Business Standard

Entertainm­ent channels’ viewership looks up. But their world has changed

- VANITA KOHLI-KHANDEKAR

If Viacom18 and Sony are planning a merger, there couldn’t be a better time. That is the first thing that hits you when you look at Broadcast Audience Research Council numbers for what has happened to television broadcasti­ng in the last sixodd months. The second is how much the market has changed.

In the first half of 2020 television viewership has risen by 9 per cent over the first half of 2019. The average time spent has gone up from 3 hours and 46 minutes to over four hours. Yet India’s top five broadcast networks have lost audience share. The estimated ~18,000-crore Star India fell from 19 per cent network share in 2019 to 16 per cent in the seven months till July. What saved it was Disney’s takeover of parent Fox in 2019. Add Disney India to the Star kitty and India’s largest broadcaste­r held steady at roughly last year’s levels. The ~8,130-crore Zee fell from 18.7 per cent to 17.2 per cent.

The reasons are not hard to find. A bulk of the audience and revenues for the top five in the ~79,000-crore Indian broadcasti­ng industry comes from entertainm­ent programmin­g. The lockdown and the rolling effects of the pandemic meant that daily soaps, reality shows, all the stuff that drives viewership and keeps audiences hooked were missing. Therefore, while viewership rose, a lot of it went to the worst programmin­g form on TV — news.

The other big gainers were films and kids. For Star, an added factor was its inability to broadcast the Indian Premier League or IPL in April. Star is one of the few networks with heavy investment­s in domestic sports programmin­g, largely cricket, and kabaddi.

Of all the broadcaste­rs, the two rumoured to be in merger talks — the ~4,025-crore Viacom18 (Colors, Nick, MTV) and the ~6,336-crore Sony (Sab, Max) — have been the steadiest. While there are no comments from Sony on whether the merger is on, it is clear about what kept it going.

“The bigger beating (during the pandemic) has been on fiction shows. Our strength was Thekapilsh­arma show and our weekend line up. That worked and we grew initially. Also, Sab TV did well with Tarakmehta­kaoo lt ahc hash ma ,” says Rohit Gupta, president, Sony Pictures Network. A similar focus on its usually strong weekend programmin­g (Bigg Boss, Khatronkek­hil adi, na ag in 5), mythologic­als and other repeats (Balika Vadhu, karmaphald­aa tasha ni) and lots of dubbed programmin­g worked for Viacom18. On the regional side it actually gained 2 per cent viewership share.

“The No.1 learning during this lockdown has been on creation versus curation. We have started challengin­g our notions of original versus older shows,” says Ravish Kumar, head, regional TV network, Viacom18. In Oriya, Bangla, and other languages the use of dubbed programmin­g from across the network pushed up viewership by twice or more for many channels. Much of this happened because most of India’s 836 million TV viewers are sitting at home. There is no prime time or non-prime time, there is no kids or adults time in India’s 197 million, largely single TV homes.

“In the lockdown the family was coming together. Family viewing became even more important. People get together, to watch and discuss. Kids saw adult content and adults saw a lot of kids content,” says Nina Elavia Jaipuria, head, Hindi mass entertainm­ent and kids TV network, Viacom18.

“The world has changed. The audience is no longer just the housewife but the whole family. The FPC (fixed point chart or programmin­g schedule) needs to capture this new reality,” says Kumar. While prime time viewing grew by 4 per cent, non-prime time grew by 14 per cent.

None of this growth, however, meant much on revenues. “In April we saw only 20-25 per cent of the usual revenue, in May it went to 40 per cent, and in June 5060 per cent,” says Gupta. Jaipuria says: “March, April, May were the worst months. Fortunatel­y, outgoing had reduced because there was no shooting. July, August, September look good — but maybe not the same as last year. We are hopeful that September should be equal to September 2019. A lot of segments and categories not on air are coming back — auto, e-commerce, FMCG.”

The uptick in advertisin­g began with fresh programmin­g coming in from July. “As a marketer, you are very challenged on where you can reach out. You can’t use outdoor, print is down, there is no commute so radio can’t be used. Therefore, TV is the best media. Also, it offers measuremen­t unlike digital (which has no standard third-party measuremen­t). You know the exact impression­s. We will begin the festive season with a bang,” says Jaipuria.

Gupta is up beat about the discussion­s he has had with advertiser­s for the new seasons of Thekapil sh arm a show, Tarak Mehtaand K au nb a ne ga cr ore pa ti coming later this year. these are, however, flicker sofa market crawling back to normal cy, not signs of growth. media Partners asia estimates that it will take the Indian video industry about three years to come back to 2019 levels in ad revenues.

If and when it does, the fact remains that the last six months have changed the interplay between advertiser­s, audiences, and entertainm­ent broadcaste­rs in many ways. Not just by mixing prime time and non-prime time or making the long tail or niche content irrelevant. It is because TV audiences also sampled and gorged on large quantities of streaming video — more than half of which was linear broadcast content.

The big battles in the video business will now be fought between Google (Youtube), Amazon (Prime Video), Disney Star, maybe Facebook, all of them 3-5 times Sony’s size. A consolidat­ed Sony-viacom18 will simply be better placed to deal with this new reality. And maybe the Sun Network could join in to make the combo stronger.

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