Showing posts with label Wanda Mkhize. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wanda Mkhize. Show all posts

Thursday, October 7, 2021

Netflix gone from the Telkom LIT streaming box, users can lodge Telkom refund complaints as consumers vent over useless Telkom LIT 'paperweight'.


by Thinus Ferreira

Telkom and Netflix have abruptly dumped support for the video streaming service from Telkom's Telkom LIT streaming box after less than 3 years, leaving Telkom LIT box users with what they describe as a useless "paperweight" they can't use to Netflix and chill.

Angry Telkom LIT customers are furious that they bought something that Telkom touted but then decided to no longer support, with the Netflix app that gives users a "NW-6-403" code when it was opened since October.

Telkom announced its partnership with Netflix and its Telkom LIT streaming box with big fanfare in November 2018, only for this contract to end less than 3 years later, leaving Telkom LIT customers with a box they can't use for what it was bought.

The Telkom LIT box still supports YouTube, DStv and MultiChoice's video streaming service Showmax.

At the time, Telkom said in a statement that it was "excited to expand our content offering with Netflix. The Netflix partnership allows us to offer more entertainment". Telkom has since launched its own TelkomONE video streaming service.

On its help page for errors for devices, Netflix South Africa now says that when users of Telkom LIT get the "NW-6-403" error code that they're "getting this error on your Telkom set-top box because the Netflix app is no longer available through Telkom. To keep watching TV shows and movies on Netflix, you will have to use a different device".


Netflix partnership ended
Telkom told TVwithThinus in response to a media query that it has ended its fixed agreement with Netflix but that customers can lodge refund complaints with Telkom.

"Over the years Telkom has strived to provide its customers with a variety of content offerings, including launching its own video-on-demand (VOD) platform, TelkomONE," says Wanda Mkhize,  Telkom's executive for smart home and content.

"Our current partnership with Netflix has unfortunately come to an end, however, we have exciting new and refreshed content partnerships for our valued customers which will be announced in due course."

"While customers will no longer have access to Netflix on the Telkom set-top box from 1 October 2021, they will still be able to access other OTT services on their STB."

"As you may be aware, the Netflix app is not available in the Google Play store, as Netflix has made the availability of their app on Android STBs dependent on a partnership agreement with the STB owner. With our fixed-term agreement with Netflix having come to an end, they will no longer be supporting the app on the Telkom STB."

Asked what customers should do who bought Telkom LIT specifically to watch Netflix who can't any longer, Wanda Mkhize says Telkom asks that "customers address or lodge refund complaints directly with Telkom, through our call centre on 10213 (follow the voice prompts), or email MashigLM@telkom.co.za ".

On Twitter, Telkom told customers who purchased a Telkom LIT box in the past 6 months that they will be compensated with a Takealot voucher to the value of R1000. With the voucher they will be able to buy another streaming device.


A cascade of complaints over Telkom's 'paperweight'
"Typical Telkom. I bought the Telkom LIT box for Netflix, now it's useless," remarked VryDenker on Twitter where there's a growing cascade of complaints over the Netflix removal from Telkom's set-top box. "If I knew it was associated with a deal between Netflix and Telkom, I would have given the box a skip. Where do we apply for a refund?"

Shahieda asked: "Is this really the end of our Netflix viewing on our Telkom LIT box? Do we just throw it away after spending money on it? I don't want to have to go buy another box and them Telkom LIT starts working again".

Siyazi Wanjali said "I bought these Telkom LIT devices with certain capability of which now they can longer deliver. Worse, it was not even communicated to me, neither by Telkom nor Netflix, and my debit order went through. I feel robbed."

"Basically this Telkom LIT box is a paperweight now. It's rough out here hey? Telkom would you like it back? What do you suggest I do with it because it's pretty useless to me now," said Tarryn Charlie.


Thursday, July 22, 2021

Telkom and JOOX launch Telkom Music a new music streaming service in South Africa for R60 per month.


by Thinus Ferreira

Telkom has launched Telkom Music as a new music streaming service in partnership with the Tencent-owned JOOX for R60 per month, with the app that is now available on the Google Play Store and Huawei AppGallery.

Telkom and JOOX worked together to create and launch Telkom Music.

Similar to Telkom's video streaming service TelkomONE, users get free access and are able to listen for free but with limited features. Users can subscribe for R59.99 per month to unlock a so-called "VIP package" with more functionality.

The Telkom Music app size is 10MB to download and has been designed to save data usage and space on a smartphone and also has a button where users can turn on and off their data usage.

The "Music Guru" feature allows users to test their music knowledge against other users. This interactive feature plays a song clip for users to identify within a few seconds as they try to get the highest score against other users in various genres and categories.

The music app's "Radio" feature allows users to find new tracks to share. The feature offers a non-stop listening experience that enables users to discover new music, aligned with and relevant to music they love.

The "Flock" feature allows users to create playlists together for their next big event - whether in person or virtual. 

"Telkom recognizes that the landscape of music streaming is changing and highlights that the stand-out feature of its music app is the fact that it focuses on data-saving and shared music experiences between users," says Wanda Mkhize, Telkom head of smarthome and content.

"In true Telkom style, our mission is to leave no man behind and we are thrilled to introduce this offering. We’ve introduced a bouquet of products recently to cater to the content needs of our customers, including a video on-demand and gaming services; and this closes the loop neatly for us from a content viewpoint".

"The technical know-how of the Tencent Africa and JOOX team in this space with our inclusive product portfolio has culminated in the perfect marriage."

Brett Loubser, Tencent Africa Services CEO, says "The future of music streaming will include shared, social experiences. With lockdown changing the way we connect, Telkom Music will include Mods focused on sharing one's music experience."

"We are very excited to embark on this endeavor with Telkom Mobile. The team at Telkom Mobile and at Tencent Africa have put a huge amount of effort into delivering the most accessible music streaming product possible."

"Our app size reduces the amount of memory used in a listener's phone, and integration with Telkom's app ecosystem makes it easy for millions of people to have millions of songs in their pocket."

Friday, November 13, 2020

Where’s SABC3? Why no SABC News? Why R7 a day? Where did the name come from? TelkomONE answers what you’re wondering about the new video streaming service.


by Thinus Ferreira

Where's SABC3? Why no SABC News? How did the name of Telkom's new TelkomONE video streaming service come about? Why R7 per day? I went looking for answers.

Telkom this week launched its new subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) service that costs R7 per day or R49 per month, offering a collection of streamed linear TV channels from SABC1 to TRT World, and a library catalogue of shows from Generations to MTV Africa's Lasizwe: Fake it Till You Make it.

While Telkom addressed and issued most information about TelkomONE, some questions remain and TVwithThinus went looking for answers.

For instance, although several SABC channels are included in the 5-year deal, and although TV news channels like Al Jazeera and TRT World are available as linear TV channels, the SABC's own TV news channel SABC News is conspicuously absent. But why?

"SABC News is currently under an exclusive agreement," says Wanda Mkhize, Telkom's executive for smart home and content. 

It means that SABC News, although it's the South African public broadcaster's public TV news channel, can only be streamed through the SABC's own SABC News app, and is of course carried on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform.

How did Telkom arrive at the R7 per day price point, and what factored into the decision to arrive at the subscription price of R7 per day and R49 per week? 

Wanda explains that a number of factors were taken into consideration: input costs - both content and data, the current offering in the market and their price points, as well as who the targeted customer segment - the youth market - is.

Another channel that is missing is SABC3. Does TelkomONE have plans to add this TV channel? Wanda says yes. "Yes it will be shortly included once certain property rights have been cleared," she says.

While the majority of the emphasis has been placed on the deal that Telkom has signed with the SABC specifically, the streaming service has more than just SABC content. But what are these?

Wanda Mkhize says that "Telkom has aggregated content from a variety of local and international content providers such as ViacomCBS, Fremantle, Discovery Inc., and a host of local independent producers who meet our focus area of music, comedy, lifestyle, and series".

How did the brand name of TelkomONE come about and what were other shortlisted contenders? While Wanda doesn't want to say what names made second and third place - and there definitely were, she says that Telkom "worked with our agencies in the development of the brand name".

When Cell C launched Cell C black and MultiChoice launched Showmax they did so with a big catalogue of content that they then gradually started to scale back when they saw that it was too much - or in other words, that a lot of people all watch only a smaller chunk of content. 

How did Telkom make the decision of "how big" the launch catalogue content offer would or should be so as to not "over-offer" but to still have a big enough variety?

"The TelkomOne platform offers a variety of content mix, live TV and catch up, as well as a specially curated library of video-on demand assets," says Wanda. "However, our approach to VOD content on the service has been to not try and be everything to everyone but to rather focus on the youth market."

"This has allowed us to focus less on quantity but more on quality content specifically tailored to this market," she says. "We're committed to adding in new content on a very regular basis inline with the learnt customer likes and preferences".

And as Cell C, Showmax and others have said where they want to be after a year, what subscriber number target does TelkomONE have for its 1-year anniversary or by 5 years? What would mean success?

"The launch of TelkomONE free and the TelkomONE AMP propositions are just the start," she says but doesn't want to mention any numbers for now. "We are within the upcoming year looking at expanding our value proposition to cater for a varied customer base. Whilst we have set aside certain targets for each of these, we are not at liberty to disclose these."


Monday, November 9, 2020

Telkom launches its TelkomONE video streaming service including linear TV channels with free package and R7 per day subscription; plans more bouquets and says 'we're here for the long run'.


by Thinus Ferreira

Telkom that initially promised to do so on Thursday last week, on Monday launched its new TelkomONE streaming service, offering some linear TV channels in its offering, with a free version as well as a TelkomONE Amp subscription package that will cost R7 per day or R49 per month.

While currently only offering the free package that will carry advertising and one AMP subscription package, Telkom says it will expand over time to offer various different subscription fee packages.

The TelkomONE video-on-demand (VOD) service was built by Discover Digital and Telkom signed a 5-year contract with the SABC to carry SABC1 and SABC2 as linear TV channels, as well as a package of library content from the SABC archives for its video-on-demand service. 

TelkomONE however carries more than just SABC content. The heavy local catalogue curated along the genres of lifestyle, comedy, music and reality TV content is flavoured with some international shows from Hollywood and independent overseas studios, and well as from South Africa locally.

TelkomONE is available through downloading it as a mobile app, internet browsers at telkomone.tv on personal computers, Android TV and Telkom's own Telkom LIT set-top box. Payment for TelkomONE can be done with Telkom airtime, adding it postpaid to fixed and mobile Telkom contracts, credit and debit cards, vouchers or cash.

Telkom declined to answer when TVwithThinus on Monday asked what the financial investment in rand has been so far in establishing TelkomONE as its video-on-demand service and for what period it will definitely be running it before evaluating its prospects and return on the investment to the telecom's bottom line.

Linear TV channels that will be streaming on TelkomONE include SABC1, SABC2, Kaya TV, SABC Sport, SABC Education, Mindset, Al Jazeera, africanews, Deutsche Welle, euronews, France24, RT, GOD TV, Hope Channel, Inspiration TV and SonLifeBroadcasting Network (SBN).

The SABC's 19 radio stations will also be streaming on TelkomONE including MetroFM, RSG, Umhlobo Wenene, 5FM, Thobela FM and Ukhozi FM. 

Included in the TelkomONE AMP package users get an additional 30 curated audio playlists that is done by a Canadian service provider packaging and distributing African content.

Notably absent from TelkomONE is SABC3 because the streaming licensing rights for international content on the channel couldn't be cleared, as well as the SABC's own TV news channel SABC News. 

Neither Telkom nor the SABC explained why SABC News isn't available although it's likely that although it is a public broadcaster channel, it was commissioned and is being paid for by MultiChoice for its DStv service.

The SABC will receive an annual channels carriage licensing fee for its linear TV and radio channels, as well as for the on-demand archive content, 10% of which the SABC will cycle and change monthly to keep it fresh. This deal includes 1000 of hours of VOD content. 

The SABC will also share in the TelkomONE advertising revenue.

The SABC placing its content on TelkomONE is separate from the SABC's plan to launch its own SABC iPlayer video streaming service in 2021.

Sipho Maseko, Telkom CEO, says "TelkomONE will make it possible for subscribers to pause, go back into the electronic programming guide and time-shift, and instantly watch a scheduled TV show they may have missed. Telkom is making digital TV functionality available to all".

Madoda Mxakwe, SABC CEO, says "We believe that the transition to digital broadcasting and over-the-top (OTT) is a key strategy for the survival and relevance of the South African public broadcaster".

Stephen Watson, founding managing director of Discover Digital that built TelkomONE, says it contains technologies and functions that are first in the African market.

On the AMP package a subscriber can download 5 titles and a user have 48 hours to start watching. 

Users can record content and shows from the live linear TV channels which will be recorded in the could and then appear in the account section under "my recordings".

Interestingly, if you've missed a show, users can now go back into the past with the free package on the EPG for 24 hours and select a show that was already broadcast, and it will play immediately. On the AMP package a TelkomONE viewer can scroll back on a specific linear TV channel as far as 3 days and still watch a specific show.

With TelkomONE the time-shifted PVR function is therefore no longer limited to consumers who can afford a set-top box with a hard drive.

TelkomONE will also offer a 4K channel broadcasting music festivals and says it will build out its 4K content offering over time. Within the free package TelkomONE will offer talk shows and music artists performing live, streamed in 4K resolution, which will be available to Telkom LIT box users.

After Telkom last week said "we're ready" and will launch on 5 November, Wanda Mkhize, Telkom's executive for smart home and content, told TVwithThinus about the postponement that "with us delaying the launch and actually launching today we had some technical and connection challenges on Thursday and unfortunately couldn't launch the platform and as such we made sure that we could at least deliver as soon as possible and that's why TelkomONE is launching today".

TVwithThinus also asked whether the TelkomONE app will also be added to MultiChoice's latest DStv Explora that will carry and offer a carousel of different VOD streaming services like Netflix, Showmax and Amazon Prime Video, or in terms of set-top boxes it will be limited to Telkom LIT.

Wanda Mkhize said that "Telkom and MultiChoice have had a longstanding relationship, we currently carry the DStv application on our Telkom LIT box, and relationships with regards to services and what we produce we would definitely continue having those conversations".

With the South African VOD landscape already littered with failures like VIDI, Altech Node, PCCW's OnTapTV, Kwesé Play and Kwesé TV and most recently Cell C black that sucked up hundreds of millions of rands without a return on investment, Wanda Mkhize, when TVwithThinus asked for how long TelkomONE will definitely be running, said "we're here for the long run".

"We've looked at the strategy, we've framed it in regards to introducing two bouquets right now. We have a future-view of introducing more bouquets, opening up and create greater access specifically to our fixed-line customers."

"We also believe and are following the strategy of being a super-aggregator which means that we believe that our customers need to have choice in regards to the services that they like to take up. Therefore we will be introducing more services onto the platform and giving our consumers- both mobile and fixed - more access."


Monday, November 2, 2020

Youth-focused, mobile-focused video streaming service TelkomONE with linear TV channels set for launch on 5 November 2020; Telkom says it won't be competing with Netflix and Showmax.


by Thinus Ferreira

Telkom will launch its new TelkomONE video streaming service on Thursday 5 November as a mobile-first, youth-focused streamer, offering a range of on-demand content but no movies, a collection of linear TV channels and with differently-tiered subscription levels but says that it doesn't plan to be competition for Netflix or Showmax - at least not initially.

Telkom is also hinting that it will make some form of new mobile data component or "tie-in" package available to Telkom customers to make it possible for people to watch TelkomONE for cheaper if they stay within the telecom's own ecosystem, although subscribers on other networks will also be able to access TelkomONE.

Although Telkom says that TelkomONE won't be competing with the likes of Showmax and Netflix, it is jumping into the exact same video streamer pool available in South Africa that is quickly filling up with rivals ranging from Vodacom Video Play and VIU to Apple TV+, Amazon Prime Video and some others.

While more international streamers like WarnerMedia's HBO Max, Walt Disney Company's Disney+ , Discovery Inc.'s discovery+ and Paramount+ from ViacomCBS might reach South African shores in 2021, Telkom is launching TelkomONE despite Covid-19 and a worsening economic outlook that will see consumers think even more carefully about their dwindling discretionary spending. 


Different tiers
"With the market that we're looking to target, you need to have different tiers of subscriptions. So we're definitely looking at monthly, weekly, weekend, daily pricing propositions, making it easier for the consumer using TelkomONE to spend in relation to their wallet and in relation to how they want to consume content," Wanda Mkhize, Telkom's executive for smart home and content, tells TVwithThinus.

A big issue and barrier to entry with video-on-demand services, especially in Africa, is the hurdle of not just having to pay a subscription fee to access a streamer but also for expensive internet, with broadband penetration, speed and data costs that remain problematic.

Telkom says it is mindful to try and sidestep the failures of previous video-on-demand (VOD) offerings in South Africa like VIDI and recently Cell C black that had to close down, as well as the billion-dollar short form content streamer Quibi in the United States that abruptly announced last week that it is shutting down.

"We made sure that we understood what's been happening in the market - some of the failures - Cell C black, Quibi, and I think some other services that have had challenges. It's about understanding the localised market, and understanding the hard-hitting point that data is very much a key barrier in a lot of communities," says Wanda Mkhize.

"For us, the TelkomONE proposition that we will be bringing, is from the understanding that it is something that is looking at content, as well as a data component - not just the cost of data but how do we ensure efficiencies in the usage of the data that is allocated through to the customer."

"How do we ensure that we give our consumer using TelkomONE the maximum quantity out of the data that they have, and also ensuring that the content proposition resonates and speak to them in whatever it is that they are looking for to see." 



Diverse content bakery
About the types of content that TelkomONE will be offering, Wanda Mkhize says "our bakery has a variety of cakes and desserts on option. Aligned with the consumer segments that we are targeting and as we broaden the proposition we will have a variety of content opportunities."

"Definitely there will be some shorts. There will be some series. At launch, TelkomONE will not be having any movies. As a mobile-first proposition, we have identified it as not necessarily the best consumption mechanism but in future, as we expand the proposition we will definitely be introducing more." 

"We will have content in different languages," she says. 

TelkomONE will be accessible through Android, iOS, as well as on Telkom's own Telkom LIT set-top-box. "We will also be making available a SmartTV app, so if consumers have an application it will be made available."

"We are also not a locked-network service. As much as we would have preferential data offerings for our Telkom subscribers the service will be open to everyone, even those not on the Telkom network - so even if you're not on the network, both fixed and mobile, you can still get access to TelkomONE."

"This is really an opportunity that we've seen for us to expand this aggregation relationship or strategy that we've started because this is just the start."

"We will be adding on new partners, as well as new services that are new to South Africa as well just to further broaden the appeal and to broaden the offering that is available to South Africans in the content space," says Wanda Mkhize.


Not competing with Netflix or Showmax
TelkomONE, similar to what Cell C black did, will stream a collection of linear TV channels, enabling people to watch TV channels as they would on their TV set but through the internet using a mobile device.

"The type of market that we are targeting is not necessarily a youth segment who's been on digital platforms only. We don't see ourselves as competing against Netflix or MultiChoice's Showmax. We're looking at a different consumer set, and understanding that a lot of the customers that we are targeting, there's still a need for linear television."

"Linear TV is never going to die," says Wanda Mkhize. "I've been in the over-the-top (OTT) and VOD space and as much as I sit down and I love the opportunity to find a programme that I want, I can sit for a good half an hour trying to find something and end up back at linear television."

"We want to give our consumers that opportunity and that choice to be able to - if there's something news or current affairs related, and they want to engage with that, as well as some other linear TV content that may be of interest, to actually be able to access that content."

"We want them to also eat and catch-up as much as they want, from what they want, from the VOD section."

Speaking about the number of linear TV channels that she doesn't want to reveal yet, Wanda Mkhize says "we've been working with a number of suppliers. We are finalising everything."


Young and mobile
"From early-2015 and eventually the launch of our Telkom LIT propositions we've been working as a super-aggregator, looking and working with other content and content platforms and OTT providers to enable our subscribers to better access these rich video platforms and to get the entertainment and services that they want," says Wanda Mkhize.

"Having worked with a lot of these content providers, we identified that there was definitely a gap in the market. There are very propositions focused on your higher-end customers; a lot more international-content focused, and much more of a lean-back, fixed-broadband type of propositions."

"We identified that there is definitely a need for a mobile-first platform that really services the customers where we've really seen the biggest growth in South Africa and Africa as a whole which is the mobile consumer, and the mobile consumer using data within that space, and also youth-focused."

"We see mobile and the youth, and a content proposition put together to service this market as the TelkomONE focus. It's also about local content, and the question is how do we make sure that we find the right content to deliver to that market that we want to attract? How do we find localised content made for mobile?"

To help in this process, TelkomONE is running a competition until the end of November asking South Africans to send in their ideas and video examples of anything from lifestyle shows to short form telenovelas that it has dubbed "mobivelas".

"Mobisodes and clips are happening within the space of YouTube but not as a service that is looking at creating it from an episodic perspective and focusing on the youth market. So we really want to find that localised content that really is made specifically for TelkomONE as a platform," says Wanda Mkhize.

"The question is also around how do we start to create these new content value-chains? Traditionally our broadcast value-chain and market has been your big-ticket production items like your Muvhango on SABC2, Generations on SABC1, The Queen on Mzansi Magic."

"However, there are a lot of young up and coming creative people who have thought about creating something but haven't necessarily thought that they are 'creatives' and getting into the industry. TelkomONE wants to create opportunities and give them a platform on which they can bring their youth-focused ideas."

About why Telkom is launching TelkomONE now instead of 2021, during a tumultuous year marked by the global Covid-19 pandemic, Wanda Mkhize says "We want to end the year with a bang; we think there are a lot of opportunities. It's been a tough year. Just launching with something new and fresh to close off the year is really an exciting opportunity for us."

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Telkom and Netflix South Africa sign content streaming partnership; Netflix to be added to Telkom's LIT TV box by end of 2018.


Telkom and Netflix South Africa have signed a partnership whereby Telkom will offer Netflix to its South African customers with Netflix South Africa that will become available through Telkom's LIT TV box by the end of 2018.

The partnership between Telkom and Netflix is the first such agreement with a South African telecommunications company. 

MultiChoice Group CEO, Calvo Mawela, told TVwithThinus in May this year that Naspers' pay-TV arm is not talking to, and not involved in discussions with Netflix to bring the subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) service to DStv subscribers in the way that the leading satellite pay-TV operators in America and the United Kingdom are doing.


"We are excited to expand our content offering with Netflix. The Netflix partnership allows us to offer more entertainment," says Wanda Mkhize, Telkom content executive, in a statement on Thursday.


"As a start, we can respond to customer requests for the inclusion of Netflix on Telkom's LIT TV Box." 


Wanda Mkhize says its working on mobile and broadband service offerings that will be launched before the end of the year and that these will include enhanced LIT video options and data offerings.


Telkom says Netflix South Africa will be available on Telkom's LIT TV Box from later in 2018.


Maria Ferreras, Netflix's vice-president for business development for the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) region, says in the statement that "We are excited to partner with Telkom and highlight our commitment to South Africa".


"With this partnership, Telkom users will easily access the most-loved entertainment experiences that Netflix provides".