Tuning in to Mobile TV



Similar documents
Mobile Voice ~ Whispers of Change?

Better Backhaul for Mobile

The Goods, the Payment and the Mobile!

Mobile ~ Let me Entertain you

Making Music with Mobile

M2M ~ Building a Connected World

VoIP: The Wireless Revolution

M2M. In an IoT World. Whitepaper.

Mobile TV with DVB-H. Markus Lindqvist Director, Server & Network Solutions Multimedia, Nokia Nokia Nseries

SMART WIRELESS DEVICES & THE INTERNET OF ME

Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games: media consumption

Studies on Market and Technologies for IMT in the Next Decade CJK-IMT Working Group

International IPTV Consumer Readiness Study

DAB Digital Radio Broadcasting. Dr. Campanella Michele

EUROPE ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT

Mobile Ticket to Ride!

Content. Empowered User- The Market Trend. Macro Environment- TV meets Telecoms Barriers to be removed-towards the successful story Conclusion

WHITE PAPER DON T REACT ACT! HOW PROACTIVE REVENUE MANAGEMENT CAN PAY OFF BIG IN TODAY S MARKETS

Media Consumer Experience Study Media Development Authority Singapore

Mobile TV: the smart and the strategic

The Australian ONLINE CONSUMER LANDSCAPE

Broadcast. Please note the below concepts help ensure the way we distribute revenue to members is equitable.

television audience measurement - a guide

Statistics dossier. Pay TV worldwide - Statista Dossier 2013

Mobile TV: The time to act is now

Table of Contents TABLE OF CONTENTS

Research Notes. Leichtman Research Group, Inc. Netflix: Four Years Later. Did you know?

SOUTH EAST ASIA AND OCEANIA ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT JUNE

The Connected Consumer Survey 2015: pay-tv and OTT video services

Adults media use and attitudes. Report 2016

The Ultimate WISP Customer Experience. A White Paper by Leon Hubby Co-Founder, Mesh Networks

NORTH AMERICA ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT APPENDIX JUNE

9 The continuing evolution of television

BT IP Exchange helps mobile operators accelerate VoLTE deployment

A STUDY ON DIGITAL VIDEO BROADCASTING TO A HANDHELD DEVICE (DVB-H), OPERATING IN UHF BAND

The Importance of the Global C-band Allocation for Satellite Communications Services

How To Migrate From Analogue To Digital Television Broadcasting

Wireless network traffic worldwide: forecasts and analysis

Digital Inclusion Programme Started. BL2a

Transforming Mobile Networks from 2G/3G to 4G LTE

The GSMA strongly support Denmark licensing the / MHz band 2 in a manner that will accommodate future use of

Alcatel-Lucent 9360 Small Cell Solution for the Home. Delivering big gains all around

The Business of Children s Content 9/12/2014. Tim Westcott, Principal Analyst Anna Stuart, Analyst

1. INTRODUCTION. 1.1 Background and Motivation. 1.2 The Digital Television Era

Nokia Siemens Networks Mobile WiMAX

Food & Coffee Offers New Ideas to Drive Non Fuel Income

The Connected Consumer Survey 2015: fixed broadband customer retention

Driving the evolution of digital terrestrial television

Service provider strategies for mobile advertising: case studies

The 700 MHz Band. Impact of the UHF spectrum reallocation on TV markets in Europe. 38 th EPRA meeting, Vilnius, October 2013

Past, Present, and Future: The Competitive Landscape of Telecommunications Services

Definition of Mobile Instant Messaging (MIM) Systems

Key highlights Entertainment & Media Outlook in Italy

Local and Ultra Local Content in Broadcast Mobile TV

Why Entertainment and Media companies should reassess asset valuation in the Digital Age

SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT

Mobile Marketing: Key Trends

Introductory Guide to Video Marketing

MANAGED SERVICES. A partnership for cost efficient operations and service quality

Ericsson Mobility Report ON THE PULSE OF THE NETWORKED SOCIETY

Ageing OECD Societies

Nokia Siemens Networks Network management to service management - A paradigm shift for Communications Service Providers

Expanding the human possibilities of technology

Television, Internet and Mobile Usage in the U.S. Three Screen Report

The Connected Consumer Survey 2015: mobile customer retention

Top 10 Questions about VoWiFi

Highly Available Mobile Services Infrastructure Using Oracle Berkeley DB

HOW TO GET A GREAT TV DEAL 6 WAYS TO EXTEND YOUR WIFI

Dear Customers, Striving for Innovation and Looking to the Future

AT&T U-verse App for iphone FAQ s

4G Operator Strategies & the Key Lessons Learned

Video. Discover its full power and potential. 38 examples of video in action. Copyright Focus Business Communications Limited

Business Model of Mobile TV and Its Key Success Factors Mu-Piao Shih, Vice President Chunghwa Telecom Mobile Business Group November 26, 2008

Mobile-edge Computing

VoIP Statistics Market Analysis

Establishing the Next Generation of Video. Ferdinand Kayser, Chief Commercial Officer

SATELLITE PAY-TV KEY ECONOMICS & PROSPECTS

Broadband Mapping 2013

Transcription:

WHITEPAPER Tuning in to Mobile TV This whitepaper is an extract from: Mobile TV Applications, Services & Opportunities 2010-2015... information you can do business with

Tuning in to Mobile TV 1. Introduction Over the past two years, the mobile TV landscape has changed dramatically. Even by mid-2008, there were serious reservations as to whether dedicated mobile broadcast TV networks could ever generate sufficient revenues to be run at a profit, even in the longer term; and the efforts of the then EU Commissioner Viviane Reding to persuade mobile network operators to deploy networks based on the DVB-H standard largely fell on deaf ears. In the aftermath of the global economic downturn, these reservations crystallised in most cases into an outright rejection of the dedicated broadcast network. By the end of 2009 - more than four and a half years after the first service was launched just 3.2 million users worldwide were paying for mobile TV services delivered via dedicated mobile broadcast TV networks: well under 0.1% of the global subscriber base. Even in the two markets where mobile broadcast TV pay services are relatively well established (South Korea and Italy, launching in May 2005 and June 2006 respectively) penetration is just 2.0% and 1.4% respectively. Even though MediaFLO achieved carriage deals with Verizon and AT&T, the two largest networks in the US, its subscriber base stood at no more than 200,000 at the end of 2009. Furthermore, this global pay TV base is barely sufficient to sustain a single medium-sized national network. Given these factors, given the comparative failures of those pay ventures, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that pay TV services delivered over dedicated networks are unlikely to generate substantial revenues in the future; that few such networks will be commissioned and deployed in the future; that those networks which are in active service will increasingly struggle in the face of competing technologies. Where mobile broadcast TV has taken off, it is largely the result either of digital terrestrial networks configured at no extra cost to enable free-to-air mobile reception of signals (e.g. ISDB-T in Japan) or with handsets fitted with chipsets which can receive free-to-air analogue TV signals (e.g. in parts of Asia and Africa). However, while they will not in themselves provide any additional service revenues, this is not to say that they do not provide the opportunity for vendors, operators and service providers to generate additional revenues, ranging from the perceived enhanced value of a handset that is in some way mobile TV-enabled, to associated, paid-for value-added interactive services. Page 1 Juniper Research Limited Tel: +44 (0)1256 830002

At the same time that the star of broadcast mobile TV has waned, that of streamed services has waxed to an appreciable extent. In areas of good reception, 3G/3.5G networks can enable high-quality coverage of streamed TV, in many cases of 24fps and above; at the same time, many streamed TV applications now offer as an alternative (or default) the option of WiFi coverage which when available offers even greater audio and video reception. Given that 3G network coverage has improved significantly in the past two years, and given that free WiFi is becoming far more widely available, it therefore appears increasingly probable that the bulk of end-user revenues from TV services will come from streamed, rather than broadcast, mechanisms. 2. The Changing Mobile TV Landscape Table 1: Key Factors Impacting Upon Mobile TV Development Factor Handsets Offering Analogue and Digital Terrestrial TV Are Now Available WiFi Has Entered the Equation Consumer Viewing Habits Are Changing Impact With a number of chipset vendors now offering receivers which can pick up analogue and digital terrestrial TV at a relatively low level of power consumption, previous assumptions about the viability of dedicated mobile broadcast TV networks must now be called into question. And as power consumption of such chipsets continues to decline in the medium term, then the pay TV mobile networks will only survive by offering content which is (a) not available on the FTA terrestrial networks and (b) created specifically for the mobile. Whether the networks and their service providers will be able to do that is another matter. Increasingly, developers are offering applications which augment delivery via cellular networks with WiFi access. At the same time, many hotels, public houses, fast food outlets, libraries and cafes are now providing their customers with free WiFi access: such brands include McDonald s, Coffee Republic, Leon Restaurants, Radisson Hotels. Indeed, many cities now include several hundred such establishments and the lists are growing daily. Furthermore, as more outlets offer free WiFi, the model creates its own impetus and thus more and more consumer-facing businesses will feel obliged to roll out free WiFi in order to compete. There has been a marked shift in consumer viewing habits in developed markets recent years, facilitated by DVRs (Digital Video Recorders) and online applications such as the BBC s iplayer, which enables UK-based Internet users to view any TV or Radio programme broadcast on the BBC s channels over the previous seven days. The implications of this are that a network which relies primary on linear broadcasting for its revenues will not be as attractive now as it was several years ago: there are fewer and fewer programmes which consumers feel obliged to watch at the time of broadcast: even live news broadcasts have become less imperative in an age whereby up-to-date news stories can be accessed instantaneously via Internet sites. Source: Juniper Research Page 2 Juniper Research Limited Tel: +44 (0)1256 830002

The table above provides three illustrations of how - and why various technological, social and economic factors have impacted upon the mobile TV market, and indeed on the relationships between the prospective participants in any mobile TV value chain. Some of these have affected the market adversely: others present new opportunities. 3. The Market for Mobile TV As the first mobile TV networks were being deployed in 2005-6, it was possible to claim that the opportunity for mobile TV lay in identifying the transition from streamed mobile TV services to broadcast mobile TV. This is no longer necessarily the case, as (for example) Swisscom s decision to switch from DVB-H back to 3.5G for its mobile TV services demonstrates. Given that this transition is no longer likely to occur (as where it does, such occurrences will be far from the norm), the opportunity lies elsewhere: identifying the revenue potential across the value chain, from chipset to service provision. Adding together the total end-user revenues from streamed and broadcast TV services gives a total of nearly $7 billion by 2015, up from $3.2 billion in 2009. Streamed TV services are expected to account for the overwhelming majority of such revenues throughout the forecast period. Figure 1: Total End-User Revenues ($m) for Mobile Streamed and Broadcast TV Services 2009-2015 $7,000 Streamed Broadcast $0 2009 2015 Source: Juniper Research Order the Full Report This whitepaper is taken from Juniper Research s report entitled Mobile TV: Applications, Services & Opportunities, 2010-2015. This in-depth report provides the most detailed analysis of the opportunity for mobile TV services to date. Within two large forecasting suites, the report assesses the likely value and usage levels of both streamed and broadcast services, Page 3 Juniper Research Limited Tel: +44 (0)1256 830002

split by eight key regions for streamed and by an additional 43 countries for broadcast services. An extensive examination of the various technological, social and economic factors that have impacted upon the mobile TV market over the past 18 months is provided as well as how disruptions in the mobile content value chain notably the growing prevalence of the app store model have impacted upon mobile TV. This report analyses and forecasts the potential impact of streamed TV services on the cellular networks, while assessing the extent to which WiFi networks will act as an additional outlet for mobile TV traffic. This fully updated fifth edition also includes a separate set of forecasts which discuss the likely additional revenue opportunity for dedicated broadcast networks from in-vehicle entertainment systems. Key questions the report answers: What are the key factors that have disrupted the mobile TV value chain? What key social, economic and technological trends have shaped the development of the mobile TV market in the past 12 months? What are the prospects for dedicated mobile broadcast TV networks and technologies? How much data traffic will streamed TV services generate over the next six years? What strategies should network operators, vendors and service providers employ to maximize their revenue opportunities from mobile TV? What adoption rate will mobile TV achieve by 2015? What is the revenue potential of mobile TV delivered to in-car entertainment systems? For more details on this report visit the website www.juniperresearch.com or phone +44 (0)1256 830002. Juniper Research Limited Juniper Research specialises in providing high quality analytical research reports and consultancy services to the telecoms industry. We have particular expertise in the mobile, wireless, broadband and IP-convergence sectors. Juniper is independent, unbiased, and able to draw from experienced senior managers with proven track records. Publication Details Publication date: July 2010 Author: Windsor Holden For more information, please contact: Page 4 Juniper Research Limited Tel: +44 (0)1256 830002

Michele Ince, General Manager michele.ince@juniperresearch.com Juniper Research Limited, Church Cottage House, Church Square, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 7QW UK Tel: +44 (0)1256 830002/475656 Fax: +44(0)1256 830093 Further whitepapers can be downloaded at http://www.juniperresearch.com Page 5 Juniper Research Limited Tel: +44 (0)1256 830002