National Post

Bell targets cord-cutters with live-TV streaming

TELECOM App-based service aims to woo viewers

- Emily Jackson

• BCE Inc. is launching an app-based television package in an effort to attract younger customers as viewing habits shift from traditiona­l cable subscripti­ons to online video streaming.

On Monday, Bell released a new TV product called Alt TV that requires only an Internet connection, not a subscripti­on or a set-top box, for customers to watch live TV on their laptops, tablets, smartphone­s or television sets.

The contract- free service starts at $ 14.95 per month for 30 channels, with addons available. But it’s only available to Bell customers in Ontario and Quebec with unlimited Internet packages with speeds of at least 25 MBps (such plans start at $84.95 per month).

The service comes as providers experiment with new ways to keep people from cutting TV subscripti­ons and to encourage-customers to pay for a little bit of TV instead of relying exclusivel­y on Netflix and other online video services. Despite the popularity of Internet-protocol TV offered by telcos Bell and Telus Corp., overall TV subscripti­ons dropped by nearly 250,000 last year as revenue from Internet packages surpassed TV for the first time.

As Bell noticed this trend, it started working on a service to target younger profession­als and people just graduating from university or college who weren’t signing up for traditiona­l TV packages, said Rizwan Jamal, president of Bell Residentia­l Services.

His team di s c overed people in this demographi­c often don’t have TVs, Jamal said in an interview, so Bell spent a couple of years developing an app that didn’t require extra hardware. Taking away costs associated with maintainin­g and installing the set-top boxes allows Bell to be “fairly aggressive” with the price for Alt TV.

It’s only available to Bell customers because broadcast licences require TV content be delivered over a managed network, Jamal said. Indeed, Bell took upstart V- Media to court for offering over-the-air TV channels over the Internet via an app. Bell won.

“At this point we’re not pursuing or looking at a service that would be over the open Internet,” he said.

Jamal wouldn’t reveal Bell’s goal for customer additions for the new product, but he did say the “overwhelmi­ng vast majority” of the TV market is interested in its traditiona­l service.

Alt TV customers can watch two TV streams at a time through the Fibe TV app, but it is not possible to record the shows.

Telus launched a similar service last month called Pik TV for $ 20 per month, although it requires a set- top box.

Both services are even cheaper than the $25 skinny TV packages providers started offering last year at the behest of the federal broadcast regulator, which mandated scaled- back packages after consumers complained they paid for channels they never watched. But uptake for skinny packages has been slow.

“For the $10 per month being saved, one is not exactly getting a cutting edge viewing experience,” said Brahm Eiley of Convergenc­e Research, which monitors cordcuttin­g in North America. Comcast and Cox have had limited traction with similar offers in the U.S., he noted.

“In some ways, these off ers appear to highlight that the traditiona­l offer, although a bit more, is worth having,” he said.

NOT EXACTLY A CUTTING EDGE VIEWING EXPERIENCE.

 ?? DAVE CHAN FOR NATIONAL POST ?? Mandatory distributi­on of OMNI addresses a “pressing need,” says CRTC chairman CEO Jean-Pierre Blais.
DAVE CHAN FOR NATIONAL POST Mandatory distributi­on of OMNI addresses a “pressing need,” says CRTC chairman CEO Jean-Pierre Blais.

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