Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

Forbes

How India Is Ahead Of The Game In TV Unbundling

While U.S. cable television customers are longing to finally be able to pay for just the channels they actually watch, others have begrudgingly accepted that bundled television is still the way to go for getting their money’s worth. Companies like DISH, Verizon, and Sony have only announced in the last year their own plans for stand-alone streaming services. With a few clicks, $8 for Netflix NFLX -1.08%, $15 for HBO, $20 for ESPN could easily add up to a higher total than what customers currently pay for only a few channels they actually watch in a bundle. What’s more, it doesn’t look like companies will use the same set-top box, if they use set-top boxes at all (Sony and Verizon are looking to offer services completely on the cloud).

International market research firm Parks Associates estimates that the average revenue per user (ARPU) for U.S. cable customers will continue to rise at 3-5% each year due to increasing fees for content and TV services. Meanwhile, in other countries, affordable, unbundled television is nothing new. In fact, all broadcasters in India and Canada are required by law to offer channels on an a la carte basis and to specify a fixed price per channel. As the third largest TV market behind China, the lessons India has learned throughout the process can be applied abroad.

From the article "How India Is Ahead Of The Game In TV Unbundling" by Rosa Trieu.

Previously In The News

Home Networking's New Push

A study by Parks Associates, a Dallas-based consulting and research firm, estimates that about 20% of new homes built this year will contain some kind of "structured wiring" for computer networking...

54 Megabits And Nothing On

Parks Associates of Dallas says that next year one-third of all new homes built in the U.S. will contain some kind of structured wiring built into the infrastructure of the house suitable for netwo...

Touching Home From Anywhere

Underground fiber-optic cables run from each home to a home Internet gateway device which then manages traffic on a home data network, allowing several PCs to connect to the Internet and also allow...

Against All Odds

Those trends will continue, but maybe not fast enough. EarthLink's digitally literate customers are four times as likely to switch to high-speed as AOL's. If the 4 million users go broadband before...