Business Standard

Changing media: From creation to discovery

It is not technology but consumers’ reactions to it that has given rise to the big themes playing out in the Indian media and entertainm­ent market

- VANITA KOHLI-KHANDEKAR

It is not technology but consumers’ reactions to it that has given rise to the big themes playing out in the Indian media and entertainm­ent market.

VANITA KOHLI-KHANDEKAR writes

Carvaan, a Bluetooth speaker loaded with 5,000 old Hindi songs, is one of the biggest media hits of 2017. S are ga ma’ s answer to thei Podis shaped like an old Murphy radio, has four dials, and is the easiest thing to operate. Since its launch earlier this year, it has sold 95,000 units and is a ~40cr ore brand. By March 2018, it will cross 500,000 units and ~200crore. Car va an illustrate­s the power of something the media industry lost in the technology madness that hit it with the internet— serendipit­y. There is a body of consumers who want the passive media experience— the lean-back one, and nott he lean-forward one.

The second thing the industry lost, after the internet disrupted it, is the ability to make consumers pay for content. That is bouncing back with a vengeance across India’s~ 1,26,200-crore media and entertainm­ent industry. And the third theme— random, serendipit­ous creativity; high levels of it and lots of it.

The push for pay

For more than 15 years now, as the internet grew, it brought tremendous freedom and flexibilit­y. Consumers can choose what portion of an album, newspaper, or film they want to hear, read, or watch. Theycan choose when, where, and what device they want to do it on. This has led to a race for customisat­ion.

Take news for instance. If you area liberal, your Facebook and Twitter feeds are full of news and alerts from liberal websites. The Google and the Facebook algorithm, among others, track you relentless­ly honing their knowledge of your likes, dislikes, buys, browsing, viewing, and soon. You end up in a silo where you are only being expose dto, discussing, andre acting to ideas that you fundamenta­lly approve of—a ghetto is at ion that has been documented in scores of research studies. This has created a space for fake news— pictures, videos or news items created to generate traffic and, therefore, ad revenues or propaganda. There are hundreds of teenagers sitting in V el es, Macedonia who cooked up headlines such as‘ Hilary Clinton isa murder er ,’ and changed the course of the US Presidenti­al election. In India, many lynchings, riots, and conflicts area result of a fake video or Whats App message.

Consumers are now pushing back. According to the annual Digital News Report, brought out by the Oxfordbase­d Reuters Institute for Study of Journalism, Americans paying to access online news doubled from 8 per cent in 2015 to 16 per cent in 2016. This includes ongoing subscripti­ons, oneoff payments and donations. This trend is mirrored in the UK, and other parts of Europe. Almost 29 per cent of the American respondent­s said a key reason for paying was because they ‘want to help fund journalism’. That roughly is the reason Indians are donating generously to Alt News, The Wire, or subscribin­g to The Ken or Rocket Post, among other news brands.

Alt News, Boom, and SMHoaxSlay­er, among others run fact-check sites that debunk fake news.

Consider entertainm­ent. At five million views in 10 days, Bose

Dead/Alive is proving to be a big online hit from Balaji Telefilms better known for TV shows such as Naagin. The critically-acclaimed Bose is one of the 12 original shows made for its video app Alt Balaji. The ad-free, subscripti­onbased platform claims 12 million downloads and a million viewers on the web. That is not much if you consider that a single episode of a top-rated show, say Kya Haal Mr Panchaal, gets over 12 million impression­s on Star Bharat. But Bose Dead/Alive or Inside

Edge on Amazon Video are the harbingers of a change that we had hoped online would bring, but never did — of bringing intellectu­al property (IP) and creativity back to the centre of the entertainm­ent business.

The growth of online video in India is an old story. There are more than 431 million Indians online, of which, roughly 300 million are watching videos. At the same time, 875 million Indians continue to watch about three hours of TV a day. At ~2,000 crore currently, online video is a non-entity compared to the ~58,830 crore TV generates. But the two forms of video consumptio­n feed off each other. What works on TV generally works online and a whole lot of online consumptio­n is about catch-up TV. This is why YouTube remains the largest video player in India, followed by Star’s Hotstar. But these two large players have been subsidised by their profitable search and broadcast businesses, respective­ly.

That changed with the entry of Amazon Video and Net fl ix in the last couple of years. They are spending huge amounts of money on commission­ing good shows across a variety of genres and languages, and charging users for it. This, in turn, is pushing other players—Alt Balaji, Voot, Viu, among the 30-odd video a pp sin India—to up the an te in the hope of creating the next Net fl ix .“As a content creator, it is an amazing time because everybody is throwing money at me ,” says Tanmay Bhat, co-founder of AIB.

The world is a stage

Even if they aren’t, it is a wonderful time to be one.

Technical S harm aji is a You Tube channel by Pr a val S harm a, a regular North Indianchap. He helps you understand tech products, largely mobile phones, laptops, etalin Hindi. Heisthe second-biggest You Tube creator of 2017, with 3.9 million subscriber­s( viewers ). The first is BB Ki Vine sat 5 million subscriber­s. Here, Bhu van B am plays different characters inh um ouro us little ski ts. The list of top 10 You Tube creators includes an inspiratio­nal speaker, two stand-up comedians, and a cook, among others. Most started with just mobile phones.

So, on the one hand is the rise of pay driven, high-quality content, and on the other hand, is this deluge of unknowns bursting out to wood work. You Tube, Vimeo, or Daily Motion have become national audition the at res. Many of these top 10 creators will soon be picked up by the big tech, telecom or media companies to fuel their online video growth just like AI B signed on with Hot star. The building of a content ecosystem that di gs deep into the talent pool of India, funnels them towardsaud­iences, bigbrandsa­ndthe money is almost over. From creation to discovery to popularity, this ecosystem is as serendipit­ous as the next song you are likely to hear on Car va an.

 ??  ?? Bose Dead/Alive on Alt Balaji or Inside Edge on Amazon Video are the harbingers of a change that we had hoped online would bring, but never did — of bringing intellectu­al property and creativity back to the centre of the entertainm­ent business
Bose Dead/Alive on Alt Balaji or Inside Edge on Amazon Video are the harbingers of a change that we had hoped online would bring, but never did — of bringing intellectu­al property and creativity back to the centre of the entertainm­ent business

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