The Financial Times on Google-Apple
The Economist on Apps
Functional business models for online TV entertainment don't exist beyond gaming. Despite the multimedia promises of monoliths Google, Apple and Microsoft, the only TV model still making sense these days is multichannel TV through cable and satellite (including broadcast) distribution. Cable profits continue to rise in volume and speed, giving MSO's a penchant to buy themselves something big to forestall death and taxes. Still, the core cable distribution profit drivers--top-line customer and revenue growth--are spending the Summer of 2010 in rerun mode, building mainly on rate increases and the churn-churned spending requirements of reselling every home on the block on the Triple Play.
So there's something riveting about the evolving Google-Apple grudge match and its relationship to our imagined digital TV future. Who'll bring it on in the next wave of digital TV--playing FM to cable's persistent AM of successful news and sports? Will HBO really GO online, like its TV Everywhere brand extension promises? Or will it OD on subscription-on-demand contentment, while a new mobile entertainment form becomes the new TV? (Can you imagine "It's not TV; it's HBO" being turned into a critique?)
The mobile point's tough to fake. It'll require a major leap for the fixed wired cable and satellite distributors to re-imagine themselves as healthy fast food, in addition to that full Sunday dinner served in the fancy eating room. Just as you can't imagine prime rib in a bag as a meal one-the-go, none of us can stay "on the cord" and stay active. What will cable and satellite do to reinvent themselves as the new protein bar?
Can content and distribution break themselves into bite-size profitable chunks for mobile money? Or, should the renaissance of vertical integration rule? Is it time to start rethinking all the successful content and distribution break-ups over the past few years--Time Warner's top-of-mind--as so 2008? Not really. Strong tensions between content and distribution are way-older than 2008. The separation between cable content and cable programming was mandated in the 1980's when the US government required cable operators to sell their programming services to their satellite competition.
But could a similar move, favoring the programmers over the distributors, be in the works today? The new FCC doesn't look like it wants too active a role in re-sorting the media world. Still, it's easy to imagine a 2012 trip across-the-border that requires cable distributors to share the programming they own with digital distributors--like Google and Apple--at reasonable rates and with supportive service guarantees in exchange for the many rights the wired world continues to enjoy and employ.
Of course: there is that nasty competitive quarrel between Google and Apple about alternative platforms and standards. No matter how combative the quarreling duo may be, does anyone doubt that the combatants are at their most powerful working together? They complement each other so well. You say: Open system; I say: Closed system. You say: Free; I say: Paid. You say: Plays Anywhere; I say: Plays-best-on-My-devices. The only thing we both say in unison is: It's fun making money sailing on a cloud.
As a quid pro quo for being granted a new form of broadband distribution transmission rights in a competitive form to cable and satellite (while "borrowing" the "utility portion" of cable and telco broadband networks,) Google/Apple may just agree to subsidize state and local governments with a new mobile franchise payment, equivalent to a small portion of the revenue they derive from mobile content delivery. Of course, once we're down this path, we might as well imagine several G-APPS--or application-driven versions of Google and Apple--because if money starts moving to this side of the ledger, it could be a digital green-fields moment for new distribution hybrids (and for new technology and new jobs.)
Wireless spectrum owners and device manufacturers are unlikely to put up a fight. Many will benefit if they can resolve the spectrum capacity and interoperability issues that need to be smoothed out to form a clear revenue superhighway. They'll need to resolve these issues anyway, just to stay ahead of the existing competition and to keep pace with the equity markets' performance growth requirements.
On the public side of the issue, given the number of real gaps between local, state and federal budgets and the money the US stands to earn on our current course over the next few years, new "Google/Apple hybrids" driving new taxes-and-fees across the jurisdictional spectrum are likely to be welcomed by Democrats and Republicans alike, no matter who's in charge.
Which content companies win in this scenario? Maybe Disney is the likely innovator, with its broad catalogue of TV content and distribution, including broadcast, cable and theme parks, not to mention the international sports monolith ESPN. What about Viacom and Fox? How far will Time Warner's HBO Go go?
In preparation for a world where the media makes even more money from more places than it does today, traditional TV will have to learn how to divide a larger pie with a larger field of players on the move.
That kind of score is going to require distributed mobility, meaning: our mobile future will include more than today's wireless telcos. And, depending on how quickly the content companies decide to place their bets, inertia will define the competitive dynamics: the media in motion will remain in motion and the rest will remain at rest.
That kind of score is going to require distributed mobility, meaning: our mobile future will include more than today's wireless telcos. And, depending on how quickly the content companies decide to place their bets, inertia will define the competitive dynamics: the media in motion will remain in motion and the rest will remain at rest.


