March 15, 2012 15:25 dmercer

Big news today as Cisco announces its intention to acquire NDS for $5bn. Both company boards have approved the deal which is expected to close during 2H 2012. NDS is currently owned by News Corp and Permira.

Cisco made headlines last year for most of the wrong reasons, including famously pulling out of most of its consumer-facing businesses such as the Flip camcorder. Acquiring NDS puts it firmly back on the acquisitions radar, and confirms what John Chambers told me during our analyst roundtable at the 2012 CES: “the consumer still remains a key element in Cisco’s strategy”. Cisco supports service providers who support consumers, and NDS fits nicely into that positioning. According to Chambers during the financial analyst call today, NDS’s strength in software is exactly what Cisco’s customers have been looking for.

NDS helped create the pay TV industry. Originally developed out of the News Corp organisation, its smart card technology was a critical element in the development of Sky in the UK, and from that base it expanded into many pay TV operators around the world. Along the way it expanded into interactive (now more fashionably known as smart TV middleware and many other components of the television technology chain. And while the company’s charismatic leader, Abe Peled, used to make great play of the longevity and importance of the smart card/set-top box model, his company nevertheless has been preparing the way for the OTT/connected TV era. The fact that News Corp is willing to sell NDS is another sign (after Sky recently announced its own independent OTT service) that media companies see their subscription businesses as less reliant on the television set-top box, instead moving towards a multi-device, software and network based model.

If anyone doubted Cisco’s seriousness about the consumer video space (rumours about the future of its Scientific Atlanta business regularly resurface), this acquisition confirms it still intends to play a critical role in television’s transformation over the coming years. Assuming that the transaction goes ahead and NDS can be successfully integrated, NDS’s operator relationships, R&D strength and technology visions should help Cisco’s service provider and media customers make better sense of the value chain disruptions which lie ahead.

David Mercer


March 7, 2012 20:38 dmercer

Former President of the European Parliament Pat Cox closed this morning's keynote at Cable Congress 2012 in Brussels by alluding to Roman Emperor Seneca the Younger's warning: "if man does not know to what port he is sailing, no wind is favourable." He was speaking in reference to the never-ending travails of the European Union as it seeks to resolve its financial problems. But he might as well have been commenting on the state of the European cable industry.

Europe's cable TV subscriber base has been flat for many years, although it has had some success in growing TV ARPUs. According to this morning"s press conference at Cable Congress in Brussels the fastest growth is now in broadband data, at least in the German market, where cable broadband had a very slow start.

Manuel Cubero, COO of Kabel Deutschland, made a telling remark when he said that the German cable industry now thinks of broadband customers using OTT video services as its own video customers, and in that context the cable industry’s video or TV customer base is growing.

Cable has always been the original broadband pipe, with the potential to offer video, television, communications, data and advanced services like smart home, all using the same network access platform. But while this inherent multi-service capability has always been seen as a strength, has it also obscured the industry's direction? If cable operators are now happy to accept customers who only pay for data as though they were video customers, what business is cable in?

As our research has shown, cable TV is caught in a pincer movement between higher value, technology-leading satellite services, and free DTT. It’s understandable that cable operators want to emphasise broadband as their growth opportunity, but at the same time I have heard a lot today about video being central to their future. Messages do seem to be somewhat mixed.

During the next panel discussion Mike Fries of Liberty Global touched on the old question of whether cable operators are in the content business. He indicated that cable certainly intended to expand its presence in content. He made the interesting point that cable's primary competitor, in all markets including the US, is free-to-air. So as cable navigates stormy seas, if it is defined primarily in relation to its main competitor this suggests that cable's port can be described as simply getting people to pay for something, or possibly anything.

That conclusion is clearly unsatisfactory so I am on the lookout for further guidance on cable's strategy and direction over the next couple of days. In the worst case perhaps we will just conclude that the sea fog is so thick that we can't even see where we are going, never mind know where and when we are expected to arrive.

David Mercer

 


March 2, 2012 17:29 dmercer

As we approach next week’s important Cable Congress event in Brussels, we went to our ConsumerMetrix survey of 2700 television households to see what European cable customers are saying about their television service in relation to cable’s major platform competitors, satellite and DTT. We are pleased to present the results of this analysis in a complimentary report to coincide with the Cable Congress, which is now available for download from the Strategy Analytics website.

Clearly broadband and other services are also on cable’s agenda, but in this report we’ve focused on television services. Unlike the US, where cable has long been established as the primary television access platform, its availability and customer base across Europe is much more of a patchwork quilt. For a number of historical and structural reasons, both satellite and terrestrial providers have established stronger relative positions in Europe than in the US.

Satellite’s advantages are clear to see from our survey. We asked customers whether their television provider gave them access to advanced services and features such as programme guide search, series recording, and live TV pause. In every case satellite customers were more likely to have access to these capabilities than cable customers. Often the margin is significant: 59% of satellite customers get HDTV channels, compared to 50% of cable; 53% have series recording on satellite services, and only 36% on cable.

 Remarkably perhaps, more satellite customers claim to get VOD from their satellite provider than cable customers: 44% v. 43%. Satellite clearly lacks the integrated pipe required for a true VOD service, although hybrid internet and push-VOD DVR services are available. Nevertheless, the fact that cable’s one big technical advantage has not been maximised demonstrates how much catching up the cable industry has ahead of it. Or is it just that cable customers don’t know what their cable provider offers?

 

While satellite leads in technology rollouts, digital terrestrial television has also had a major impact on Europe’s landscape. Not surprisingly, given that these are often free services, DTT lags behind both cable and satellite in feature availability and performance. But the flipside is that DTT is most highly rated on overall value for money, not surprisingly. In times of economic uncertainty the threat of customer defection to a lower cost option is very real.

 

This satellite/DTT pincer movement presents cable TV with a dilemma: should it concentrate on the innovation threat from satellite (and potentially other new entrants), or try to resist the allure of free digital terrestrial services now widely available across Europe? Can cable meet both challenges, and how can its broadband advantage be used to best effect?

 

I’m looking forward to getting further insight into these and other questions from the senior executives who will be speaking at Cable Congress. I’d also welcome any feedback on our survey findings and invitations to discuss industry issues and strategies during the event.

David Mercer