• Conditional access report redraft ready?

    Submitted by ITV Production on Apr 25, 2002

    If this piece of unconfirmed news emanating from Delhi proves true, the industry‘s wait for legislation on conditional access systems (CAS) may well be over sooner rather than later.
    Reports indicate that the final draft of the CAS report, which had been sent back for reworking following strong protests from sections of the industry vis-a-vis its implications, was completed last night. The original draft was prepared by a the task force headed by Rakesh Mohan, joint secretary, I&B ministry. Reports say a two-man team who worked on the final draft looked at three key areas:

    i) The programme of introduction of CAS.

    ii) What changes in law are required to implement CAS?

    iii) What sort of standards to apply and how to calibrate them into the Indian Bureau of Standards.

    If there has been a decision to move forward on CAS, it will set in motion the beginning of the switchover from the catch-all bouquet of several channels as is the system now to one that makes it mandatory for consumers to pay only for the television channels they watch.

  • Conditional access report redraft ready?

    If this piece of unconfirmed news emanating from Delhi proves true, the industry's wait for legislation on conditiona

  • SET aims for No. 1 perch on subscription revenues

    Submitted by ITV Production on Apr 25, 2002

    Sony Entertainment Television has set itself an ambitious agenda for the year ahead on the distribution front. By the end of this fiscal, it aims to become the number one network as far as subscription revenues are concerned.

    This the brief that Shantonu Aditya, SET‘s senior vice-president franchise channels & distribution has before him. Says Aditya: "One of the objectives for the year ahead is to set benchmarks and standards for ourselves. To be the Number 1 network. This doesn‘t mean just subscription revenue collections. It includes customer care and the institution of systems and processes which bring a high level of professionalism into the way we function. We are investing a lot in training our people as well in building relationships with our affiliates."

    While Aditya was not willing to offer any revenue targets, SET will at least have to cross what Star India is expected to take in this year at the current network subscription rate of Rs 40.50, which according to industry sources is about Rs 2500 million.

    Obviously it helps that SET has bagged the telecast rights to all ICC designated one day international cricket, including the next two cricket World Cups over the next six years which is what will be the pivot on which the drive forward will be executed. Then there is the "quality package" that is the "One Alliance" - what the distribution joint venture between SET and Discovery is called. The JV is identical to the one that Zee Telefilms and Turner India formed last December as far as the stake breakup is concerned. Sony has a 74 per cent stake and Discovery holds 26 per in the JV.

    Aditya, who is also president of the Sony Discovery JV, elaborated on the "One Alliance" subscription packages on offer thus:

    Any one of the four channels SET, SET MAX, AXN or Discovery - Rs 36
    Any one of the two channels CNBC India or Animal Planet - Rs 15
    Any two channels - Rs 36.50
    Any three channels - Rs 37
    Any four channels - Rs 38
    The full six-channel package - Rs 40
  • SET aims for No. 1 perch on subscription revenues

    MUMBAI: Sony Entertainment Television has set itself an ambitious agenda for the year ahead on the distribution front

  • SET aims for No. 1 perch on subscription revenues

    Sony Entertainment Television has set itself an ambitious agenda for the year ahead on the distribution front.

  • Mukta sells telecast rights to SET

    Bollywood showman Subhash Ghai's Mukta Arts yesterday ended all speculation regarding the sale of satellite telecast

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