are spending money to get entertainment on the move..mobile TV provides broadcasters with opportunities to do new things that they might find difficult on a normal broadcast platform," he said.

In January 3’s free-to-customers ad-funded Celebrity Big Brother service saw 1.2 million downloads in 3 weeks, with 1 million of those paid for by the advertiser.

Its World Cup coverage created 3.6 million users of mobile TV services for the network, with 638,000 watching its made-for-mobile TV show, Berlin or Bust.

Oxby added that the key factors for the development of the service were creating simpler pricing, making the service easier to use and production of more made-for-mobile content.

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Thursday, March 29, 2007

Advertisers want to go mobile

(c) Reuters

Privately held MobiTV, which streams live television to about 2 million cell phones, is launching an interactive ad platform in coming weeks, with options for consumers to call the advertiser or send a text message to receive information.

As well as approaching ad clients itself, MobiTV hopes to use a service Yahoo Inc. is launching. MobiTV plans to give carriers a percentage of ad revenue as well.

"We expect that we can get an incremental 20 percent of revenue by selling advertising," MobiTV President and co-founder Paul Scanlan told Reuters.

Media companies also view the mobile space as a crucial way of bringing their programs and movies to a wider audience.

"We believe advertising can work on the wireless platform ... we view it as a critical medium," Viacom Inc. Chief Executive Philippe Dauman said in a speech. The owner of MTV and Comedy Central networks has signed Intel Corp. and Pepsi-Cola North America as its first mobile advertisers.

Another factor adding momentum is that advertisers are seeing the benefits of mobile advertising as a research tool.

For example, ad campaigns inviting mobile users to send a text, answer a question or vote for a contestant on a show have helped marketers figure out the sort of words or displays that make people want to respond to their messages.

"Mobile becomes an effectiveness measurer for all types of media," said Forrester marketing analyst Christine Overby.

Forrester analyst Charles Golvin said carriers were moving forward with mobile advertising now that the prospects are clearer and the supporting technology is more advanced.

"It's about moving from promise to reality," he said. "(Carriers) are moving fairly aggressively behind the scenes."

Experts had recommendations for making the most out of mobile ads, for example, providers can collect consumer data like Web search engines that show ads based on keywords.

"We're basically going to see things that are very similar to what we see on the Internet without the spam." said Entner.

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@ CTIA: Interview: Philippe Dauman, President & CEO, Viacom

(c) MocoNews

Posted by Staci D. Kramer

As mentioned earlier, I interviewed Philippe Dauman, president and CEO of Viacom, following his CTIA keynote this morning. We talked as we walked through the convention hall (hence some of the subtle background noise) making the most of a crowded schedule during his whirlwind trip to Orlando. (Most of the keynote execs zip in and out.) Dauman was relaxed during the keynote—as relaxed as you can get when the lights are glaring and you can’t see who you’re talking to—and he seemed equally comfortable during our conversation. We talked about how important wireless is to Viacom’s future, the company’’s current and future plans, and spent a few minutes on the C word—copyright.

Some excerpts:

Mobile’s importance to Viacom: Dauman: “This is a very good platform for the type of content we produce. We appeal to the early adapters of any kind of technology and our consumers really love the wireless platform. We believe in not only providing the content we produce on air for this platform but we also want to produce original content.”

Bottom line: Dauman: “It’s a small business for us today but it is growing extremely rapidly. It’s one of the fastest growing parts of our company. It’s a small portion of the company today --- the growth is huge off a relatively small base but I think the growth will continue to be huge for years to come. I expect this business to be a very significant part of our business as we look forward to the long-term future. It’s an important part of our strategy to be on every distribution platform that exists today or will exist in the future.”

Business models
: When I asked about a time when mobile TV might be ad-supported to the point of lowering monthly subscription costs, Dauman talked about how the ad model helps support the cost of creating programming. As for business models, “I think they’ll be different economic models that will be developed by the carriers over time and we’ll try different models and we’ll see what resonates best with consumers.”

Advertising
: Asked about multiple revenue steams from advertising on and off deck, Dauman mentioned another major way Viacom makes money from mobile advertising—advertising about mobile from carriers who need Viacom’s audience: “We love the fact that they’re competing with each other to provide new services to customers and new handsets. ... The influencers of purchasing decisions are getting younger and younger.”

Amp’d
: Viacom is an investor in Amp’d and the companies have done several content deals, including one announced today for an exclusive SpongeBob SquarePants channel. Dauman: “It gives us a platform. It allows us to experiment.” He mentioned the show Lil Bush that started for Amp’d and is now moving to cable, adding that he expects to see a lot more of moving content from platform to platform. “We are the largest owner of content and we’re going to continue that strength. We’re playing our strength. That what it’s all about.”

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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Mobile ads need compelling content to grow

(c) RCR Wireless News
TV network executives charged with delivering their programming to the mobile environment are happy to see their shows living on multiple platforms, but there’s little room for celebration as they each anxiously await opportunities in advertising on the new medium.

“Actually, I wish this was going beyond the hypey, bubbling phase and going into the real phase,’ Cyriac Roeding, executive vice president of CBS Mobile, said in a panel focusing on the profitability of mobile television during the Mobile Entertainment Live event at CTIA Wireless 2007.

“The consumer is not going to bear all the cost on their shoulders anymore,” he said.

Roeding believes the market will “explode in terms of users” if the industry comes together and decides to make the content supported more heavily by advertising. It could simply mirror their business model for at-home television, he said, but he doesn’t expect that to happen before the end of the decade at the earliest.

“Discoverability is a nightmare,” he said “This is about simplicity of use.” MediaFLO USA Inc., a CBS partner in broadcast mobile television, stands out as a “massive step forward” in the industry as it makes “advertising highly relevant on that platform,” Roeding added.

As more networks come to market, advertisers’ interest will logically increase, he said, in which case the cost to subscribers would be cut drastically.

“Content is basically where it all starts,” Roeding said. ‘The content creation process is currently not set up to create mobile content that understands and identifies this as not a TV screen.”

Success on this and the advertising fronts would give networks the capability to reach profits much higher than they’ve experienced on all other mediums, he said. “This is the only medium that you will always carry with you while you are viewing other mediums.”

Roger Wood, senior vice president and general manager of Amobee, said a watershed event would be realized if advertisers are given the opportunity to preview their ad or commercial before it goes to market, much like they can do now in traditional media. He said advertisers are a needy lot and interest in mobile television will remain stagnant until they’re given the capability to continue driving interest to whatever demographic they want.

“I think what we really need in mobile is better content,” said Lucy Hood, president of Fox Mobile Entertainment, offering an interesting admission from a major player on the content creation side of the game.

“If we really want to grow this business, it’s got to be truly compelling content because that’s the only way you grow beyond a few early adopters,” she said. Beyond that there are two missing ingredients in this marketplace, she said. “We’ve got to offer proof that people are being reached and that it’s working” and “you’ve got to have global reach,” she said.

As for monetizing the industry, Hood looks to new, innovative advertising formats to offer her clients. She doesn’t believe companies will deliver their message via text or a 30-second TV spot. “I think it’s a whole new advertising format we’ll deliver in the next year or two,” she said.

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