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The
sports broadcast business in 2004 will be remembered for
one dominant issue. The great Indian cricket rights trick.
As in it had many a twist in the tale but no denouement.
The story, which is still being played out even as we move
into 2005, could well give the Balaji soap factory a run
for its money.
And
money is what the private broadcasters stand to lose big
time if some clarity is not brought to bear, and soon, on
the confounded confusion that is sports broadcast today.
To
share or not to share? That is the question
THE
major issue that cropped up in 2004 (in implication terms
if not media noise), and which will probably persist in
2005, is this whole business of sharing of telecast rights
with national broadcaster Doordarshan when it comes to India
cricket.
Today,
the reality is that in the telecast rights domain a huge
question mark hangs over any tourney that features the Indian
cricket team (or should one say the BCCI squad as the Indian
cricket board is arguing in the Supreme Court). And if truth
be told, it makes no difference whether a series involves
a traditional cricket power like Australia on the opposing
side or one from Timbaktoo. As long as the Indian team is
playing, the tag of "event of national import"
can be applied. To understand what's at stake a recap is
in order.
The
beginning of the year and the end of the year saw two such
"events of national importance". It was in March
that India embarked on a landmark and historic tour of Pakistan
for which Dubai-based broadcaster Ten Sports held the exclusive
telecast rights. Ten Sports was placed under an enormous
amount of pressure from the government to share the terrestrial
feed with DD.
The
government's contention was that for an event like this,
which was of such national importance, the Bukhatir owned
broadcaster should rise above commercial considerations.
And one valid point that the government did have in its
favour was that had it not put its weight behind the series,
there would have been no tour in the first place.
What
was not a valid extension of that reasoning however, was
the stand that DD took wherein it asserted public service
broadcasting credentials in refusing to pay for terrestrial
rights and also tried to make a fast buck via ad sales.
When Ten agreed to give its feed for the first ODI following
a Supreme Court directive, DD was quick on the draw in selling
airtime and inserting its own ads into the private sports
broadcaster's feed.
That
is not to say that Ten had only a hard luck tale to tell.
The fact that it reportedly made Rs 1.15 billion in ad sales
from the historic series speaks for itself.
If
at the start of the year it was Ten Sports that was complaining
over being hard done by, at the end of the year it was rival
ESPN Star Sports that was in moan mode.
This
time it was India's visit to Bangladesh, a tour involving
the lousiest Test team in world cricket, that was deemed
as being of national importance (a PIL filed by an "aggrieved"
party in the southern state of Kerala argued as much). And
in a ruling on similar lines to one made earlier in the
year by the Supreme Court in the Ten Sports Vs DD case,
the Kerala High Court directed ESS to share its feed with
the national broadcaster. It in fact went further and ruled
that ESS should share revenues with DD in the ratio of 80:20.
Just
how farcical the whole issue has become can be gauged from
the fact that DD actually made a submission before the high
court that a "fair" deal would comprise Rs 10
million in minimum guarantee per one-dayer (to be paid by
ESS to DD) after which a 80:20 advertising revenue share,
in favour of ESS, looked okay.
India
Rights: Chandra versus Dalmiya
Purely
in terms of media noise, however, it was the controversial
manner in which the BCCI's auctioned the India rights that
hogged the headlines.
Their
is a whole lot of grist for the rumour mills as to what
was going on behind the scenes in this regard, but what
is of material import is the end result of all the shenanigans.
As
we enter 2005 and with Pakistan's return visit under three
months away, no one can say for certain just who will get
what is really the "crown jewel" of the whole
four-year India rights offering.
What
is certain though is the BCCI has kissed goodbye to even
the $ 260 million that was the highest bid that Subhash
Chandra's Zee Telefilms had put in when the tenders were
first opened. As for the $ 308 million that was Zee's final
offer matching ESPN Star's increased bid, there was a question
mark over it in any case, with a high possibility of litigation
over the extra $ 48 million.
As
for Zee, whether it will be able to welcome a new sports
channel when the Pakistanis land in India is in the hands
of the Supreme Court to decide on. Till then, all it has
to show (or is willing to show at the moment) as regards
its sports broadcast ambitions is the Zee Sports logo.
In
all this, there were two parties (three in fact) however,
that had a hearty laugh at the whole mess. Pubcaster Doordarshan
ended up broadcasting the Australia and South Africa Series
for a pittance after the BCCI reached a compromise with
it. Last heard, the BCCI has already approached DD to bid
for the Pakistan tour. The other party that gained in a
big way was Ten Sports which had earlier bid a paltry $
115 million for the rights. Ten's parent Taj Television
did the production for the BCCI. Ten also strengthened its
grip outside India by broadcasting the India-Australia series
in Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, the Middle East, Europe
and South East Asia. The remaining international territories
were with Sony Entertainment. The end result therefore,
was that the two highest bidders were left gnashing their
teeth while the other three walked off with the spoils by
default.
|
Initial
Bids for India Rights
|
| Zee
Telefilms |
$ 260
million |
| ESPN
Star Sports |
$ 230
million |
| Doordarshan |
$ 150
million |
| Sony
Entertainment |
$ 140
million |
| Ten
Sports |
$ 115
million |
The
irony in all this is that even as Dalmiya looks back on
the windfall that ultimately never was, there are many who
believe that the whole mess is a fallout of the clash of
egos between two men used to having their way --- the BCCI
supremo himself and the Zee Group CMD.
ESS
still not given up on India Rights
If
the Supreme Court orders the BCCI to go in for a rebid,
expect ESPN Star Sports to chase the Indian Pakistan series
aggressively. There are two reasons. Firstly it is already
starting to face difficulties on the distribution front.
The
other reason is that if Zee does get the rights, then a
third player will get introduced into the sports broadcast
equation. If that happens, then one can expect the cost
of sports properties to shoot up even further. Speaking
to Indiantelevision.com recently ESS Asia MD Rik Dovey said
as much when he said, "I see the cost of sports rights
continuing to spiral out of control. This is largely due
to newcomers coming into the market and not really understanding
the values within the business."
Uncertainty
deals distribution revenues hard blow
2004
has been a tough year for both Ten Sports and ESPN Star
Sports on the distribution front. Even with India-Pakistan
cricket on its menu, Ten was unable to ramp up its distribution
numbers beyond 2 million nationwide, industry sources say.
And the situation post-June has been even worse with collections
at a virtual standstill, the sources aver.
Ten
would be hoping that 2005 sees a more settled picture. That,
however, dependent in large measure on how soon it will
be able to sew up its distribution distribution strategy
which has been in virtual limbo post the parting of ways
with Modi Entertainment (which happened after the Pakistan
tour). As things stand there are three possible platforms
that Ten may hop aboard --- Zee-Turner, SET-Discovery or
ESPN Star Sports. If none of these work out, there is the
option of going it alone.
It
is on the advertising front that Ten is in far better shape.
It holds the rights for cricket coming out of Sri Lanka,
Pakistan, the West Indies, Sharjah and Morocco. All these
are long term. It has the WWE which is allowing it to deliver
far higher GRPs than ESS. This year Ten also strengthened
its football line up by acquiring the rights for among others
Brazilian, Argentinian, Italian, German and Portugese football.
And
what of ESS? Well, since the beginning of last year, there
has been a steady erosion of subscriber base from 6.5 million
then to under 4.5 million today.
ESS
is however, not letting the uncertainties of the India cricket
rights prevent its moving ahead on other fronts.
The
biggest and most laudable effort, which could well yield
long-term benefits, is its bid to infuse fresh life into
India's moribund hockey league. The Premier Hockey League
initiative (PHL) for which it signed a 10-year telecast
deal with the Indian Hockey Federation (IHF) is about to
kick off. The broadcaster is also looking at tennis in a
big way. It recently renewed deals for the Australian Open
and Wimbledon Tennis. As far as football is concerned it
renewed its agreement for EPL and also signed a deal with
the Asian Football Confederation. Its rights to Formula
One are also a solid ad sales revenue earner.
On
the marketing front one major initiative from ESS was its
efforts at increasing the level of interactivity. To give
an example during the Asia Cup in July it did a mobile tie
up. Subscribers of Airtel, Orange/ Hutch, Tata Indicom and
Idea Cellular could call a unique number and express their
views on the tournament. ESS also came out with innovations
to connect the advertiser more closely with the viewers.
For example there was the huddle of the Indian team during
which viewers could see the Pepsi graphic.
The
interactivity also extended to soccer. ESS tied up with
Nokia for the show Goals. Through the pan Asian initiative
viewers could vote for their favourite goal, save or player
shown during the programme.
However the initiative that took sports marketing in India
to the next level was what ESS did in May to get viewers
into the Euro spirit. The broadcaster painted the metros
and the trams of Kolkata with Euro images, posters, movie
halls etc. Euro 2004 was positioned as 'The biggest soccer
battle'. The result was that even without including the
finals, the matches reached a cumulative audience of 182
million. By comparison Euro 2000 had a cumulative audience
of only 27.8 million. What also helped ESS penetrate the
Hindi heartland was the fact that it introduced dual feeds
in English and Hindi for key tournaments like Euro and Asia
Cup. This year ESS Asia announced that it had managed a
25 per cent year on year increase in advertising revenues
across the network from 1999. It attributed the achievement
to the four O's strategy which combine on air, off air,
on ground and online benefits.
DD
failed to market and sell Olympics
All this is not to say that one needs to do tons of marketing
to get the ratings. The bigger the event the less the effort
required. Former Max business head Rajat Jain admitted as
much in an interview when he referred to Ten's lack of marketing
for the India Pakistan series other than the print medium.
Despite that the broadcaster got excellent ratings.
But
a clear case of how lack of marketing and mundane promotional
activities killed a potential killer application was the
national broadcaster Doordarshan as regards The Olympics.
Some
facts first: When the biggest sporting spectacle aired in
August DD Sports was able to more than triple its reach
compared to the Sydney games in 2000. Tam data c&s 4+
showed that across the six metros the pubcaster was able
to reach 18.8 million homes. In 2000, the figure stood at
5.6 million.
No
wonder Mudra's Amit Ray which handles media planning for
Reliance gushed, "Not only did we get huge visibility
in non c&s homes, the average rating of Olympics were
higher than tennis (both Wimbledon & US Open) even in
C&S homes. Going by the above facts it proved beneficial
to be on Olympics.
"While on cricket though the popularity is beyond question
we must not forget that though the 10 second price of a
normal match has reached the sky it's only one match - India
vs. Pakistan which justifies that. But unfortunately people
are so blinded that a similar price is being paid for matches
involving teams like Bangladesh & Kenya in the disguise
of a tournament!"
One can understand why Ray would be pleased. If you get
the kind of numbers that the Olympics delivered at a bargain
basement price who wouldn't be thrilled. That well sums
up the story of the Olympics as far as DD's sell strategy
was concerned.
Even
though DD paid a pittance (relative to the rest of the world)
in acquisition costs of Rs 240 million for the Olympics,
it netted just Rs 80 million from the games. That's a Rs
120 million loss for an event that is universally acknowledged
as the greatest sporting spectacle on the planet.
As
far as other sports news was concerned sports marketing
firm Total Sports Asia launched in India in September. It
is the WWE's Asian representative in terms of television
rights and merchandise sale. It also organises events on
behalf of the WWE. One could see the WWE come down to India
next year.
*********
There
are some lessons the government needs to take from all this.
While it is all very well to continue hand holding DD on
the issue of sports telecast rights, there has to be a line
drawn somewhere as to what constitutes "must provide"
to the state broadcaster.
It
is for the government to spell out clearly the terms under
which rights issues are to be dealt with. Sports broadcast
is a high investment business the world over. If broadcasters
are not given guarantees that protect their investments
then its a dead loss proposition. And ultimately it will
be Indian sport that is the loser.
A
case in point is the Premier Hockey League (PHL) initiative.
It took three years of detailing and ground work to get
the whole thing going and is a long term investment that
has very little scope for returns any time soon. But it
is initiatives like this that can infuse life into Indian
sport. For that to happen it is Big Daddy cricket that will
perforce have to bankroll such efforts.
And
that will not happen if even tours like the one that India
just concluded in Bangladesh are brought into the "of
national importance ambit".
The
only way out of what is at present a dead end game is to
use the formula that is employed vis-a-vis the ICC Cricket
World Cup. This would mean that DD is guaranteed terrestrial
rights for all India cricket. But only if it pays a competitive
price for it. That price could be determined by the broadcast
regulator if negotiations fail to throw up a reasonable
resolution.
Secondly
ALL cricket outside the country should be made offlimits
for DD. Unless it is willing to enter into competitive bidding
with private broadcasters for the rights that is. That would
of course mean that DD would have to work towards getting
returns on investments made.
We
return to the point about DD making a Rs 120 million loss
(after paying just just Rs 240 million) out of an event
as big as the Olympics. When you consider that this is an
event that runs for over a month, it becomes even more incomprehensible.
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