Despite some stock market price dings for Roku -- moves made by bigger, more traditional media companies, as well as analysts' concerns about too-fast growth -- the overall picture of the OTT TV
industry continues to evolve.
Roku might have a hand in some nagging traditional pay TV disruptions disappearing -- like those looming nasty TV blackouts.
One media analyst says the average
Roku user watches an amazing 3.5 hours of TV through its set-top box or software platform on smart TVs or other devices. By way of comparison, the average Netflix user only watches 71 minutes a
day.
For many, this is an oranges-and-apples comparison -- Roku (mostly an ad-revenue generated site) versus Netflix (no advertising).
Still, one key metric is that Roku brings in
$4.62 million in revenue from its subscribers, estimated to be 29.1 million. (Netflix has around 60 million.) For 2019, Roku projects annual revenues to hit $1.04 billion -- revenue that continues to
rise anywhere from 30% to 40%.
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At the same time, analysts worry about the obvious, especially from seemingly big digital players like Amazon, when it comes to its set-top-box subscribers.
Amazon was recently revealed to be larger than Roku. (Amazon Fire TV has 34 million active users.)
That’s not the only concern. Walt Disney, NBCUniversal and WarnerMedia are bigger --
especially in terms of original content. And that could be a factor.
One troubling area is that the Roku Channel pulls the majority of its advertising revenue from older movies and library
product, stuff from traditional TV-movie companies.
For those who are not familiar with Roku, here’s the big draw: It’s free to Roku users once they are buying set-top-box devices
or, for example, an accessing app via a smart TV. Is that enough in a world of oversupplied “premium TV” shows?
No worries, say senior Roku executives. Those bigger companies are
Roku’s “partners. We can really help those companies build scale if
they want to use some of the marketing techniques we have on our platform,” says Anthony Wood, CEO, Roku, speaking recently on CNBC.
The good news is that the digital/OTT business is
still growing. The bad: Traditional media companies are ramping up in a big way to take a bigger share of this business. New direct-to-consumer platforms may not depend -- as much -- on those
secondary TV distribution deals for revenue growth, money that might come from content deals with Roku.
With many more options for consumers to get their networks, favorite programs and
content, one thing that might fade to black: TV blackouts — or threats of one.