• IPL 5 ratings soften, 16 matches notch up 3.65 TVR

    MUMBAI: The ratings for the fifth season of the Indian Premier League have failed to improve after a softer opening,

  • Action movie channels hunt for growth

    Submitted by ITV Production on Feb 25, 2012
    indiantelevision.com Team

    MUMBAI: India is seeing a flurry of launches in the action movie genre ahead of digitisation as broadcasters are keen to tap into a niche segment with a particular eye for subscription revenues.

    National and regional media conglomerates like UTV, Sun TV Network and Star India either have entered or have plans to foray into the genre.

    UTV Action, which airs Hollywood action movies dubbed in Hindi, launched its Telugu feed to dig into the Southern market as it has an affinity for action cinema. Star India has said it plans to launch two action movie channels (English and Hindi). The Hindi channel is expected to have the dubbed content along with Hindi action movies.

    Sun TV has recently launched four regional ad free action movie channels - Sun Action in Tamil, Gemini Action in Telugu, Suriyan TV in Kannada, and Surya Action in Malayalam, catering to different segment of audiences.

    Will the market support so many launches? Madison Media Group CEO Punitha Arumugam notes that it is good that channels in genres like action and food are getting launched as it will help advertisers do specific targeting.

    ?The future of Indian television is going to be in niches. The more you are able to offer options which target a certain psychographic of the target audience, the more it is actually going to find appeal,? Arumugam says.

    As per her estimates, the size of the action genre is under Rs 500 million. ?Though for action movie channels the yields are low, the cost of acquiring content is also low. I am assuming that for all such channels, action-imported, dubbed stuff is being used,? she adds.

    Action movie genre is led mainly by male viewership with preference first for action, then comedy and drama.

    The genre has to evolve before it becomes accommodative of so many players. Lodestar UM chief growth officer Habeeb Nizamuddin admits that it is a niche within a niche. ?In terms of percentage, the highest spend by any category on the action movie channel is about 1.5 per cent of their overall spending. There are basically two categories -automobiles and consumer durables -who spend more on this category. Still, out of their overall ad spend, they just use 1.5 per cent for action movie channels,? he says.

    The entry of Star into the genre will expand the thin ad market but still it will have to depend on pay-revenue models. But that won?t be an easy task. Says GroupM CEO Vikram Sakhuja, ?There is scope for people paying for exclusive viewing of live sports and good movies. This will become a sizeable opportunity only once digital distribution of C&S reaches critical mass. Having said that, relying 100 per cent on distribution revenues, in a market that has been spoilt on free content, is highly ambitious.?

    Adds UTV Action business head Sameer Ganpathy, ?With multiple channels entering the space, the genre will surely stand on its own in the years to come. At present, there is no scope for the pay revenue model for action movie channels. But as India moves towards digitisation, the pay revenue model will become a part of the mainstream model."

    Image
    UTV Action
  • GroupM elevates top HR executives

    MUMBAI: GroupM has appointed Sonali Vaidya as HR head for India, while Gaurav Hirey, who held the post earlier, is be

  • Indian Telly Awards 2002 on 1 November

    MUMBAI: The Indian Telly Awards, the first and the biggest awards programme to recognize the talent and achievements

  • India's first TV air time selling, planning and buying forum, kicks off tomorrow

    Building on the success of Qalam 2001, a two-day creative writing workshop held in December 2001, television service

  • MindShare lures media wiz M.Suku for BroadMind

    Mindshare South Asia chief Andre Nair is gradually unvieling his gameplan for the media powerhouse in India.

Subscribe to