Can MacGyver Finagle Emerging Markets?
TV.com, an Internet media streaming company backed by CBS (and
Viacom), announced last week that they were beginning to
serve overseas customers, beating rival service Hulu (backed by
NBC and Fox) to the international table. TV.com will not offer its
entire menu, however. For the time being, only short clips of
current shows and full episodes of older series like Beverly Hills
90210 and MacGyver will be available..
|
VITAL WAVE CONSULTING
FREE REPORT |
|
|
 |
|
| |
mHealth for
Development
The opportunity of mobile technology for healthcare in the
developing world.
mHealth for Development surveys the
current landscape of mHealth, including profiles of over 50
mHealth programs across 26 developing countries.
Details |
|
|
 |
|
|
Put aside for the moment any discomfort you may feel about exporting
these particular shows to the rest of the world, and consider the
market entry strategy from a more clinical business perspective. Is
this a case of simply designing a service for mature-market
consumers and offering it to emerging-market consumers, or is it a
clever and inexpensive way to test the waters?
If media companies are
testing the water, are they being too tentative? According to the
Netsize Guide, mobile
TV and video revenues have increased steadily each year in all of
the emerging-market countries surveyed, and China was ranked 4th
in the world with a mobile video market value of $117 million in
2008 (before the broad
rollout of 3G). Further, media and broadcasting companies are safe
to assume that entry barriers such as limited bandwidth and reliable
broadband will decrease as PC and smart-phone ownership spreads and
network infrastructure improves, particularly in emerging-market
cities. Other barriers, such
as international licensing rights and local regulatory environments,
can be overcome through partnerships and revenue-sharing agreements.
Media companies and their networking and device-manufacturer
partners have an excellent opportunity to deliver compelling,
high-demand content to growing sub-segments of emerging-market
consumers – PC owners with broadband, and smart-phone owners with 3G
connectivity. Localizing services for certain regions is not a
particularly difficult technical challenge, nor would it require
major product or business-model innovations. And there are plenty of
advertisers (e.g., Coke, Western Union, Johnson and Johnson, large
local hero brands) with an interest in selling to comparatively
wealthy emerging-market consumers. Near-term
incremental revenues are attainable for media companies, ISPs,
computer and smartphone manufacturers and mobile carriers, as long
as they treat these new markets thoughtfully and with business rigor
(rather than finesse them MacGyver-style with pen cap and a hairpin). |