Fundamental shifts in consumer behavior are driving content creators to cater to an increasingly fragmented audience with their approaches to both live and on-demand content. Not only are these shifts presenting significant challenges to the established broadcasters and the developers that supply them with video workflow solutions, but they are also opening up opportunities for new broadcasters and new solution providers to enter into the market.
In this post, the first in a new series exploring how the broadcast industry is evolving, we are going to explore the new economic realities of broadcast, how new players are thriving in this new world, and how traditional broadcast players will need to evolve to stay relevant.
New Economic Realities of Broadcast
New Production Realities for Broadcast
Contribution: Per-event costs need to be minimized through rapidly adopting remote production techniques that leverage low-cost live connectivity. Traditional approaches to event coverage, with large on-site OB production vans and teams of staff, are simply no longer sustainable as the number of events continues to grow, and the number of viewers per event continues to shrink.
The Race Between New World and Traditional Broadcasters
However, the traditional broadcasters are not resting on their laurels. They have extensive knowledge in broadcasting high-quality content for the world’s most prestigious events. Their experience in traditional workflows and distribution channels, plus their access to resources and large audiences, means they can experiment with the latest technology innovations and eventually expand what they cover in an effort to satisfy the ever-growing appetite for live content and win the battle for eyeballs. It will be a battle.
The Emergence of New Broadcast Solution Providers
These new technology companies are disrupting traditional broadcast workflows and are providing easy to use solutions that may not yet be as robust as existing legacy, big iron systems. However, the new cloud services offer a significantly lower barrier to entry with consumption-based pricing models and minimal capital expenditures to get started, and technology-wise are addressing enough problems to appeal to a new breed of broadcasters – notably companies with niche viewership or younger demographics that only consume content online.
Embracing the Future of Broadcast Solutions
It is also clear that broadcasters, both new and old are embracing this future and adapting to the new economic realities of the industry. Because if they don’t embrace the future, they will be left in the past.
Courtesy: Peter Maag, CMO, HaivisionCMO, Haivision