Webcasting Facilities
Like conventional broadcasting, webcasting facilities can range from the
simple to the complex. At the low end are Webcast plants that are little
more than a PC full of digital video clips set up as a Web server, hosted
by an Internet Service Provider. A high-end facility will include a live
video studio, a production department, an equipment rack full of servers,
and its own Internet backbone connection. For the purpose of the hypothetical
business models presented below, present day space leasing costs, bandwidth
pricing and staffing costs in the San Francisco Bay area are used.
Webcasting Content
The digital video programs offered by an Internet television station can
be identical to programming on broadcast television, provided that the
webcaster has permission to re-broadcast them on the Internet. Movies
that are out of copyright can be Webcast without any permission. Video
programs and movies that have never been distributed in conventional channels
may be Webcast with their owner's permission. Then, there is content created
specifically for the Internet.
Today, most of the
original video content distributed by downloading or as pay per view on
the Internet is in the adult entertainment category. As sports organizations
become more Internet oriented, their games and background content will
probably become a significant percentage of Internet media content. Educational
or corporate training materials are already on the Internet as Web pages
and downloadable text. Distance Learning and Learning on Demand can both
be accomplished effectively with video. Direct marketing videos, generally
known as infomercials, are becoming more common on the Internet every
day, with real estate virtual tours leading the way. Although the major
news gathering organizations that dominate the airwaves today have a limited
Internet video presence, this is bound to increase. More importantly,
as thousands of Webcast channels go online, video journalists will have
more non-mainstream outlets for their stories.
Pre-existing media
content requires minimal processing, or authoring, before it can be Webcast,
and so has minimal handling costs associated with it. Original video content
that takes full advantage of the interactivity of the Internet has substantially
higher authoring costs associated with it. Although the sky is the limit
when it comes to authoring intense interactive content such as videogames,
a rough estimate of the additional costs of interactive video versus non-interactive
video is about a one hundred percent premium, assuming efficient authoring
tools and staff that knows how to use them.
For the purpose of
the hypothetical business models presented below, content costs are based
on our own experience in buying media, producing new media, and converting
existing media for use within Internet television.
Bandwidth Cost
Before any bandwidth charges are incurred, the Internet TV server must
be placed on the Internet. If the server will be located in your own facility,
and you are not already hosting a Web site, you will need a router, a
csu/dsu, and other interconnect equipment. If this is a first-time installation
of an Internet server, then there will be charges for setup of the dedicated
connection from a local ISP (presumably one located on the Internet "backbone"
or main line), and the phone company's local loop charges. Once the connection
equipment and service has been installed, it must be supervised and maintained
by competent personnel. Scalability of the Internet connection must also
be considered. If a T1 line is used to make the connection to the Internet,
bandwidth can not be increased beyond 1.54 megabits per second without
installing a second T1 line and additional interconnect equipment.
The alternative to
owner-hosting the Internet TV server is to contract with a company that
specializes in providing Internet hosting services in a shared facility,
referred to as "co-locating". Co-location hosting companies offer a state-of-the-art
facility, with highly redundant Internet backbone connectivity, climate-controlled
space, an uninterruptable power source, 24x7x365 network monitoring, and
best of all, virtually unlimited amounts of bandwidth, on demand. This
allows the webcaster to start with a small amount of bandwidth, and to
increase the bandwidth at any time, without any additional equipment or
local loop line charges.
The price for server
co-location is approximately $400/month. This is the rack space "real
estate" cost. In addition, bandwidth usage is sold per 1Mbps (one megabit
per second). Each 1mbps of Bandwidth is approximately $950 per month,
and can support about 3 concurrent video streams. A range of price structures
is available, from "pay as you go" to "fixed block" purchase plans. Since
time of day is a factor in Internet backbone bandwidth pricing, off-peak
loading to remote caches in local markets can reduce costs.
Business Models
While it is difficult if not impossible to predict how real business operations
will perform, the following hypothetical cases may serve to illustrate
the general feasibility of Internet television in a variety of applications.
Given the rapidly changing nature of the Internet and technology itself,
these examples should be considered perishable. None of the following
represent actual businesses.
Case 1: Video on
Demand
A producer/distributor of Yoga videotapes aimed at the health conscious
consumer is presently making VHS format tapes, duplicating them and marketing
the tapes via a Website. The Yoga site has e-commerce support so consumers
can buy online with a credit card. The tapes are shipped via UPS or US
Mail. In this case, the object is to increase revenue by selling more
videotapes and to add three new sources of revenue; pay per view yoga
videos, embedded Web page links to second party e-commerce sites and video
advertising of second party products that are health oriented.
The content on this
YogaTV1.com channel consists of free video programming on health and fitness
topics, pay per view Yoga video clips that average 5 minutes in length,
infomercials averaging 20 minutes in length, and 30 second commercials.
During free video playback, a commercial is shown every 10 minutes. At
start-up, YogaTV1.com has 48 hours of free content in which each program
is repeated on a typical cable TV channel rotation schedule. If a viewer
chooses to watch all 48 hours of free content, that viewer will see 288
commercials during the 48-hour rotation.
In addition to the
free programs, YogaTV1.com offers an online library of 200 instructional
Yoga video clips on a pay per view basis. These video clips were previously
produced for sale on VHS tape, and their cost was expensed prior to the
Internet television project. To keep its proprietary content fresh, YogaTV1.com
produces 6 new pay per view video clips each week, adding 300 clips per
year to its library. New free video programs are added at the rate of
2 hours per week. One hour of second party infomercials is available on
the site for free viewing. Each week, one of those three infomercials
is replaced with a new one.
YogaTV1.com has a
facility based on a Level 1 Imon.comTV Instant Internet Television package,
at a cost of $35,000. In addition, they purchased a PC configured as a
digital TV production suite for $8,000, a Mini-DV camcorder for $2,500,
a TV lighting package for $1,000 and a tripod for $500. No costs are given
for studio space or workspace, as the existing offices of YogaTV1.com
are sufficient.
Production costs
for the 2 hours of new instructional yoga video clips each month (twenty-four
5-minute clips) are $5,000. A contractor, using YogaTV1.com's equipment
and facility performs this work on a part-time basis. The 48 hours of
free programming material had a one-time acquisition cost of $5,000. Over
the course of the first year, another 100 hours of video will be acquired
at a cost of $12,000.
The cost of Internet
bandwidth to YogaTV1.com is $7,000 per month for a guaranteed 1 megabyte
per second of data output; enough to support 20 simultaneous individual
video feeds from the YogaTV1.com server.
Based on the numbers
above, YogaTV1.com spent $52,000 to get to the point where they could
begin webcasting. Then, each month they spend $16,000 to operate their
station. (7,000 + 5,000 +1,000 +20% overhead) Then, an additional $10,000
per month is spent in advertising on the Internet at health and fitness
Web sites. So, in the first year YogaTV1.com spends a total of about $364,000.
Note that in the pro forma P & L statements below, the hardware is amortized
over three years.
On the revenue side,
YogaTV1.com generates four revenue streams: pay per view, infomercial
fees, video ads, and e-commerce link fees. The pay per view revenue is
$720 per day, every single day of the year, for a total of $262,800 ($0.50
for a five-minute video clip * 5 users * 12 showings per hour * 24 hours
* 365 days). This figure is based on the assumption that, on average,
25% (5 of 20 streams) of the station's Webcast capacity is utilized by
pay per view.
The second revenue
stream, infomercials, yields $144 per day, for a total of $52,560. This
figure is based on the assumption that one infomercial is always playing
to one viewer, and that the infomercial advertiser will pay $2 each time
their program is shown ($2 * 1 user * 3 showings per hour * 24 hours *
365 days). On average, the infomercials use 5% (1 of 20 streams) of the
station's Webcast capacity.
The third revenue
stream is video ads that are shown in the course of free video programs.
Assuming that free programs will account for 70% of the usage of the station,
336 viewer-hours per day are subject to a video ad burden of one ad every
10 minutes. This yields 2016 ad slots per day. At $0.25 per 30 second
long ad, this amounts to $504 per day, totaling $183,960 per year. It
is worth noting that from the advertiser's point of view, this is a premium
price to pay for a 30 second commercial, given that only a single person
is watching it. Put in ad industry terms, the rate is $250 per thousand.
YogaTV1.com justifies this price by pointing to the quality of the audience,
the ease of targeting, and the ease of measuring the results based on
click-throughs.
The fourth revenue
stream is from fees paid by Web site owners who want their pages to pop
up when the viewer clicks the "Visit Website" button, beneath the video
screen. YogaTV1.com prices these embedded Web address placements at $0.05
per click-through. Like the video ads, these placements are only available
during free programming, not pay per view or infomercials. Infomercials
have in effect pre-paid for their click-throughs with their $2 per showing
payment. And, YogaTV1.com has decided that pay per view video clips will
be commercial-free in all respects. During the 336 viewer-hours of free
video per day, an average of 2000 click-throughs occur, generating $100
per day, yielding $36,500 per year.
All in all YogaTV1.com's
revenue is $535,820 in the first year, for a gross operating profit before
tax effects of $206,420. This represents a 39% gross margin.
Pro Forma Financials
for Case 1
Video on Demand
One time Cost
Imon.comTV 35,000
PC/Digital TV Suite 8,000
Mini-DV Camcorder 2,500
TV Lighting
1,500
Purchased Programming (48 hrs) 5,000
One time Costs 52,000
Amortized 3 years = $17,400/Year
Annual Recurring
Expenses
New instructional clips
2 hrs x $5Kx12 Months
= 60,000
Additional 100 hours
of
purchased material
= 12,000
Cost of bandwidth
$7Kx12 months = 84,000
Overhead $3Kx 12 months
= 36,000
Advertising $10k x
12 months = 120,000
312,000
Video on Demand
Revenue model
Annual $ Comments
Pay per view
262,800 $720/day
Infomercial Fees 52,560 $144/day
Video Ads
183,960
$504/day
E-commerce Fees
36,500
$100/day
535,820
Income Statement
- Annual
Revenue
535,820
Recurring Annual Expense
(312,000)
Amortization of one
time costs
(3 yrs)
(17,400)
Operating Profit
206,420 39%
Case 2: Cable TV Extends onto the Internet
A regional cable
TV operator with 61-channel analog local facilities, decides to try out
webcasting from one station in a suburban town of 150,000 people, in which
40,000 homes have the cable. The cable plant does not support cable modems
or any other digital delivery system. The suburb is in a metropolitan
area of 2 million people. Of that metro area population, 20,000 residences
have high-speed Internet connections to their homes via cable modems (from
a competitive cable TV company) or DSL (from the Phone Company). Within
the metro area are the regional offices of 100 Fortune 1000-class corporations,
all of who have at least one T1 Internet connection. The corporate LANs
are used by a total of 25,000 employees.
The cable TV company's
new Internet television station, Channel21TV.com, is based on a Level
3 ImOn.comTV package, plus a second ImOn.comTV expansion server supporting
a total of 400 simultaneous streams. This webcast system cost $142,800,
which is being amortized over 3 years. Internet bandwidth is block-purchased
for $75,000 per month. All of the content on Channel21TV.com is free programming.
All of the revenues are derived solely from an ad bundle that provides
advertisers video spots, banner ads and e-commerce links.
Program content varies
widely on Channel21TV.com. During business hours on weekdays, the channel
is targeted to businesses with programs including sales motivational training,
management techniques, stress management, business news, financial markets
analysis, industry trends reports and the like. Weekday mornings and evening,
the programming is primarily local news, weather and traffic. On weekends,
the programming is primarily local junior college level sports, local
sporting events not carried by national broadcasters, and community events.
Late night programming is classic movies, "underground" movies, local
club live webcams, and music videos from local bands.
All webcast content
is "canned", that is, all programs are stored on the servers, either because
they were transferred from another medium, like videotape, to hard disk,
or were captured from a live video feed to hard disk. Live real-time feeds
can be webcast as they are stored, for instant replay. In any case, the
fact that all programs end up stored, means all programs are always available
as "video on demand".
The cost of Channel21TV.com's
content is $500,000 in the first year. Six hours per day of content are
"free" in the sense that those hours are identical to the local content
produced by the cable company for its cable TV broadcast anyway, or are
extended length versions of the same content. Ten hours are public domain
content or content provided by authors in return for recognition. The
cost of processing the public domain and donated content is $120,000 per
year. The remaining eight hours are business-related content purchased
specifically for use during weekday business hours. This content, some
of which is from live satellite feeds, and some of which is sourced from
videotape, costs Channel21TV.com $500,000 per year. Staffing and overhead
cost $200,000, reflecting use of existing station resources, plus one
part time staffer dedicated to the webcast project. The cost of advertising
is $20,000 per month or $240,000 annually. Summing up, the annual cost
to run Channel21TV.com is $2,007,600 including amortization of system
cost.
Revenue is produced
entirely from ad bundles. Each bundle includes one 30-second commercial
in-line with the program content, like conventional TV, plus 5-minutes
of e-commerce linkage, plus the exclusive banner at the top of each search
page requested during the 5-minute period following the video spot. The
way this works is, while a 30-second commercial is running, any mouse
click on the video will link to the advertiser's Web site. Then, when
the program resumes, the e-commerce linkage remains active for 5 minutes,
at which time the next commercial spot runs. At any time within those
5 minutes, a click on the video will pause the program and open the advertiser's
e-commerce Web site. When the Web site window is closed, the video program
resumes itself. Also, every time the built-in search engine is used during
the 5-minute period, the resulting search report will feature the advertiser's
banner ad on each page of the report.
Channel21TV.com has
priced its ad bundle in three tiers. Tier 1 ad bundles play during business
hours on weekdays and on weekends from Noon until 8 PM. Tier 1 ad bundles
are priced at $50 per ad bundle. There are 96 Tier 1 bundles sold per
day, generating $4,800 per day. Tier 2 ad bundles play during the 6 hours
per day of original local programming. Tier 2 ad bundles are priced at
$20 per bundle. There are 72 Tier 2 bundles sold per day, generating $1,440
per day. Tier 3 ad bundles play during the 10 hours per day of public
domain and donated content programming. Tier 3 ad bundles are priced at
$10 per bundle. There are 120 Tier 3 bundles sold per day, generating
$1,200 per day. Total daily revenues are $7,440. Annually, this amounts
to $2,715,600.
Pro Forma Financials,
Case 2
| Cable
TV on the Internet |
System Cost |
= $142,800 |
|
Amortized 3 Years |
$47,600
/ year |
| Annual
Recurring Expenses |
|
Cost of Bandwidth $75K x 12 months |
= 900,000 |
|
Cost of Program Content |
= 500,000 |
|
Advertising $20K x 12 months |
= 240,000 |
|
Staffing and Overhead |
= 200,000 |
|
Cost of Processing |
= 120,000 |
| Revenue
Model |
|
Annual
$ |
Comments |
|
Ad Bundles
|
| Tier
1 |
1,752,000 |
4,800/day |
| Tier
2 |
525,600 |
1,440/day |
| Tier
3 |
438,000 |
1,200/day |
| Income
Statement-Annual |
| Revenue |
2,715,600 |
| Recurring
Annual Expenses |
(1,960,000) |
| Amortization
of System Costs (3 Yrs) |
(47,600) |
| Operating
Profit |
708,000 26% |