I swear I’m not saying, “I told you so.” OK, maybe I’m thinking about saying “I told you so.”
Two years ago, I published a Forbes piece noting how even early Connected TV/streaming was showing signs of resembling the cable business that it often mocked and threatened to replace. Fast forward to last week, amid a week of mostly news-free upfronts, as Warner Bros. Discovery
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A quick listen to the frustrations of streaming consumers would tell you why a new/old streaming bundling approach might make sense. “How many services do I need to subscribe to?” “Why do prices keep going up – that was what I hated about cable!” “I pay sub fees, but I also have ads now?” “How come I have this credit card charge for Paramount
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Of course, we already have bundling of multiple services offered by one company: “Disney Bundle” customers who take Hulu and ESPN+ along with Disney+ get an attractive bundled price, WBD’s Max (RIP HBO Max) incorporates Discovery+ content, and Paramount Global has announced that Paramount+ and Showtime will now be a combined streaming service. Yet the proliferation of options is overwhelming. From Comcast alone you can subscribe to NBCU’s Peacock, Xumo, and Now TV (yeah, you’ll have to look it up). But consumers like more than one type of content from more than one content supplier. Maybe the old fashioned “cable business,” for all its mistakes – the failure to create their own Netflix as soon as they saw the power of broadband video is a most obvious one – still have worthwhile features that streaming can draw upon.
The irony is the media business already tried this and kind of let it slip through their fingers. I was part of the original outside team that helped launch Hulu, which was the offspring of Fox
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Several subsequent corporate maneuverings ultimately undermined the notion of Hulu’s partnership. Comcast
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A re-bunding in some fashion wouldn’t be easy or simple. The history of the cable business is littered with some misshapen joint ventures from Excite@Home in the early broadband days to the addressable ad service Canoe Ventures. But the undeniable consumer demand for streaming content and the irreversible trends in linear TV require some profound business creativity here.
The institutional challenges of a re-bundling are not insignificant. I’m frankly skeptical Netflix, Amazon and Apple
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The dual revenue stream is foundational
The FAST (free ad-supported streaming TV) world – led by platforms such as Fox’s Tubi and Paramount’s Pluto TV – has demonstrated its consumer appeal with its “TV comfort food menu” of access to massive content libraries. But to sustain original, top-quality content creation and distribution, multiple revenue streams from subscribers and advertisers, as well as those from theater ticket buyers and merch purchasers, are essential. Consumers have lived with this in some fashion for 40 years and they accept that this is part of the bargain moving forward. It’s disingenuous to think or act otherwise.
Tiering flexibility is essential
Cable’s biggest problem was the inflexibility of the bundle. It doesn’t matter who’s to blame – programmers demanded all their services be carried on the basic bundle that kept expanding for decades, but cable operators also used every new channel as justification for raising rates. Any streaming bundling will require multiple price points with multiple content choices. Some content and some networks won’t make the cut for enough consumers to be viable, but this is the only way to sustain a system consumers will buy into.
Incorporating cross-company genre options is required
Consumers who want kids programming want it all – not just Disney’s. Same for those who are sports fans, news junkies (OK, maybe not Fox News viewers), and reality fans. A real bundle will provide access for different types of consumers to all of what they most want. Some of these “niches” are inevitably going to be more expensive than others – sports of course – but you can’t expect people to sign up for a streaming bundle to pay a premium for sports content they aren’t interested in to begin with. That ship has sailed – and is sinking.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/howardhomonoff/2023/05/24/warner-bros-discoverys-zaslav-floats-streaming-super-bundle–can-it-happen/