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IPTV 2007: PVRs/DVRs Boost Subscription TV Revenues

However, Questions Are Raised About Advertising Revenues

      

Operators might not think of the hardware as one of the big attractions of IPTV, but customers quizzed recently by Forrester Research rate their Personal Video Recorders (PVRs) as one of its most compelling features. PVR’s are sometimes called Digital Video Recorders (DVRs) and record programming without tapes or DVDs.


That came as pleasant if somewhat surprising news to David Burks, a senior manager at hardware manufacturer Seagate.

Quoting Forrester at the IPTV World Forum in London yesterday, Burks said that “PVRs engender strong feelings among consumers and that the majority of users even claim they have improved the quality of their family and social lives.”

“Only two percent of PVR users eventually abandon them,” said Burks, who reckons that makes them a vital tool for operators in reducing churn and maximizing IPTV revenue.

Indeed, the research indicates that 40 percent of PVR users place such a premium on the value of the devices that they are willing to pay for regulator storage upgrades.

And because familiarity with a PVR encourages users to experiment with other features of pay TV, they have been shown to increase Average Revenue Per User (ARPU) from existing cable and satellite deployments, according to Burks. He says that surveys conducted in the U.S. indicate that monthly ARPU is US$15.00 higher for cable customers that have a PVR, and US$11.00 higher for satellite customers with the device.

The message is clearly catching on among operators at the show. Isabella Kosch, the product manager for Swisscom, says that customers of Bluewin TV, Swisscom’s recently launched IPTV service, are provided with a 160Gbyte PVR for free, and that simple functionality (recording can be done at the touch of a button) has been designed with the aim of boosting usage.

In the future, Burks expects PVRs to become an even ‘stickier’ component of the IPTV mix as operators realize their full potential as devices that can store a range of content other than television programs, including; music and photographs.

But not everyone is so upbeat on the issue. “The question is what happens to the 30-second advertising slot with the advent of the PVR,” says Ian Valentine, technical services director for Sky Interactive.

Because PVRs allow customers to easily fast forward through television content, they offer users a means of bypassing commercials and could threaten the advertising-revenue model.

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