For some time now, media companies have been under heightened pressure to cut costs while trying to keep up with new technology and evolving consumer choices. Newspapers felt it first, when readers
were increasingly driven to online and mobile content that wasn’t easily supported by typical advertising rates.
Now, over a decade later, most well-known publications have adapted to
the changing landscape by migrating content, ads and in some cases subscriptions to digital platforms.
Traditional television has been dominant for so long that focus on new models has not
been warranted until recently. Initially, over-the-top (OTT) offerings like YouTube simply added more video content (primarily user-generated) to the market. But over time, long-form, high-quality
content normally seen on TV became more prevalent and popular on these platforms. With larger audiences watching a similar content online, leading digital platforms have started competing directly
with the TV networks.
Today, increased programming competition from digital-only competitors in with linear and video on demand (VOD) is forcing traditional broadcast companies to re-think
strategies and adjust to modern viewing habits. For years, digital media companies that came to consumers via the technology first, content second model struggled to provide broadcast-quality content
to a growing, built-in audience of younger, digital natives.
That is no longer the case — Netflix and Amazon are great examples of companies spearheading the trend of producing
broadcast-quality programming on digital platforms. Broadcast and cable providers now realize the need to offer high quality programming on digital platforms, but bringing content from the broadcast
format to digital is a complex and expensive undertaking.
The fact is, millennials are changing how video is watched and broadcasters need to find ways to move into the future of TV and video
without reducing investments in programming. Creating cheaper content is not the answer—if anything, cost-cutting should be focused on freeing up more money to be invested in quality content
consumers demand and seek out.
Content is, after all, the most significant differentiating factor for media companies, it drives audiences, which drives advertising and subscription/affiliate
fees, and therefore should be the top priority for media companies. Technology and infrastructure operation, on the other hand, doesn’t have to be.
We want our content in real time, on
the platform we choose, and we want it to be a high-quality, uninterrupted experience.
Forward-thinking media companies that recognize this shift have benefited immensely from
outsourcing tech ops to shared service partners.
Successful media companies must also be able to reach an increasing number of cord cutters who turn to digital platforms like Twitter, Facebook
and Yahoo to watch games. To do so involves an entirely separate set of operations that could include streaming of their own digital offerings (if they have rights), streaming to authenticated OTT
offerings, syndicating promos and highlights to digital media leaders, or streaming to digital-only rights holders.
The 2016 Rio Olympics, did not perform well in TV ratings compared to
previous years, however it did do well online. Viewers who streamed the Olympics online increased significantly compared to previous years. According to NBCU, nearly 50 million viewers streamed 3.4
billion minutes across the Web and on mobile and connected devices, with more than half of streamers under the age of 35.
It’s not the delivery that makes you special, it’s your
content. It’s far better to leave content delivery in the hands of experts whose sole focus is to deliver media anywhere in one seamless operation with broadcast-level quality. Invest in your
differentiators.
Outsource the back-office and behind-the-scenes stuff to a shared service provider. Focus instead on making killer, high quality content that keeps you competitive and in
demand as amazing as possible. Media companies should be asking themselves what they can do now to ensure they can afford the next blockbuster when it comes. You never know when the next “Game
of Thrones” equivalent will land.