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Ovum: Mobile TV fails to deliver

Ovum: Mobile TV fails to deliver

Mobile video

Despite the phenomenal growth in smartphone technology, there are still significant barriers to making mobile television a viable and sustainable industry, according to new research from Ovum.

In a new report, the independent technology analyst claims that most attempts to deliver television services via mobile handsets have been unsuccessful, and this trend will continue due to the numerous obstacles that exist.

Tim Renowden, Ovum analyst and author of the report, said: “While viewing web video via mobile handsets has taken off in recent years, the delivery of TV services has promised much but delivered little. At best it has achieved incremental revenues to existing web services, at worst substantial investment write-downs.

“There are a range of issues standing in the way of developing an environment that will enable mobile TV to take off as a successful industry. These range from infrastructure issues and a lack of investment to the simple absence of evidence to prove the consumer use case.”

For broadcasters, mobile TV opens up a new distribution channel for live programmes on a multitude of new devices. This could both complement and act as a competitor to the main living room TV, with potential advertising and premium subscription revenue gains. However, with a long list of challenges to be overcome, it remains a huge risk for television networks.

According to the report, mobile network operators (MNOs) have a strategic disincentive to subsidise handsets with integrated mobile digital TV technology, as it could result in lost revenues for them, limiting handset availability through dominant operator channels.

Meanwhile, unless TV networks are prepared to make upfront investments in content and infrastructure for mobile TV, which many are reluctant to do, consumer demand for handsets will remain weak. These are just two in a long list of barriers that Renowden believes are holding the industry back.

Examples of failed mobile TV models include Qualcomm’s MediaFlo network in the US, DVB-H in Europe and several 3G-based services throughout Europe, North America and Asia-Pacific. Linear mobile TV has succeeded in markets such as Japan, South Korea, Brazil and other parts of Latin America. However, typically these services rely on digital terrestrial television or analogue terrestrial and are delivered free to consumers with the support of regulatory policies.

To find out more about mobile, book a ticket for MediaTel Group’s Come on Mobile… Stand Up and Deliver! event on 18 March. The panel includes Virgin, O2, Google and Facebook.

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