Showing posts with label Vodacom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vodacom. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Vodacom's new Enhance allows adding of game consoles and streamers to unified bill.


by Thinus Ferreira

Vodacom has launched "Enhance" for subscribers as a means to add things like gaming consoles, video streaming services and even phones and TV sets to their contracts in a unified monthly bill, whether it's for a subscriber or family members or friends.

According to Vodacom, Enhance allows contract customers to consolidate their bills by adding "as many products and services as possible" onto one unified bill. It's available to Vodacom customers and their families and friends, allowing them to pay it off over 24 or 36-month terms.

Vodacom says it is fast morphing from a pure telecommunications to a technology services company and is allowing customers to customise their contracts according to their lifestyle needs, especially in a world connected to the internet.

"As we transition from a telco to a technology player, we are bringing technological solutions that empower customers with a seamless and effortless experience, allowing them to focus on what truly matters in their lives," says Rishaad Tayob, Vodacom South Africa's consumer director.

"We are cognisant of the fact that in today's fast-paced world, consumers seek seamless solutions that make managing their daily lives easy. We believe that convenience is the ultimate sophistication.  In response, we have carefully designed Enhance to respond to the constant evolving lifestyle needs and behaviours of our customers."

Vodacom customers can add video streaming services like Netflix, MultiChoice's Showmax, Amazon Prime Video and Apple Music through the add-to-bill capability, can add Plug & Play Wifi and add UPS back-up offers to stay online during Eskom's loadshedding.

With Enhance it's also possible to add Sony PlayStations or a Microsoft Xbox for gamers, while fitness enthusiasts can add smart wearables to track and monitor their sports performance and health.

Tuesday, October 11, 2022

Vodacom launches Amazon Prime Video mobile for R29 per month in South Africa.


by Thinus Ferreira

As Amazon Prime Video continues to expand its localised presence in South Africa the video streaming service has now launched a mobile version of Amazon Prime Video for R29 per month in the country, in partnership with Vodacom which limits viewing to standard-definition (SD).

Amazon Prime Video Mobile at R29 will compete with Netflix SA Mobile at R49 per month without data, MultiChoice's Showmax Mobile at R39 per month without data, as well as Disney+ SA at R119 per month that doesn't have a cheaper mobile-only plan.

Vodacom is also making Amazon Prime Video Mobile available at R59 which includes 3GB of video data monthly, as well as for R79 per month for the full Amazon Prime Video service.

According to Vodacom South Africa all new, existing and upgrading customers are eligible to subscribe to Amazon Prime Video or Prime Video Mobile Edition, regardless of price plan, whether prepaid or post-paid through Vodacom.

At launch, Vodacom customers signing up for Amazon Prime Video Mobile Edition will get a 30-day free trial and 10GB of video data valid for 30 days.

Vodacom's Amazon Prime Video Mobile Edition gives access to the entire streaming service's content catalogue on a single mobile device, but streaming and downloading through the app is limited to standard-definition (SD).

"Research has shown that over-the-top (OTT) streaming in the sub-Saharan Africa region continues to grow rapidly, with around 30% more subscribers between 2020 and 2021," says Jorge Mendes, Vodacom South Africa chief officer of consumer business.

"With that said, we strive to forge partnerships with the best streaming services to ensure customers enjoy a variety of subscription packages. As we continue transitioning to a pan-African technology company, with the ambition of offering much more than telco products, this partnership fits perfectly with our overall goal of enabling our consumers access to video streaming content."

"Ensuring our entire customer base including prepaid gain access to such services, without worrying about data is in line with our purpose of ensuring we leave no one behind."

In July Vodacom shuttered its own Vodacom Video Play video streaming service it launched in July 2015, and said it's strategising to rather become an "enabler" of other video streaming services by becoming a platform to host streamers and allowing Vodacom customers to pay for these by adding add-to-bill functionalities.

Vodacom first partnered with Amazon Prime Video in November 2020 when it began to offer customers Amazon Prime Video for free for half a year.

Thursday, March 18, 2021

Vodacom Video Play secures rights to HBO's Justice League Snyder Cut film after WarnerMedia wasted time with setting a distribution deal in place in Africa with cinemas or MultiChoice's M-Net and Showmax.


by Thinus Ferreira

With the Justice League Snyder Cut that is released worldwide today, TVwithThinus has reliably learnt that while South African viewers will be able to watch it through Vodacom's Video Play video streaming service that acquired the film's licensing rights from WarnerMedia.

In the growing video streaming wars no distribution deal has been put in place in time with any of the other local streamers, cinemas, or traditional pay-TV options for viewers to watch the redone version of the film.

WarnerMedia's video streaming service HBO Max is releasing the highly-anticipated recut version of Zach Snyder's Justice League film – a so-called "Justice League Snyder Cut" – today, 18 March, as a 4-hour film.

Vodacom sources on Thursday morning told TVwithThinus that it managed to secure a licensing agreement with WarnerMedia and that the Justice League Snyder Cut will become available on its Video Play streaming service but only from tomorrow, Friday 19 March.

The film is a 2021 director's cut of the 2017 Justice League that Snyder had to exit prematurely due to family reasons but had the opportunity to return to. The movie that is now much improved according to reviews, follows the Justice League – Superman (Henry Cavill), Batman (Ben Affleck), Womder Woman (Gal Gadot), Aquaman (Jason Momoa), Cyborg (Ray Fisher) and the Flash (Ezra Miller) – as they try to save the world from Darkseid (Ray Porter) and Steppenwolf (Ciaran Hinds).

HBO Max, that is available in the United States and that is being made available in over 60 countries by the end of 2021, is not launching anytime soon in South Africa or the sub-Saharan Africa TV market – similar to Disney+, Paramount+ and Discovery+ that have decided to skip South Africa and the continent in their global launch roll-out plans.

South Africans have been left wondering where they can get access to the new film release since it wasn't acquired through any local subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) streaming services like Showmax, Netflix South Africa or Amazon Prime Video, any traditional direct-to-consumer (DTH) pay-TV offerings like MultiChoice's DStv or StarSat, or through cinemas like Ster-Kinekor or Nu Metro, with no usual pre-announcement or marketing.

Meanwhile Sky in the United Kingdom last week announced that it had signed an international distribution deal to bring the Justice League Snyder Cut exclusively to Sky pay-TV subscribers in Britain, Ireland, Germany and Austria.

Besides the UK, viewers elsewhere in Europe and Asia are also able to watch the Justice League Snyder Cut from today through HBO Go.

Insiders at M-Net and MultiChoice – where M-Net has an existing output deal with HBO but one that doesn't really include new HBO Max content – told TVwithThinus that the pay-TV operator has been trying to secure the Justice League Snyder Cut for the linear M-Net and M-Net Movies channels or for Showmax but that negotiations have been ongoing and has so far not been successful.

The result – similar to what has been happening with content like The Mandalorian and WandaVision on The Walt Disney Company's Disney+ streaming service – is that many South African viewers would have been and are still very likely to become pirate viewers of the Snyder Cut from today.

Consumers who would have paid to watch and who are highly motivated to see the film or any Justice League or superhero content, will again very likely be forced to deliberately venture outside of the established content distribution value chain of HBO, MultiChoice, M-Net and cinemas like Ster-Kinekor and will likely immediately start to download or stream illegally ripped and torrent copies of the film.

This results in unrealised and lost revenue for every company, from the bottom all the way to WarnerMedia at the top, within the content pay-and-play value chain.

In an interview with the SnyderCutBR YouTube channel Zack Snyder criticised WarnerMedia's bad international distribution plan outside of the United States around his Justice League Snyder Cut.

"There has been, you know, not amazing work done with the distribution of the movie. I don't know why that is, I honestly couldn't put my finger on it," he said.


Thursday, November 5, 2020

Vodacom adds Amazon Prime Video, gives customers 6-months free and cheaper thereafter than going direct.


by Thinus Ferreira

Vodacom is now offering existing and upgrading contract Vodacom customers 6 months of free access to Amazon Prime Video, which will thereafter be cheaper at R79.99 per month than the existing R95 per month it costs to subscribe to Amazon Prime Video directly.

Vodacom's announcement about the Amazon Prime Video tie-in offer comes on the same day that Telkom plans to launch its new TelkomONE streaming service today. 

Vodacom already operates its own Vodacom Video Play video-on-demand (VOD) service. 

After the 6 month free promotional period, Vodacom will charge customers R79.99 per month for an Amazon Prime Video subscription which will be added as a line-item to a customer's monthly invoice or airtime.

This R79.99 per month to watch Amazon Prime Video through Vodacom - besides the 6-month free trial period - is cheaper than the $5.99 or R95 per month that a customer will pay or is currently paying to sign up with Amazon Prime Video directly. 

Vodacom has now jumped MultiChoice that also planned to offer DStv customers subscriptions to Netflix South Africa and Amazon Prime Video through a DStv Explora decoder, with the option to subscribe and unsubscribe monthly at will for access to these additional streaming services, and pay for it in rand, added to their DStv bill.

MultiChoice's plan to provide customers with third-party streaming services besides its own Showmax through an OTT carousel offer - likely also at a slightly cheaper price than going direct - has been hampered by an investigation of South Africa's Competition Commission that has forced MultiChoice to postpone its roll-out and further announcements about it.

Vodacom and Amazon Prime Video's launch offer is available to all existing and upgrading contract Vodacom customers, as well as to prepaid and top-up customers who have spent a minimum of R150 with Vodacom over the last 30 days.

These Vodacom users will be able to watch Amazon Prime Video series like The Boys, The Grand Tour, The Marvelous Mrs Maisel, Carnival Row or Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan on up to 3 devices at the same time with the Amazon Prime Video app, or any compatible TV, smartphone or tablet.

"We continuously strive to partner with premium content providers to deliver compelling propositions that keep customers connected for a better future," says Jorge Mendes, Vodacom chief officer of consumer business.

"The introduction of this Amazon Prime Video offer for our customers underpins our commitment to enabling a digital society."

Mariam Cassim, chief officer of Vodacom financial and digital lifestyle services, says that Vodacom "strives to work with like-minded partners around the globe to bring innovative digital lifestyle services to South African consumers".

"We are excited to be teaming up with Amazon Prime Video to bring about quality entertainment to our customers."

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

After 22 years SABC1 loses the South African Music Awards to M-Net's Mzansi Magic with virtual event 26th SAMAs that switches to a 5-episode, 5-night broadcast from 3 August 2020.


by Thinus Ferreira

SABC1 has lost another televised awards show with the South African Music Awards (SAMAs) that is switching to M-Net's Mzansi Magic (DStv 161) channel and changing to a 5-night, 5-episode broadcast in a new permutation because of the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic.

After having been on the South African public broadcaster's SABC1 channel for 22 years, the Recording Industry of South Africa (RISA) is switching the 26th SAMAs to Mzansi Magic and Vodacom's MyMuze video streaming app.

Under the theme of "ForThaKultcha", the 26th SAMAs will be broadcast from 3 to 7 August at 21:30 on Mzansi Magic as 30-minute nightly episodes with a 45-minute episode on 7 August.

The "red carpet" is moved to Twitter. The 26th SAMAs will have two hosts who will still be announced, along with performers and panellists.

"We look forward to the 26th SAMAs virtual experience. Our teams are hard at work to deliver a show that we will all be proud of given the current state the world is in," says Nhlanhla Sibisi, RISA CEO, in a statement.

Nomsa Philiso, the director of local entertainment channels at M-Net, in the statement says that "The South African Music Awards have always been a platform where talented Mzansi artists have been recognised for their excellence".

"As a channel that has a track record of showcasing local talent across several platforms, we are very proud to be partnering up with the 26th SAMAs to give our viewers front row seats to this virtual showpiece".

Thursday, March 19, 2020

Coronavirus: ICASA says DStv and StarSat pay-TV must be made free and Vodacom and MTN must give cheap or free mobile data during the Covid-19 pandemic.


by Thinus Ferreira

With the rapid increase of the Covid-19 novel coronavirus in South Africa as society is increasingly hunkering down, South Africa's broadcasting regulator ICASA says it is asking mobile operators and pay-TV services to give people free DStv and free or cheap data.

The Independent Communications Authority of South Africa wants MultiChoice and StarSat to give away their pay-TV services for free to South Africans during the coronavirus pandemic and for mobile operators like Vodacom, MTN and Cell C to give people free data so that they can communicate and stay informed.

ICASA in a statement says that there is expected to be a "surge in usage of data as the majority of South Africans across all sectors have no option but work from home, learn from home and carry on their day to day life activities (for instance shopping, entertainment) from home through technological means".

"This will result in a spike in data usage, particularly as consumers also access information with regards to the pandemic – thus placing strain on the capacity of networks."

Dr Keabetswe Modimoeng, ICASA acting chairperson, says ICASA is requesting all network service providers in the telecommunications industry to "heed the call to enable the country to mitigate the spread of Covid-19 by facilitating easy and affordable and/or free access to data".

"In this regard ICASA is engaging the sector on possible ways of radio frequency spectrum relief for the duration of the declared state of disaster to ease congestion, ensure good quality of broadband services, and enable licensees to lower cost of access to consumers, particularly in relation to education, emergency and other social services."

In terms of broadcasting Dr Keabetswe Modimoeng says that all broadcasting services are required to make Public Service Announcements (PSAs) about the Covid-19 virus in the public interest, but that over and above this that pay-TV providers like MultiChoice and StarTimes/StarSat "have been requested to open both their audio and television bouquets to consumers that do not subscribe to their services".

"This will assist the public to have access to information that they can use to deal with the scourge of the virus that is facing the country."

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

INTERVIEW. Vodacom's Video Play streaming service adds PrideTV content, plans further linear TV channels and a set-top box; says American soap The Bold and the Beautiful 'is blowing the lights out'.


by Thinus Ferreira

Vodacom's Video Play has just added PrideTV content with a carousel of gay content for South African viewers, while the streaming service's boss says viewers have been flocking to Video Play since it decided to add the American soap The Bold and the Beautiful which is "blowing the lights out".

Video Play that competes with other available subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) services like Netflix South Africa, MultiChoice's Showmax, Amazon Prime Video and others, now features a carousel of LGBTQ content ranging from dramas, comedies and documentaries to films as a newly-added subscription sub-section.

Access to PrideTV, where users can watch anything from "comedies, sexy college boy thrillers, horrors, love stories, gripping dramas and doccies about LGBT issues and personalities" cost R5 a day to subscribe to, R15 weekly, or R25 for monthly access.

TVwithThinus spoke with Zubair Munshi, Vodacom video commercial operations executive head, about the addition of PrideTV and the plan behind it, Vodacom's plans to add more linear TV channels and a set-top box (STB) in future, how The Bold and the Beautiful is doing and what the impact of Eskom's loadshedding is on its video streaming offering.


Why was PriveTV added to Vodacom Video Play? Can you give some insight into the decision to add LGBTQ content?
Zubair: So, as you know, Vodacom is a company that prides itself on connecting customers for a better future and part of that is that we try to include everyone and that's what gave impetus to the inclusion of PrideTV.
If you look at Video Play, we have a lot of content, movies, series, content from West Africa, we have some Bollywood content, we have a very nice kids schedule - we've brought in other partners like Da Vinci Kids and Hopster - and PrideTV is very topical. As part of our all-inclusive strategy we opted to include PrideTV.


When MultiChoice ran OUTtv in October 2018 as a linear TV channel on DStv it removed some of the shows but only after the content started to screen because it was too risque for broadcast. Within the genre of PrideTV how did Vodacom decide what type of content you'll make available?
Zubair: All of the content on the platform is classified according to the Film and Publication Board (FPB) guidelines.
Coupled with that there is obviously content classification guidelines that are given to us from Vodafone, our parent company. Based on those two criteria we then look at each piece of content that goes in, each piece of content then gets reviewed, filtered, classified in terms of whatever it is and then placed on the platform.

The other thing is that it's a video-on-demand (VOD) subscription service so it's not a linear channel that runs 24 hours per day as some of the other things. The focus is more around "coming of age" stories, "coming out" stories, drama, information, challenges that people go through, light entertainment, content like that, that resonates with the LGBTQ community. A lot of caution is applied to ensure that there's nothing in there that's racy or inappropriate for our audiences.




How has Video Play grown as a VOD service and what does Vodacom envision it to still become?
Zubair: We launched Video Play in June 2018 and we've seen very positive, strong growth on the platform.
As we've reported in our Q3 results in December 2019 we had just over 1.9 million active customers on the platform with an enormous amount of subscription purchases.
Notably the difference between us and most other platforms is we allow customers to purchase a transactional viewity so it's like the video rental business, and we also offer subscriptions that start from 1-day subscriptions from as little as R5.

From a future-looking perspective our intent is to continue to optimise both the platform features - so bringing in different user-experience channels, for example, SmartTV's, set-top boxes and so forth, so that people can enjoy Video Play in more places than their phones, laptops and tablets.
We already, for instance, support ChromeCast, we're now busy working on an AndroidTV version and we're talking to some of the big TV manufacturers to start building SmartTV apps. As you know there are quite a few of these guys so it's not a quick thing but that's the next big thing for us.

There's also going to be a very big focus for us on linear television because it's the one thing that we've been very cautious about. We currently have two linear TV channels.
The one is from KwaZulu/Natal, 1KZN TV, which produces a lot of content out of KZN in the isiZulu which is one of the most spoken languages in our country, so it made sense to us that if there are 20 million Zulu-speaking people in our country that we go and secure content that is in Zulu.

The second linear TV channel we brought on was GAUtv and we're starting to see audiences and we're continuously talking to more local channels. We're also looking at some international TV channels. We want to give a different channel experience for customers. It's going to be a slightly different model in terms of how we take it to market which we will unveil closer to the time.


What has Vodacom learnt from the mistakes and failures of other VOD services in South Africa of which we've already seen several starting with VIDI and Cell C black being the latest?
Zubair: Look, I'll be very honest right. We don't really look at what the other guys have done right or wrong.
Each person that launches a platform has a specific version of how they think it will succeed and we've confined a lot of our focus on doing what we believe make sense for our customers.
If it's okay I'll rather focus on talking about what I think we are focusing on that we believe is working for us.

In my mind, I think we're working exceptionally hard to try and bring down, one, the cost of content. That means giving customers the ability to purchase for when they need it, modelled around how we've been very successful in giving customers access to what we call "micro-consumption" of airtime and data.

So when you only want to watch something for one day, we have a 1-day subscription for you. Just by pure economics, as soon as you bring say a R50 per month service, and you make it R2 per day as an example, you can obviously make that same service a lot more accessible to a lot more people, even if it's for a 24-hour window.

You then take that, and you map it against a typical lifestyle for not very wealthy people, and you soon start to get a very interesting correlation with based on lifestyle as opposed to affordability.

For instance, think of someone in the middle segment of the market that has a job - typically it's 6 days a week. They genuinely only have one day in a 7-day cycle where they have time for entertainment and leisure.

In that day, the person may or may not have access to large or small amounts of cash but he only wants to be entertained for one day.
So for our viewers we said lets create a platform where they can go to a platform, look at something that he likes and watch that or subscribe to it, but only for that day because it's all he really needs.

The second thing we think we got right very well is ease of consumption. Our platform doesn't do credit cards as an example, and it's a question of availability, risk and so on.
We allow customers to use their Vodacom airtime or their Vodacom post-paid wallet to add the transaction cost or purchase cost to that wallet.

So if you have R10 in your airtime wallet and you want to movie you don't need to give us a credit card. We get that not everyone has debit cards and credit cards and under current economic conditions, even if you do, you maybe don't have much money left. What you do have, is a trusted partner in Vodacom that manages that wallet and if you're not going to make a phone call with your airtime, why don't you use it to rent a movie for R10 or R5, or just a whole bunch of music videos?

We have thousands of them on Video Play and it costs R5 a day. You don't need a credit card, you take it from your airtime or add it to your post-paid bill and you get access.

The combination of those two things, as well as a mobile-first strategy and then started looking at set-top boxes (STBs) and linear TV channels, has certainly helped us.




I read this fascinating BBC article this week about Amazon as an online retailer and how it was and is able to data mine and know precisely what customers click and buy better than walk-in shops. Video-on-demand services also have a treasure trove of very precise viewership and usage statistics and data. 
What's some of the content that's performing really well for Video Play and what has been the response to the addition of the American soap The Bold and the Beautiful?
Zubair: You're absolutely right. The big upside is that we have a lot of granularity on what users are doing on the Video Play platform - what they browse through, what they watch, which guides a lot of things like the recommendations we put forth in both our direct marketing as well as customer-specific propositions.

The second thing is that it also guides us in terms of acquisition - it tells us what we should be buying more of and what we shouldn't be spending money on.

Content like The Bold and the Beautiful is blowing the lights out. People are really, really excited to have it back and available. We're releasing episodes every week and are well ahead of where the SABC was when they dropped it.

At the rate we're going we'll be very close, if not on par with the American timeline soon. The response we've seen from that is really, really phenomenal, the views are going up, people are really enjoying The Bold and the Beautiful experience. We've got some of the back-episodes of Generations which is also performing incredibly well and customers are enjoying it. I think there's a type of nostalgia-effect that people can go back several episodes or several seasons and watch something.

A lot of that is a function of 12-months of customer usage behaviour that showed that there's a huge penchant for drama, for local, for compelling entertainment.
We're spending a lot of energy to try and acquire that kind of content, which as you know is not so simple to do, and some of them come with enormous price tickets.




What has been the impact of Eskom's loadshedding in South Africa on Video Play and Vodacom's VOD service? Do consumers watch more when they don't have electricity and do usage spike since they don't have working TV sets or is usage less when the lights are out?
Zubair: It's a mixed bag. When the loadshedding is quite severe - when it's a Level 2, Level 3 type of environment then we see a mixed version across the country.

In some parts of the country we see consumption go up - but for a very limited period - for about 35 minutes or so. Then in other parts of the country we see no change - it stays exactly the same as it was, with or without loadshedding.
It's a bit of a difficult thing to say to you "yes it does" or "no it doesn't". But does it have an impact on the business? Yes, absolutely. It has an impact on the network as well and affects our business. We run a video streaming service. If the consumer has no internet connectivity you're not streaming anything - whether it's us or anybody else for that matter.

And there's also the issue of do I watch movies on my phone or keep the battery for in case something might happen and need to make a call or something like that. It's really mixed though. We don't see a definitive correlation between the two.

Saturday, October 12, 2019

Vodacom says 'free' Bold that's back in SA is only beautiful on its restricted Video Play service with a Vodacom number.


Vodacom that announced that The Bold and the Beautiful is back and free to watch for viewers in South Africa on its Video Play streaming service, now says that the American weekday soap is restricted to customers who must have a Vodacom number.

A growing number of disappointed viewers and fans of The Bold and the Beautiful who tried to register on Vodacom Video Play to watch the soap that made its return on Wednesday after the struggling SABC dropped it in March this year, couldn't understand why they're not able to register and sign up for Video Play and getting a "register error".

It turns out that Vodacom only allows viewers to watch Video Play if they have paid to be a Vodacom customer.

In its initial statement issued by the WE South Africa PR company, Vodacom said that it has "secured the rights to stream the beloved TV show on its video-on-demand platform, Video Play. Now South African consumers will be able to stream the soap on their mobile devices, such as their smartphones, tablets and laptops". 

Vodacom said that "consumers don't need to subscribe to any packages" because The Bold and the Beautiful, produced by Bell-Phillip Television Productions, "is FREE".

Vodacom made no mention that people who want to watch The Bold and the Beautiful must buy a Vodacom SIM card and have a valid Vodacom number in order to register on Video Play.

TVwithThinus asked Vinnie Santu, Vodacom spokesperson for comment about South African consumers saying that they can't register or watch The Bold and the Beautiful because they don't have Vodacom numbers. She said that "Video Play is exclusive to Vodacom customers".

Asked why this was not specified in the announcement, Vinnie Santu said "Video Play is Vodacom's entertainment platform, exclusive to Vodacom customers". 

Rival Cell C doesn't restrict access to its struggling Cell C black streaming service to just Cell C customers, and neither does VIU, or any of the other major video streaming services available in South Africa like MultiChoice's Showmax, Netflix South Africa or Amazon Prime Video. 


Wednesday, October 9, 2019

BREAKING. Brooke's back! The Bold and the Beautiful returns to South Africa - this time on Vodacom's Video Play streaming service.


The Bold and the Beautiful is blasting back to South Africa with the American weekday soap that has found a new home on Vodacom's Video Play streaming service since getting axed from the SABC in March.

Despite strong ratings until the end the cash-strapped SABC decided to abruptly end its decades-long contract with the Bell-Phillip Television Productions, that led to big viewer outrage and disappointment.

M-Net (DStv 101) looked at possibly acquiring The Bold and the Beautiful but said it's schedule is full with lifetime reality shows currently working well in its late-afternoon timeslot and with ratings up 120%, while e.tv has been unable to add another American soap after it already took over Days of Our Lives in September 2017 after SABC3 dropped that as well.

Now episodes of The Bold and the Beautiful will play from today on Vodacom's video-on-demand (SVOD) service, starting with brand-new episode from season 31, as well as a binge, catch-up catalogue of 50 episodes to span the "missing period". 

 The 50 Episodes will be loaded to binge for those customers that weren’t able to watch the Bold & Beautiful when it went off air in South Africa early this year. 

The ‘first new Episode – 7715 from Season 31 will form part of the new content that will be ingested as part of the 10 Episodes a week, this will launch on 9 October. 

 The episodes are free and a new episode is released daily. Vodacom Video Play customers will get access to The Bold and the Beautiful as part of a free subscription and don't have to pay for access.

Vodacom says viewers "will be able to stream the soap on their mobile devices, such as their smartphones, tablets, and laptops."

"We are extremely excited to be bringing back one of South Africa’s favourite international soap operas on our video on demand service, Video Play, along with the characters we’ve all grown to love, or love to hate," says Zunaid Mahomed, Vodacom group digital and fixed services officer. 

"This move forms part of our ongoing commitment to providing access to the content our customers want, in a format that allows them to watch it whenever they want and wherever they are."

Additionally, the synopsis of each new episode will be displayed so that viewers can discern exactly which episode they want to watch.

"Our South African viewers have been asking for The Bold and the Beautiful to come back. Now we’re very happy to announce the good news," says Bradley Bell, executive producer and head writer. "Thank you for welcoming us back onto your screens."

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

SPI International signs channels carriage agreements with Telkom, Vodacom and TV2GO in South Africa.

SPI International continues to expand the presence of its channels in South Africa and has signed additional channels carriage agreements with Telkom, Vodacom and the new free streaming service, TV2GO, run by CAST TV/Infinivy SA, for its set of Box channels.

SPI International's channels are already carried on Cell C black, Cell C's subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) service that includes linear channels.

Per SPI International's deals, its channels will now be available through both Telkom and and Vodacom in South Africa.

The available channels include FilmBox Africa, FilmBox ArtHouse, DocuBox, FightBox, Fast & Fun, FashionBox, 360TuneBox and Gametoon.

"To meet growing demand for TV consumption on mobile devices in Africa we wanted to ensure that Telkom and Vodacom mobile subscribers have access to SPI's premium content via CAST TV/Infinivy platform in South Africa," says Amrit Karni, the head of distribution for SPI International in Africa, in a statement.

"We are excited to work with CAST TV/Infinivy, and I am sure that South Africa will only be the start of our cooperation.

Yaron Chen, Infinivy CEO in the statement says "Adding SPI's channels to our TV2GO platform, with its diverse genres and program offerings, allows us to boost our entertainment content line-up in order to meet the demands of our viewers".

Thursday, May 17, 2018

Vodacom to launch a new video-on-demand entertainment service, including Netflix and Showmax.


The cellular operator Vodacom will launch a new video-on-demand video entertainment service within weeks that will include streaming services like Naspers' Showmax currently run by MultiChoice, as well as Netflix.

"Vodacom will launch a new content service in the coming weeks that will offer a variety of content, a Vodacom video service and access to certain third-party content," Vodacom spokesperson Byron Kennedy told TVwithThinus.

"The new service will be competitively priced and will be supported through discounted data use options such as the recently launched Vodacom Ticket multimedia bundles."

In preparation of its VOD service, Vodacom launched its Social Media Ticket products earlier this month - essentially data bundles that Vodacom users can use to get certain data discounts when they use the data for social media, video viewing, music and gaming when making use of YouTube, DStv, Netflix or Facebook and Apple Music.

Vodacom's as yet unnamed VOD platform has been months in the making and follows the launch of Cell C's black VOD service that launched in November 2017 and that has seen impressive growth.

The third rival, MTN is limping along, after having tried twice with its now shuttered MTN FrontRow that was started in December 2014, relaunched as MTN VU and got terminated in May 2017.

Telecoms and cellular operators are fast ramping up and expanding their video entertainment streaming offering, as over-the-top (OTT) subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) services like Netflix South Africa, Amazon Prime Video, Showmax and others are trying to cash in and make market share inroads as broadband penetration, data costs and speed improve.

Legacy pay-TV operators feeling the heat from the rapidly-expanding SVOD consumer sector are not about to give up their lunch. MultiChoice this week announced that it will launch a dishless streaming-only DStv option sometime in 2019, with increasing budget spending by M-Net on local productions to keep viewers hooked.

Monday, August 21, 2017

SABC3, Vodacom and Jeep South Africa all distance themselves from the imploding Cape Town model search production Beeldskoon.


The SABC's SABC3 TV channel, Vodacom and Jeep have all distanced themselves from the controversial and imploding Cape Town model-search production Beeldskoon from Snapshots TV Productions.

The Weekend Argus reported that Beeldskoon, a model search competition done in Cape Town that made many promises to many people, has imploded.

Beeldskoon, allegedly fraught with problems and short on cash, saw its production manager Megan Scholtz reportedly quit halfway through who says it was difficult to feed the models daily while the production was filming in a Camps Bay villa and in Stellenbosch.

Beeldskoon created by Alfredo Alfred, promised a Jeep Renegade as a SMS competition prize "sponsored" by Jeep for the public, and a Fiat for the winner and a Los Angeles based modelling mentorship.

Beeldskoon was punted for broadcast on SABC3 from September with a years-old logo of the SABC's SABC3 TV channel, although SABC3 says it knows nothing about the competition.

"On behalf of SABC3, we are not aware of this title," said the broadcaster.

Vodacom and Jeep also disavowed their involvement with Beeldskoon.

Crew who worked on Beeldskoon told The Weekend Argus they haven't been paid their salaries. Alfredo Alfred allegedly also owes money to a hair salon, the Rosenview Guesthouse and the Camps Bay villa.

Friday, February 10, 2017

Naspers' SVOD ShowMax does its first service tier split; creates cheaper ShowMax Select; launching in Poland on 15 February.

Naspers' subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) service ShowMax has done its first market segment service tier split since it launched in August 2015, creating a cheaper alternative branded ShowMax Select in conjunction with cellular service provider Vodacom.

ShowMax is also getting ready to launch in Poland next week, starting on 15 February 2017 with a monthly subscription of 5 euro or R70.90.

Until now ShowMax has only had one subscription "tier" costing R99 per month but is now doing its first bundling stratification to create a lower-tiered service for R49 per month its calling ShowMax Select.

ShowMax Select can only be paid for by adding the R49 to Vodacom subscribers' monthly bill while ShowMax Premium has various payment offers. ShowMax Select makes it possible for people without a credit card to get access to the SVOD player's service.

ShowMax Select as a cheaper option - the first consumer demographic delineation for the SVOD player - limits the portion of international content available in the bucket for the client. 

With less international content licensing rights payable to foreign distributors and filling up with local shows - many of which is owned by through-the-wire-fence pay-TV broadcaster M-Net - ShowMax is able to lower offer a cheaper targeted product.

More than 50% of the available content on ShowMax Select is local content, resulting in the 50% cheaper price difference.

Besides the higher local content bucket, ShowMax Select is also optimised to use as little data as possible of Vodacom users who have to watch on smartphones and tablets. The default level is standard definition (SD), using almost 40% less data than ShowMax Premium.

Chris Savides, head of ShowMax Africa, says ShowMax Select costs "half the price of our existing ShowMax Premium service with a strong focus on local content. We designed ShowMax Select to be viewed first and foremost on mobile devices,with multiple options for managing data consumption".

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Petition calls on advertisers from Clientele Life, FNB, Vodacom and Checkers to Telkom and Chicken Licken to boycott and stop advertising on the SABC.


A Petition has started calling on advertisers to boycott the SABC and to stop advertising on the South African public broadcaster due to the SABC's unwillingness to end the censorship of SABC TV News regarding the broadcast of public protests.

The petition, started on the community advocacy organisation Amandla.mobi's website, is asking advertisers to stop advertising on the SABC until its ends SABC boss Hlaudi Motsoeneng's censorship decree, and is asking the South African public to let advertisers know that they will no longer buy their products and services if they continue to advertise on the SABC.

The online petition asks that Clientele Life, Chicken Licken, FNB, Vodacom, Carling Black Label, Checkers, Telkom boycott the SABC and stop advertising on the SABC.

"More and more organisations and political parties including the ANC, agree with us that what is happening at the SABC is wrong. But the situation at the SABC is deteriorating rapidly, with journalists facing suspension and more and more evidence surfacing of censorship. This calls for a different approach," says the petition.

"We know the SABC makes much of its revenue from advertising, so together with our allies from the SOS Coalition and Media Monitoring Africa, let's call on some of the SABC's largest advertisers - Clientele, Chicken Licken, FNB, Vodacom, Carling Black Label, Checkers, Telkom and others - to pause their advertising with our SABC until this censorship is brought to and end".

The South African broadcasting regulator, Icasa, on Monday ruled that the SABC's censorship of SABC TV News is wrong and needs to be stopped immediately, retroactively to 26 May.

The SABC's controversial chief operating officer (COO) Hlaudi Motsoeneng said the SABC will not listen to Icasa, that "no-one is going to tell us what to do", and that the SABC will fight the ruling to the Constitutional Court.

Monday, August 17, 2015

BREAKING. ShowMax and Vodacom in talks about making Naspers' new SVOD service available on mobile devices across Africa.


ShowMax and cellphone operator Vodacom are talking about delivering video-on-demand (VOD) content to mobile devices in South Africa and across the African continent, Bloomberg reported on Monday.

Vodacom spokesperson Tshepo Ramodibe confirmed talks between Naspers and Vodacom regarding a ShowMax VOD streaming deal and told Bloomberg that "these discussions are ongoing" and that its part of Vodacom's "business strategy to add new service offerings, including content".

Naspers is creating and launching ShowMax to pre-empt the arrival of the global streaming subscription service Netflix, which told TV with Thinus that it will be in South Africa before the end of 2016.

While Naspers has not responded to a media enquiry last week and PR company Atmosphere Communications handling the ShowMax contract hasn't issued any information to the press, information is already leaking impacting the new brand – the word ShowMax apparently an amalgam of the names Showtime and Cinemax both known as premium TV providers in America.

ShowMax will be officially announced on Wednesday in Johannesburg, likely with a free ShowMax Basic option giving people free but limited access, as well as a ShowMax Premium subscription offering that costs R99 per month for unlimited use.

Showmax' cost of R99 – a psychological consumer number – is interestingly compared to the basic monthly subscription fee of R699 for MultiChoice's DStv Premium package. In America Netflix and Amazon subscribers pay around $10 for the streaming service, compared to between $80 and $90 per month for a premium satellite or cable pay-TV service. 

While ShowMax from Naspers will be direct competition for Naspers' MultiChoice operating the DStv satellite pay-TV service in South Africa, it also does something else: weakening Netflix' available offering.

ShowMax is sowing up SVOD rights which wouldn't be available to Netflix when the global internet subscription service launches in South Africa. Netflix' offering differs from country to country, depending on available licensing rights.

ShowMax is set to show content through adaptive streaming in high definition (HD) (720p) and says subscribers should have a minimum internet speed of 2 megabits per second (Mbps) but that an uncapped 4Mbps connection or faster is recommended for the best experience.

ShowMax will work on personal computers (through web browsers), iPhones and iPad running iOS7 and higher, Android phones and tablet running Andriod 4.1.0 or higher; Samsung Smart TVs from 2012 to 2015, Samsung Tizen Smart TVs from 2015, LG NetCast Smart TVs from 2012 – 2014 and LG WebOS Smart TVs from 2014 and 2015 through a ShowMax app.

ShowMax subscribers will likely be allowed to watch on two devices simultaneously and will be allowed to register up to 5 devices. 

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Vodacom and Naspers talking about sharing DStv video content; looking at customers paying a fixed amount for video data instead of per megabyte.


Vodacom and Naspers are having discussions about the possibility of letting their South African customers download movies and episodes of TV shows but paying a fixed amount instead of the exorbitant data costs per megabyte which has held back the uptake and growth of video-on-demand (VOD) and other over-the-top (OTT) services.

Bloomberg reports that Vodacom is having talks with media and TV company Naspers to bring DStv video content through its pay-TV platform MultiChoice to mobile devices like smartphones and tablets.

A deal between the big companies could bring new impetus to South Africa's severely constrained and lagging broadband infrastructure and investment.

The roll-out of new services and video-on-demand growth in South Africa have been slow, hampered by years of government inaction and incompetence, as well as bureaucracy at the country's slow-moving broadcasting regulator.

The consumer uptake of video-on-demand (VOD) and OTT services in South Africa, as well as things like digital video mobile broadcasting or DVB-H, have been severely held back the past decade due to a slow-moving and constricted regulatory environment.

On a practical level, limited broadband availability and roll-out for instance has resulted in extremely high data costs involved for ordinary South African consumers who are scared to make use of it and also don't have the money to pay for it.

With expensive uncapped internet connections in the minority in South Africa, consumers with restrictive capped connections and slow connection speeds who want to use even a little bit of data to make video calls or watch video like a movie or TV shows, quickly run into debilitating price points where making use of these services become too expensive.

Besides paying a rental fee per movie release or making use of VOD services, South African customers are burdened with the additional high cost of the actual data used which is quickly gobbled up when accessing video downloading and streaming services like Times Media's VIDI, MTN's FrontRow or MultiChoice's DStv Catch Up.

Last week for instance, Altron TMT admitted that it's Altech Node which it launched in September 2014 was an flop, with sales for the expensive video-on-demand (VOD) set-top box (STB) and service "below expectations with regard to retail customer take-up".

MultiChoice for instance warns DStv subscribers watching video on tablets and smartphones that it recommends uncapped data accounts because "downloading video consumes large amounts of data so please be aware of your data package limits and costs".

It comes as the global VOD streaming service Netflix plans to enter South Africa soon as a new competitor and market disruptor. Netflix told TV with Thinus in January that it plans to be operational and definitely available to South African customers before the end of next year.

According to Bloomberg, Vodacom and Naspers are now considering allowing customers to download a movie or show to a smartphone or tablet for a fixed fee instead of "billing per megabyte".

A deal would mean that customers would be able to download DStv on Demand movies and shows through Vodacom for a cheaper fixed price, without the insanely high cost that comes with the data use of a 500MB or more movie download or streaming, in addition to the rental fee.

Shameel Joosub, Vodacom's chief executive officer (CEO) told Bloomberg that Vodacom - which recently shocked and angered consumers with a unilateral tariff hike from May - plans to sell its own video content to customers. "That's where we'll evolve," said Shameel Joosub.

A deal between Vodacom and Naspers would be the first new big partnership between the two since Vodacom started selling the two DStv Select bouquet offerings from MultiChoice in June 2007, a packaged product agreement which was terminated in late 2011, with legacy DStv Select subscribers being phased out.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

BREAKING. Late Nite News host Loyiso Gola lashes out in a Twitter tirade and trashes Vodacom for its terrible service.


Loyiso Gola, comedian and host of the Emmy nominated satirical weekly news show Late Nite News with Loyiso Gola on eNCA (DStv 403) and e.tv is as mad as hell and won't take it anymore.

The comedian is lashing out in a Twitter tirade and trashing the South African cellular operator Vodacom for what he sees as terrible service.

Loyiso Gola made his hate and disdain for Vodacom known in a series of Tweets to his 307 000 followers, venting that he feels ripped off  by the cellular service provider, after his cellphone was stolen.

"So I pay Vodacom insurance every month for them to tell me I must pay R7 000 for a new iPhone," Loyiso Gola wrote.

He followed it up with an expletive laced rant against Vodacom, asking followers to join him, and Tweets like "VODACOM IS A RIPOFF", "Been taking sh*t from Vodacom for a while now" and "I hate Vodacom's slow ass internet".

When Vodacom responded with "Hi Loyiso, please DM us your contact number and we'll get in touch to sort this out ASAP", Loyiso Gola responded with an expletive telling Vodacom to go away.

He followed it up with a "Dear Vodacom, If I was not clear the first time #ihatevodacom".

Loyiso Gola added: "R12 800 for an iPhone 5S. Vodacom has lost the plot".

Chester Missing didn't respond but will presumably send Loyiso Gola a please call me.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Naspers in preliminary talks with Vodacom over access to MultiChoice TV content reports Bloomberg.

Naspers has been in talks with the wireless cell operator Vodacom, for Vodacom to possibly get access to MultiChoice TV content, Bloomberg is reporting.

Bloomberg is citing preliminary talks between the media giant and the cellphone operator.

Earlier this year Shameel Joosub, Vodacom group CEO said in an interview that getting and having access to TV content such as that from MultiChoice, "could be very beneficial" to both parties in a possible deal.

Monday, July 9, 2012

The cheapskate Vodacom Durban July 2012 and the total diss to Cape Town journalists.

The terrible PR and pathetic corporate communication from South Africa's entertainment industry starts off early this week with the cheapskate Vodacom Durban July 2012 and Vodacom instructing the PR company Total Exposure to only invite and fly Johannesburg press to the annual event which was shown on SABC3 -  and completely dissing all of Cape Town's media and press.

Hopefully the very oh so cheap Vodacom and the Vodacom Durban July 2012 get exactly the kind of total exposure from the Johannesburg media they wanted - since they're going to get exactly the kind of bad feelings from the press and the limited to no exposure from the Cape Town journalists and editors their blatant diss is worthy of.

And strange that Vodacom or any company would proactively have in their media and marketing plan to court the resentment and resultant negative exposure such an informed decision would stir up and generate.

I am of course assuming that whoever made this decision to cut out Cape Town's high caliber press with national reach is obviously clever enough and well-versed in media strategy, to have surely known that if you decide to not bother with a section of media and press, that this is what would likely happen - they will ignore you right back. I wonder why a company would think that by playing favourites with press from different parts of the country it would not come across as very cheap, quite low-class, and of course geographically discriminatory.

I cover television and can't care less about bad and dismissive media planning around more entertainment type events, but Cape Town's entertainment journalists and editors (where covering television often overlaps as part of the bigger scene of things) have been buzzing today about the Vodacom Durban July 2012 - and not in a good way.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

BREAKING. MultiChoice on DStv Select: 'MultiChoice and Vodacom have agreed that DStv Select will be managed by MultiChoice only.'


After TV with Thinus broke the news yesterday that Vodacom's DStv Select pay TV offering will now be managed by MultiChoice after Vodacom started the service just over 3 years ago, MultiChoice has responded to media enquiries made, saying that ''MultiChoice and Vodacom have agreed that the DStv Select service will be managed by MultiChoice only'' because this ''this enables the company to provide a streamlined service to its subscribers.''

Vodacom launched DStv Select - consisting of two cheaper pay TV bouquets, DStv Select 1 and DStv Select 2 - in June 2007 through an exclusive pay TV agency agreement between Vodacom and MultiChoice.

Vodacom has been offering the sell-through DStv Select and DStv Select bouquets costing R157 per month, but after three years, DStv Select 1 and DStv Select 2 will now be directly administated by MultiChoice.

Exactly as I've told you yesterday, MultiChoice says the billing of all DStv Select accounts will now be managed by MultiChoice.

DStv Select subscribers will receive their DStv Select statements directly from MultiChoice and DStv Select subscribers need to change their debit order instructions from Vodacom to MultiChoice as soon as possible. ''We urge customers to update their payment details with MultiChoice by 1 November to avoid having their DStv Select services discontinued,'' says MultiChoice.