Virtual MVPDs: Platform Improves the Path to Content

Virtual MVPD panel (left to right): Jon Steinberg, Cheddar;  Jeff Shultz, Pluto TV; Andrew McCollum, Philo;  JeanDavid Blanc, Molotov; Dwayne Benefield, PlayStation Vue; and Tim Connolly, Hulu.

Virtual MVPD panel (left to right): Jon Steinberg, Cheddar;  Jeff Shultz, Pluto TV; Andrew McCollum, Philo;  JeanDavid Blanc, Molotov; Dwayne Benefield, PlayStation Vue; and Tim Connolly, Hulu.

Denver – Subscriber losses are continuing to plague the world of traditional MVPDs, but a new wave of OTT TV services believes that providing more intuitive experiences and platforms that connect consumers to the shows they love are sizing up to be a big difference maker.

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That was one big takeaway here Wednesday (May 16) at the Pay TV Show on a panel focused on a new wave of virtual MVPDs equipped with slick, personalized interfaces that deliver various types of packages to a wide range of mobile and TV-connected devices.

Session moderator, Jon Steinberg, founder and CEO of Cheddar, the business and tech news service tailored for younger audiences, asked why traditional TV is in trouble and ran through a list of TV shows and series that tend to appeal to an older set of consumers.

Tim Connolly, senior vice president and head of distribution and partnerships at Hulu, said that many of those shows are also popular on Hulu, whose average subscriber is 31 years old.

“It really is more about the platform and not the show itself,” Connolly said, adding later that a case study found that shows like The Good Wife have done a decent job finding an audience of young women on the streaming service.

PlayStation Vue, the Sony-owned OTT TV service, serves an audience that’s mostly in the low 30s.

“The reason we built PlayStation Vue was because the PlayStation audience is largely millennial and wanted a better way to watch TV,” Dwayne Benefield, vice president and head of Sony PlayStation Vue, said.

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To keep TV relevant, service providers need to create a better product experience, agreed Andrew McCollum, CEO of Philo, which launched a national, entertainment-focused package last November that starts at $16 per month.

Philo cut its teeth on a multi-platform TV platform tailored for college campuses, and found that 92% of those college users said they’d want to keep the service after they graduated. Philo has parlayed those learnings and those experiences into its new national OTT TV product.

“The content really isn’t the problem,” McCollum said. “It’s the cost and the delivery.”

Consumer cost isn’t an issue for Pluto TV, the free, ad-supported linear-style TV service.

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Traditional TV didn’t keep up with consumer expectations, Jeff Shultz, chief business officer of Pluto TV, said. He argued that while the customer experience continues to be an issue, the challenges affecting the overarching business model remains a more significant hurdle for the pay TV industry to overcome.

“We’ve learned that free and instant scales in a way that’s remarkable,” he said.

But Steinberg wondered if MVPDs, virtual or traditional, have a “tortured relationship” with Pluto TV, given that networks and programmers, including Cheddar, offer some content on the free streaming service as well as through pay TV distributors, creating a challenge to provide enough value across the board. Why not create a “front porch” that gives consumers access to that free content alongside an avenue to the paid product?

Shultz said Pluto TV is starting to do that, citing some work with SVOD service DramaFever, whereby season one of a multi-season series from DramaFever appears on Pluto TV’s free, ad-supported service while also giving viewers a clear path to DramaFever’s full SVOD offering.

Others see the path to success being paved by a mix of both free and paid.

France-based Molotov runs a freemium style service that offers some free content with an upsell option. Blanc said Molotov’s simplified approach has enabled the company to draw consumers of all ages.

“Everything is about the experience,” JeanDavid Blanc, CEO of Molotov, said.