Title: PBMA
1PBMA
2- Were all at various points on the learning curve
- There are no dumb questions
- There are no easy answers
3- CAVEAT 1
- Those who say they know how the transition to
digital broadcasting will come out dont know
what theyre talking about.
4- CAVEAT 2
- Three months from now, these will be the old
days, technologically speaking
5- CAVEAT 3
- If some aspects of the transition to digital
broadcasting dont make sense to you . . .
6- CAVEAT 3
- If some aspects of the transition to digital
broadcasting dont make sense to you . . . - . . . it could be that they dont make sense.
7WHAT WERE GOING TO TALK ABOUT
- The Rocky Road to Digital Broadcasting
- The Strategic Inflection Point
- Why We Think the Way Broadcasters Think
- Whats Different Now?
- Implications for Public Broadcasters
8- THE ROCKY ROAD TO DIGITAL BROADCASTING
9THE ROCKY ROAD TO DIGITAL BROADCASTING
- Much is being made of the transition to digital
broadcasting, with HDTV, widescreen,
multicasting, datacasting, 5.1 Dolby Digital
audio - DTV has enormous service potential for public
broadcasters - But consumer market has been very slow to develop
10THE ROCKY ROAD TO DIGITAL BROADCASTING
- original 2002/2003/2006 timetable wont be met
- broadcasters must build DTV transmitters to keep
licenses for analog stations - new FCC Chairman Michael Powell taking
marketplace approach
11THE ROCKY ROAD TO DIGITAL BROADCASTING
- obstacles
- more than 1200 stations not yet on air
- very high cost of sets and receivers (check the
ads) - reception problems
- no cable must-carry
- no cable-ready DTV receivers
- chicken and egg problem no killer app content
12THE ROCKY ROAD TO DIGITAL BROADCASTING
- 250,000,000 analog sets in USTVHHs
- 27,000,000 (est.) to be sold in 2001
- every analog set purchased now is a DTV receiver
which wont be purchased in the next few years - 35-50,000(?) DTV receivers in USTVHHs
- Beware of industry reports!
13THE ROCKY ROAD TO DIGITAL BROADCASTING
- analog TV getting better, less expensive
- 85 rule
- 85 of the homes in a TV market must be able to
receive and display a broadcast DTV signal before
analog stations go off the air - analog broadcasting will remain our principal
distribution platform for the next 5 - 10 years
14THE ROCKY ROAD TO DIGITAL BROADCASTING
- Will cable rescue the broadcasters?
- cable could permit viewers to watch DTV stations
on their analog sets - Time Warner Cable agreement for PTV DTV
- discussions with other MSOs underway
- No current discussion of DBS carriage of DTV
stations
15- THE STRATEGIC INFLECTION POINT
16THE STRATEGIC INFLECTION POINT
- Intel Chairman Andy Groves strategic
inflection point - Thats the point in the life cycle of an
organization, business, or individual, when fewer
and fewer of the old rules apply, and the new
rules are being made up as you go along.
17THE STRATEGIC INFLECTION POINT
- Intel Chairman Andy Groves strategic
inflection point - Organizations which fail to change their ways in
order to navigate through the strategic
inflection point go out of business. Grove goes
on to say that in a few years, there will be no
Internet companies - companies will either be on
the Internet, or they will be out of business.
18THE STRATEGIC INFLECTION POINT
- Much of what we do is based on the legacy of
where weve been, where weve come from. - If we were starting over today, what would we do
differently?
19WHY WE THINK THE WAY BROADCASTERS THINK
- Marshall McLuhan (paraphrased)
- We are speeding into the future at 90 mph with
our eyes firmly fixed on the rear view mirror.
20WHY WE THINK THE WAY BROADCASTERS THINK
- We are accidental broadcasters
- Broadcasting was the only mass communications
technology available when we started out as
educational television stations - At the time, there was no cable, satellite, home
video, the Internet, DVDs, etc.
21WHY WE THINK THE WAY BROADCASTERS THINK
- We were conditioned to think of our audience
members as being largely anonymous to us - and to
each other - because broadcasting is a mass
communications technology
22WHY WE THINK THE WAY BROADCASTERS THINK
- In the past, competition was limited by the small
number of broadcast licenses in each community,
which created a high threshold to entry, limited
audience fragmentation - Educational and public service organizations
without broadcast stations had to come to us to
to reach viewers and listeners.
23WHY WE THINK THE WAY BROADCASTERS THINK
- We controlled what programs would be made
available, and when, and how they would be used,
releasing them in real time, beginning on the
hour and half hour. - Over the years, we became used to a predictable,
steady rate of change, and behaved accordingly.
24 25WHAT'S DIFFERENT NOW?
26WHAT'S DIFFERENT NOW?
- On the Internet . . . no one knows youre a dog
27WHAT'S DIFFERENT NOW?
- On the Internet . . . no one knows youre a dog
- . . . or a radio station, TV station, newspaper,
library, museum, school or individual
28WHAT'S DIFFERENT NOW?
- The digital continuum
- text/audio/graphics/moving images
- where does print end, radio begin, radio end, TV
begin? - radio and TV stations, newspapers producing and
distributing print, audio and video on the
Internet
29WHAT'S DIFFERENT NOW?
- The Internet lowers threshold to entry - no
broadcast license required - other public service media providers, e.g. public
libraries, museums, colleges, universities moving
out on their own - (see A Digital Gift to the Nation - Fulfilling
the Promise of the Digital and Internet Age by
Lawrence Grossman and Newton Minow - especially
essay by Richard Somerset Ward Public Television
in the Digital Age)
30WHAT'S DIFFERENT NOW?
- shift from mass communications to mass
customization - Jeff Bezos - Amazon.com is a store for one
- Internet facilitates relationship building
- the audience need no longer be anonymous to the
communicator, nor to each other
31WHAT'S DIFFERENT NOW?
- While waiting for digital broadcasting, good
enough technologies are proliferating in the
marketplace, offering features of broadcast DTV
at lower cost to consumers - More to say in next session at 1030 A.M.
- Digital Conversion for Public Broadcasting
Funding Technology - (Pine Room)
32- IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
33IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- Organize around core competencies
- content creation
- content packaging
- content distribution and access
- providing content-related services
- developing individualized customer relationships
34IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- We have to learn to be platform agnostic
- developing parallel production techniques
- ideal is to Create Once/Play Everywhere (COPE)
- how much of our programming needs to be provided
in real-time to the end user?
35IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTER
- We need to learn to speak the new languages of
increasingly customized and interactive media - look at job descriptions and training
- look at work flow processes
- look at interdepartmental relationships - are
they conducive to working across media platforms
toward a common vision?
36IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- As control shifts to the user, we are
transitioning to digital libraries, providing
both scheduled program services as well as direct
access to content, on demand - The editorial content we create, acquire and
package is one of our stations most valuable
assets
37IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- We need to manage and organize editorial assets
strategically to derive maximum value from them,
make them easily accessible for use today and in
the future. - Need to do this as a system, so we dont create
175 independent versions of the Dewey Decimal
system.
38IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- The global -reach euphoria created by the
Internet has been tempered by the realization
that because almost everyone lives someplace,
geography doesnt go away as a market criterion.
39IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- All local public broadcasting stations are under
increasing pressure to demonstrate their
relevance to their local constituents - If local PTV stations are so important, why are
we so afraid of the Discovery Channel? - If local public radio stations are so important,
why are we so afraid of the deathstar DBS
services? - In most communities, the local PTV station is the
last locally-owned station.
40IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- Need to optimize the role of the local station in
the community as the local retailer of content
and services - link national programs with local community
- link outreach and fundraising
41IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- Invest in building relationships with viewers and
listeners - Hypothesis The more engaged the viewer and
listener, the higher their lifetime value as a
contributor to the station
42IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- How do we free up the resources to pursue new
opportunities, focus on strategic opportunities?
43IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- centralcasting
- 350M problem/opportunity (est. cost of
individual DTV master controls) - new PBS interconnection system in 2006
- state nets as models
- joint master control operations in Denver, NYC
- Northwest ADDE project
- NPR content depot
44IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- Develop alternatives to real-time delivery of
recorded content to stations, to end users - use of the Internet for feeding content
- Program scheduling services
- Backroom fundraising services
45IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTERS
- Build partnerships with other community
institutions - access new sources of funding
- change perception of station from broadcaster to
locus, catalyst and collaborator with other
public interest information providers
46WHAT WEVE TALKED ABOUT
- The Rocky Road to Digital Broadcasting
- The Strategic Inflection Point
- Why We Think the Way Broadcasters Think
- Whats Different Now?
- Implications for Public Broadcasters
47PBMA