Showing posts with label Telkom Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Telkom Media. Show all posts

Friday, September 13, 2024

Telkom to try and compete with MultiChoice's DStv - again - with a 'content mall' of bundled streaming curation.


by Thinus Ferreira

It might be a case of third time lucky for Telkom which plans to once again compete with MultiChoice's DStv by creating a curated, bundled video streaming offering through a "content mall" that's cheaper than subscribing to streamers directly, after attempts over the past decade to create its own satellite TV service and then its own streaming service both failed.

Lunga Siyo, Telkom consumer CEO, told the ITWeb On The Road podcast that the telecom is busy setting up its own "content mall" through which it wants to bundle various video streaming services at a bundled price that's cheaper that subscribing to each streamer individually.

Multiple American studios and streamers are currently exploring and working on the same idea of offering bundled streaming services similar to the traditional satellite pay-TV bundle, as the industry starts to consolidate and consumers are saying they no longer want to pay for a bunch of different streamers.

In this Telkom "content mall", Telkom customers would be able to subscribe to streamers like Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+ and others at a cheaper price than subscribing to those streaming services directly.

"Instead of investing in content and becoming a content producer, we've taken a position that we create a content mall. So we become the access. So in our own platform you're able to subscribe to these platforms, for a fee, which might be cheaper than if you were to go directly."

"So we will aggregate all of these services, and offer it you it to you as a bundle," Siyo said.

"They bring their own content, we bring our own platform."

Telkom's latest plan might be easier said than done. 

Not only has MultiChoice stalled in its own plan three years after announcing that it was creating a "one-stop shop" for streaming services through its DStv platform, but Telkom has struggled and gave up on both its previous tries to create a traditional and streaming video service.

In 2006 Telkom was one of the few successful bidders for new satellite TV service licences in South Africa and set up Telkom Media into which hundreds of millions of rand was poured with executives appointed and international content agreement signed.

After planning to invest over R7 billion, Telkom then abruptly decided to pivot Telkom Media which never launched, into an IPTV service instead of traditional satellite pay-TV and, two years later in 2008 slashed its funding.

After another year, Telkom dumped Telkom Media in 2009 which was sold off to Shenzhen Media Group which never launched and shuttered.

In November 2020 Telkom tried for a second time with launching its own video service when TelkomONE was launched into which Telkom again poured hundreds of millions of rand.

Barely two years later in November 2022 Telkom decided to get rid of TelkomONE and abruptly shuttered it and sold it off to the SABC for the South African public broadcaster to create its SABC+ streamer.


Streaming bundling future
MultiChoice had the same idea as Telkom a few years ago but MultiChoice's attempt has not fully come to fruition - although in America studios, broadcasters and video service providers are realising they need to aggregate streamers and are trying to come up with new consumer bundling approaches and offerings.

Calvo Mawela, MultiChoice CEO, in 2021 said the traditional satellite pay-TV service would work to become a "one-stop shop" and a "super aggregator" for video entertainment services like streamers. 

Over the past three years MultiChoice has added third-party streaming apps through DStv like Netflix, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video and the recently shuttered BritBox but that's where its efforts stalled. 

Warner Bros. Discovery's Max isn't available in South Africa yet, and Paramount added its Paramount+ not as a stand-alone streamer in South Africa like elsewhere in the world but as a studio tile folded for free into MultiChoice's own Showmax streamer with a limited Paramount+ title offering.

Other global streamers like Apple TV+ and local streaming services are also not available on, or through DStv. 

In the United States, consumers who have had to subscribe to four or five different streaming services are cutting back as streamers from Netflix to Disney+ are aggressively hiking subscription fees, adding ads, and making it much more expensive to be a subscriber than when they launched.

Media companies, legacy pay-TV services and content providers like Disney are trying to figure out how to offer bundled streaming services where they don't cannibalise other offerings but provide consumer value in a way where they can drive sustained subscriber growth and profitability, while it also makes sense as a bundle.

Earlier this year Warner Bros. Discovery, Disney with its ESPN and Fox announced they would start a joint sports streaming service Venu which has quickly become mired in a court battle.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Comment awaited on Super 5 Media seeking yet another extension on its pay TV license from Icasa.

The wannabe pay TV operator Super 5 Media, formerly Telkom Media, is begging for yet another pay TV license extension after having failed to start any kind of pay TV service in South Africa in more than 3 years.

Super 5 Media, owned by Shenzhen Media SA and controlled by Imbani Media, was granted a pay TV license by the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) more than 3 years ago in August 2008. On Digital Media (ODM) has since started the TopTV subscription television service in South Africa.

In the Government Gazette of 28 December 2011 Icasa is inviting comment on Super 5 Media's umpteenth license extension request. Super 5 Media is applying for yet another 6 month extension of its pay TV license to start a commercial subscription television broadcasting service.

South Africa's TV industry and other interested parties have until 28 January to comment on Super 5 Media's request for another license extension after which Icasa will make a decision.

ALSO READ: Struggling Super 5 Media keeps begging Icasa for further extensions on its license conditions to start a pay TV service in South Africa.

Friday, September 3, 2010

BREAKING. Wannabe pay TV operator Super 5 Media licence gets extended to February 2011 for dubious reasons.


You're reading it here first.

Yesterday I broke the news RIGHT HERE about a surprising six month extension for Super 5 Media after the wannabe pay TV operator was supposed to lose its licence at the end of August. The Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) okay'ed a further six months for Super 5 Media (formerly Telkom Media until Shenzhen Media SA took over the shareholding) to come up with, and start a viable subscription television service in South Africa.

Now I can be first to tell you why!

Icasa granted the dubious extension to Super 5 Media who now has until the end of February 2011 to start a service, because, according to Super 5 Media ''its application for an Individual Electronic Communications Network Service licence to self-provide is yet to be finalized by Icasa''. Super 5 Media told Icasa that the company intends to provide its own signal distribution for the service.

Firstly, in normal language, it means that Super 5 Media (basically a shell of a company now after firing basically everyone last month and mired in financial problems) doesn't want to make use of outside signal distributors like for instance Sentech or Orbicom but want to handle signal distribution themselves.

Secondly, its VERY STRANGE that Icasa granted this extension. Super 5 Media had three years already since it was granted a pay TV licence in 2007, burned through more than half a billion rand and has no service to show for it. Why has the issue of an electronic communications network service licence not been resolved much earlier? Why is Icasa granting an extension to a company clearly not able to mastering the rudimentary requirements of a pay TV service in three years and after the flood of news about the quagmire Super 5 Media is currently finding itself? Why is a struggling company getting what seems to be special treatment after being a no-show for three years and several fake, empty promises, and then go pleading right at the end for more time?

Monday, June 28, 2010

With retrenchments happening, is this the end of wannabe pay TV operator Super 5 Media's dimming dream?

Is the end looming for the struggling Super 5 Media (formerly Telkom Media, before Telkom sold its share to Shenzhen Media SA) and its increasingly dimming dream of starting a pay TV service?

I hear that Super 5 Media is letting people go. Of course, all my attempts to talk to somebody there to verify this, is falling on deaf ears. Nobody at Not-so-Super 5 Media is returning any email or voicemail left for the obviously struggling and super secretive company. Super 5 Media is not reacting to any media enquiries, while the company is now facing doom: Super 5 Media has to start broadcasting and making use of its pay TV licence that it got from the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) in 2007 by the end of September 2010 or lose it.

As I've chronicled here time and again, Not-so-Super 5 Media has made umpteenth empty promises - even just this year to start in February, then March, then May, then June and now . . . nothing. Radio silence. Now they're apparently also letting the last of the last workers go with voluntary severance packages after the previous round last year which also saw Super 5 Media shed workers. Of course I can't ask Super 5 Media what's going on because they don't reply or answer the phone. Yet they want to do pay TV. Maybe Super 5 Media should start with the telegraph. Or the grammophone. Or simpler yet . . .smoke signals?

Super 5 Media, if they at all still have any intention of launching any kind of credible pay TV service of any kind in South Africa, needs to communicate (even if you severed ties with your spokesperson last year). Talk. Tap out morse code, even if its an SOS. Send that smoke signal.  The South African journalists covering television are vigilantly looking for a sign. Any sign . . .

ALSO READ: Failure . . . again. Super 5 Media again missed its self set starting date of 1 June 2010.
ALSO READ: Yawn. Super 5 Media misses May; now promises June as its ''new starting date.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

FAILURE! (AGAIN) Super 5 Media once again misses its own starting date to launch a pay TV platform in South Africa.


Super 5 Media has once again NOT launched its pay TV platform yesterday on June 1 as it said it would, and is currently hiding away and not speaking to anybody or responding to media enquiries.

I've lost count as to how many times Super 5 Media has promised to start, had the date roll by, to then simply come up with a new date. Super 5 Media has lost all credibility within the local TV industry after it has - in only this year so far - promised to start its pay TV service in February, then May, then June - and has now also missed that date.

I called the troubled Super 5 Media several times yesterday and sent numerous email requests. This morning I phoned again and during the afternoon. No response. Shenzhen Media SA is the majority shareholder in Super 5 Media after Telkom sold their share and the name changed from Telkom Media to Super 5 Media.

Who knows what date Super 5 Media will dream up next. July? September? Just like The Bible Code, the Mayan 2012 calendar, Nostradamus and prophecies predicting the end of the world, Super 5 Media's self-imposed starting date remains more massive myth than actual fact - and then, when it eventually rolls around, constantly keeps getting pushed always further into a fake new future.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

RUMOUR! Is Solly the SABC's new CEO?


You're reading it here first. Is Solly Mokoetle going to be the new CEO of the SABC?

That is what the breathless rumour mongers are telling me. The biz is abuzz with appetizing stories that Solly, a former SABC executive, might soon be back at the public broadcaster.

Solly was chief operating officer at the SABC until 2006, when he left to go and work at Telkom Media (now Super5Media).

Solly is currently the chief content officer at Super5Media.

Monday, November 9, 2009

BREAKING. Super5Media still ready to launch 'in the first half of 2010' with local content.


You're reading it here first. I thought a little update might be good on the struggling competitors in South Africa's pay TV market.

''The company plans to launch services in the first half of 2010,'' Chris van Zyl of Super5Media tells me. And Super5Media will have LOCAL CONTENT on its satellite TV bouquet.

Super5Media is the new name of Telkom Media. Telkom sold its shares in Telkom Media to the Chinese owned Shenzhen Media, so the name had to change.

Super5Media is now owned as follows:
75% - Shenzhen Media
15% - VideoVision Home Entertainment (Anant Singh)
5% - MSG Afrika Investments (Given Mkhari)
5% -WDB Group.


''In terms of the shareholding, we have met all Icasa's requirements regarding the notification of the sale and transfer of shares in terms of a sales agreement between Telkom and Shenzhen Media SA. The company is of the opinion that it has complied with all regulations in terms of the transaction and therefore has a licence to broadcast.''

On Super5Media's new website the pay TV operator says it will target South Africa's ''rapidly growing middle class''.

''The satellite pay-TV offering will bring together a mix of local and international content.''


The pay TV operator plans channels and content on those channels that will include entertainment, sport, movies, news, and docu-entertainment.

All of these will include local content.