TV stations group have a big wish -- to be a bigger TV entity. Not just focusing on local TV consumers, but a national TV audience -- and marketers.
We are not just talking about possible
deregulation of companies to buy more TV stations -- but where the biggest of TV groups continue to seek
ways to get business scale equal to that of say cable TV networks.
Take Sinclair Broadcast Group efforts to create an local TV advertising consortium, called OxMyx, one where other big TV
station groups could join building a national TV footprint -- “a scalable unwired network” -- when it comes to automated/programmatic buying that U.S media agencies continue to want.
In large part, this is
looking to pull advertising money from mid-to-small cable TV networks. To avoid antitrust concerns the operation would be independently operated with TV station groups as silent equity partners.
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More on the consortium-front: Two of the biggest TV station groups, Sinclair and Nexstar Media have
announced a tech-focused consortium “that will promote spectrum aggregation, innovation and monetization and enhance their abilities to compete in the wireless data transmission
sector.”
This comes with the anticipation of the adoption of the new ATSC 3.0 broadcast transmission standard -- believed to be a basis for new products and services: virtual MVPD
platforms, multicast channels, automotive applications, single frequency networks and wireless data applications.
Nexstar reaches nearly 39% of all U.S. television households; Sinclair is also
close to that coverage level. So you see the numbers are adding up to network-like levels.
Much of this would be easier if more deregulation of local broadcast TV and radio stations would
occur -- specifically letting companies buy more TV stations. Currently, the limit in buying stations is coverage amounting to 39% on U.S. TV homes.
For its part, Sinclair is already looking
nationally -- starting up, or owning national TV networks -- either traditional cable networks or new locally based networks TV stations with local digital over-the-air signals.
Last January,
Sinclair recently bought cable network Tennis Channel for $350 million; recently it started up digital TV networks -- Comet TV, Charge! and TBD.
All this doesn’t mean TV station groups
want to abandon one business advertising effort and move into another. Instead, it gives companies options -- not just against their long-time cable TV competitors, but increasingly against new
digital media platforms, with a local and national focus.