Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

E-commerce Times

Pay TV Could Find a Silver Lining in the Looming OTT Cloud

The video content industry long has relied on pay-TV services as a significant revenue source, but digital technologies -- namely over-the-top, or OTT, services -- are impacting pay-TV rights and revenues.

Nearly two-thirds of U.S. broadband households now own one or more devices capable of delivering online content to TV sets, and younger viewers have altered their video consumption habits in response to these new technologies.

Live/linear broadcast TV accounted for just 51 percent of all video consumed on a TV in early 2014. More people are using an Internet-connected streaming video service like Netflix or Hulu to watch TV shows and movies. Millennials, in particular, consider online video to be the most important source for finding and viewing video content. Very soon, linear TV will be in the minority of all video consumed on a TV set.

This rise in popularity of OTT services is forcing several pay-TV providers and networks to rethink their current strategies and offerings.

From the article "Pay TV Could Find a Silver Lining in the Looming OTT Cloud" by Glenn Hower.

Previously In The News

Amazon Wrangles Publishers as iBookstore Grand Opening Looms

"My sense is that consumers have been very happy with the pricing model Amazon has established," Kurt Scherf, vice president and principal analyst with Parks Associates, told MacNewsWorld. "It'...

Apple Bites Off a Juicy Chunk of E-Book Market

Lately it seems that every idea Apple has returns piles of cash to the company's coffers. So, it should not be surprising that Apple is experiencing quick success in the e-book marketplace. More th...

Gaming Industry Likely to Pick Up Following Weak June

Gaming software sales were down in June, although hardware saw a boost... It is unusual for software sales to drop while hardware sales increase, said Pietro Macchiarella, an analyst with Parks...

Mixed Bag of News Keeps Apple Investors Guessing

"There's almost a consensus that Verizon Wireless will get the iPhone, but the question is when," Harry Wang, a director of research at Parks Associates, told MacNewsWorld. "Some put it at early ne...