Amazon Prime Video Set to Go Live and Linear

Amazon has begun recruiting the technical and marketing talent needed to integrate “24/7 linear broadcast TV content” into its expansive Amazon Prime Video portfolio of services.

“We are seeking an experienced Product Manager for the Prime Video Linear TV team to redefine how customers watch 24/7 linear broadcast TV content,” reads a LinkedIn job posting, published three weeks ago and first discovered by tech blog Protocol.

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“Linear TV enables customers to watch 24/7 streams of their favorite TV stations airing programs including sports, news, movies, award shows, special events and TV shows,” the posting adds. “You will be responsible for designing the end-to-end customer experience for how customers discover and watch Linear TV content.”

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Another LinkedIn posting is seeking a “senior software development engineer”: “Linear (24/7 Television or broadcast programming) is one of the key options for Prime Video customers,” it says.

Save for sporadic experiments in live programming including NFL games, Amazon Prime Video has primarily focused on streaming on-demand content, just as its biggest SVOD competitors, Netflix, Hulu and Disney Plus, do.

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Amazon opted several years ago not to pursue the virtual pay TV model adopted by Google, Hulu, AT&T and Dish Network and others, who have struggled to turn a profit by streaming expensive skinny bundles of linear networks. Amazon instead focused on repackaging third-party SVOD services through its popular Prime Video Channels aggregation service.

According to Protocol, which said it spoke to an industry insider familiar with Amazon’s plans, the technology company is seeking a less costly strategy for packaging live programming, as well as pre-recorded programming delivered through traditional “live/linear” means.

That might mean licensing individual shows and events, and creating a limited number of linear networks as opposed to licensing pricey bundles of whole linear channels, a la a vMVPD.

Notably, Prime Video rival Roku is focused on linear programming, too. Earlier this month, Roku announced that it’s adding more than 30 free live and linear channels to the Roku Channel, expanding its selection to more than 100 linear channels.

Roku has also created a channel guide to help viewers find what they want to watch.

Daniel Frankel

Daniel Frankel is the managing editor of Next TV, an internet publishing vertical focused on the business of video streaming. A Los Angeles-based writer and editor who has covered the media and technology industries for more than two decades, Daniel has worked on staff for publications including E! Online, Electronic Media, Mediaweek, Variety, paidContent and GigaOm. You can start living a healthier life with greater wealth and prosperity by following Daniel on Twitter today!