Title: Public Television Strategic Investment Scenarios
1Public TelevisionStrategic Investment Scenarios
- Digital Distribution Implementation Initiative
- NETA 2003 Conference
- San Antonio, January 9, 2003
2Participants
- Work scope involved both radio and television
scenarios. The latter covered in this report.
3Core Working Group CPB
- Ed Caleca, PBS
- Jeff Clarke, KQED
- Dennis Haarsager, KWSU, NW Public Radio (DDII
consultant) - Byron Knight, Wisconsin
- David Liroff, WGBH
- Pete Loewenstein, NPR
- André Mendes, PBS
- Jim Paluzzi, Boise State Radio
- Ted Coltman, CPB
- Andy Russell, CPB
- Doug Weiss, CPB
- Alison White, CPB
R/TV Radio Television Civilian
4Multidiscipline Experts Group
- Jon Abbott, WGBH
- Brenda Barnes, KUSC
- Rod Bates, Nebraska
- Joe Campbell, KAET
- Scott Chaffin, KUED
- Beth Courtney, Louisiana
- Vinnie Curren, WXPN
- Tom DuVal, WMRA
- Tim Emmons, Northern Public Radio
- Fred Esplin, U. of Utah
- Glenn Fisher, KTCA
- Jack Galmiche, Oregon
- John King, Vermont
- Ted Krichels, WPSX
- Jon McTaggart, Minnesota Public Radio
- Paige Meriwether, KUED
- Steve Meuche, WKAR
- Peter Morrill, Idaho
- Meg OHara, WNET
5Multidiscipline Experts Group
- Maynard Orme, Oregon
- Allan Pizzato, Alabama
- Lou Pugliese, onCourse
- Don Rinker, Alaska
- Meg Sakellarides, Connecticut
- Bert Schmidt, WVPT
- Jonathan Taplin, Intertainer
- Kate Tempelmeyer, Nebraska
- Tom Thomas, SRG
- Mike Tondreau, Oregon
- David Wolff, Fathom
- Art Zygielbaum, Nebraska
6Current Environmental Scan
7Public Broadcasting Today
- Everyone is baking their own cookies
- Hail Mary method of funding depreciation
- Usage strong compared to other public service
providers, not so (TV) compared to other
broadcasters - Policy support of pubcasting less assured
- Our esteem is an asset that can be leveraged or
squandered - Other public service entrants entering electronic
media
8The Electronic Media Today
- Conglomerates dominate ownership and control
diverse distribution outlets, with both
horizontal and vertical operations and
pricing advantages - Users are beginning to take control of when they
access programming - Subscriber-based economic models (e.g., HBO) are
competing with ad-supported ones
9Television Today
- Cable/DBS are gatekeepers for the main receiver
in 85 of homes - Cable/DBS increasingly deliver original progr.
- Cable/DBS focus is on quantity vs. quality
- Non-broadcast channels are on threshold of
overtaking broadcast channels in viewing - Television advertising may erode as cable DBS
develop greater advertising options - No federal support for multicast no active
support for non-HD models
10Diverging Fortunes of Public R/TV
- Terrestrial digital transition is mandatory for
TV, voluntary for radio - Content production entities are generally
licensee based (with major exception of NPR) - Public TV viewing and number of members is
steadily declining, while public radio listening
and memberships have increased - Public radio players have explored alternative
distribution platforms to a greater degree than
have PTVs
11Five-Year Horizon
12Television In Five Years
- Terrestrial will be of minor consequence as
last-mile distribution to mass audiences - Viewers will choose from incr. customized,
personalized programming options - Revenues from other than spot advertising will
become significant and competitive - Must convince replaces must carry some
stations will be shut out of cable/DBS
13Television In Five Years
- Erosion of audience and revenue threaten
existence of many licensees may be fewer
licensees - A variety of technologies, wired and wireless, to
compete for delivery of services - Audiences will still value storytelling, but
truly compelling content will continue to be
scarce - First stations in the new mobile video/multimedia
service will begin operation
14Five-Year Horizon
- Plausible But Less Probable Outcomes Wins and
Losses
15Unexpected Wins
- DTV killer application content or service
that accelerates adoption - DTV universal set-top box works with a wide
variety of digital services, including DTT - New broadcast models (rich media, mobile) prove
economically viable
16Closet of Our Anxieties
- DTV DOA with stranded 1B investment diminished
credibility with funders - No federal funding for public TV NGIS
capabilities drastically reduced - Early surrender of analog spectrum
- Continued reduction of funding for public
broadcasting
17Strategic Investment Scenarios
- Investments may be individual or collective
18Collective Investment Modalities
- Toolkits activities or tools licensees can use
to achieve best practices without need for
collaboration - Service Clouds stations outsource significant
activities created for specialized purposes - Colonizers efforts to operate public
broadcasting mission elements independently with
or without station involvement
19Scenario 1 Sustaining
- Make strategic investments in initiatives that
sustain the legacy (broadcasting) business - Tends to maintain operational independence
- Preserves as much gross tonnage of public
service as possible, at least in near term
lengthening the glide path - High investments in toolkits, somewhat lower
investments in service clouds, little in
colonizers
20Scenario 2 Repositioning
- Make strategic investments in initiatives that
reposition public television in new directions
consistent with historic mission - Capacity and scale created at collective level
- Emphasis on editorial (programming) rather than
operational independence - Accepts the current glide path but creates new
climb paths - Increased investments in service clouds and
colonizers
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24Provocations
25Television Provocations
- Form virtual broadcast groups, digital
distribution companies that operate key functions
of current stations across markets - Provide elective, centralized station operations
services through PBS - Create public service digital condominium
association with other state, national and
international advanced networks - Task system economics panel with devising
strategies to redeploy insert ambitious amount
here to priorities
26Virtual Broadcast Groups
- Repositioning service clouds
- Provides competitive (to commercial group
stations) scale and cost savings - Create common technical standards and best
practices - Licensees freed to concentrate on things not
transparent to viewers, on building new
constituency relationships, and fundraising - Groups could aggregate for multiple reasons
27PBS Station Operations Services
- Repositioning Service Cloud
- Provides similar functions to VBGs, though
perhaps more oriented toward technical ops - Natural extension of NGIS role and mission
- Services could also be provided with VBG
affiliates
28Digital Condominium Association
- Builds on blossoming relationships with Internet2
and affiliated state networks (e.g., IA, MI, TX,
WA) - Scale saves substantial dollars on capacity
- Enables public television to serve emerging
communications needs of education, libraries,
museums, et al. - Multiplies political capital for interconnection
- Peering provides collaborative environment for
all condo residents the pool
29Redeploy To Key Priorities
- Wide agreement on unnecessary expenditures at
your station (not mine) - Unnecessary expenditures transparent to our
viewers - Perhaps we really can afford our service
priorities - Set an ambitious goal and task a panel with the
task of identifying where and how with proceeds
redeployed to programming, capital needs and
repositioning colonizer investments
30DDII Scenarios Documents
- www.technology360.com
- Scroll to Documents
31Contact Information
- Dennis L. Haarsager, DDII Consultant
- 1019 Border Ln., Moscow, ID 83843-8737
- 208.892.9445 e-fax 206.770.6100
- haarsager_at_moscow.com
- Associate Vice President, Educational
Telecommunications Technology, Washington State
University - Box 642530, Pullman WA, 99164-2530
- 509.335.6530 e-fax 888.455.1070
haarsager_at_wsu.edu