Why a streaming TV service should be Google’s next African play

TV

Inspired by the recent successful launch of the Television White Spaces pilot in South Africa, I am once again tempted to engage in providing mostly unsolicited advice about what Google’s strategy in Africa ought to be. What I want to propose today is the launching of a Netflix-like streaming television service aimed at African markets and serving African and international content. In this I take a more radical point of view than I did in my recent post about the Digital Dividend. This idea is borne of two recent experiences, one, some work I did recently looking at the migration process from analogue to digital broadcasting in Africa; and, two, my personal experience with Netflix.

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Digital migration

Most of the industrialised world has made a transition from analogue to digital broadcasting of terrestrial television. The process in most African countries is much slower. Because digital broadcasting requires a fraction of the spectrum needed for analogue broadcasting, a transition to digital television broadcasting:

  • Creates space for more television channels;
  • Allows the possibility of broadcasting in High Definition (HD);
  • Makes some spectrum available for other purposes such as broadband; and,
  • Allows broadcasters to keep pace with changes in broadcast technology.

Of the above benefits, I question whether the first and second are relevant in Africa. There has always been plenty of space for television channels. The majority of African countries have four or fewer terrestrial broadcast channels. As for High Definition broadcasting, it is hard to make either the social or economic case for HD broadcasting.

You could make the argument about Africa not being left behind or given second class technology but frankly I have trouble seeing the real market demand for HD television in the industrialised world, perhaps for sports broadcasting. HD television feels like the upgrade that manufacturers tell you you want. Which of course doesn’t rule out HD television via other means such as satellite. So the real benefit of the switch-over to digital terrestrial broadcasting is the spectrum that is freed up for other purposes such as mobile broadband or TV White Spaces technology, etc. And if that’s true, then does there really need to be a switch-over to digital broadcasting at all?

Across the continent, the switchover process is not going very well at all. Very few countries seem to have come up with an effective strategy of how to manage the switch-over let alone finance it. Few countries have an effective strategy of even how provide everyone with the Set Top Boxes (STBs) that are required to view digital broadcasts if you don’t happen to have a shiny new digital television set.

In South Africa, unspent funds from the Universal Service Agency are being re-purposed for the purchase of STBs for the masses. The bottom line is that the economics of the transition to digital broadcasting simply don’t make sense. It is an extremely expensive process for an, as yet, undetermined benefit. Digital broadcasting is being treated as a giant “build it and they will come” project that will hopefully create both supply and demand at the same time. And if you don’t buy that, there is always the argument that one must embrace the digital switch-over because it is inevitable.

Most African countries signed an agreement in 2006 that they would commit to the digital switch-over. The general sense is that you simply have to get on board because analogue broadcasting will soon be obsolete. It reminds me a bit of the furore a few years ago about the need to move to IPv6 because all the IPv4 addresses were about to run out. Strangely the sun has yet to set on the IPv4 address space.

So what if there were another option, an option that didn’t exist or seem credible in the near future in 2006 when the switch-over policy decision was taken? I am referring to Over The Top (OTT) broadcasting or the delivery of what was traditionally broadcast content over the Internet.

The success of Netflix

Netflix is the most successful example of OTT service delivery. As of the end of 2012, they claim over 33-million subscribers worldwide, most in the United States. Not too long after moving to Canada from South Africa last year, I signed our family up for Netflix. I was unprepared for how cheap and how efficient its service is. US$7.99 per month for all-you-can-eat television is pretty good, by any standard.

In fact, US$7.99 looks roughly like mobile ARPU in Africa. People complain about the choice and how up-to-date its offering is but for our family it is the right blend of price and service. What was even more impressive is how well it works. We have a single 6Mb/s dry-DSL link that provides all of our household communication including VoIP phone service and Internet. I was pleasantly surprised to discover that my kids watching Netflix did not affect the quality of my VoIP phone calls.

Last month, I attended an event at which Netflix’s director of cloud infrastructure Adrian Cockcroft spoke. He further impressed me with just how far and how fast Netflix has come. One of the first things he said was that Netflix expects to become the largest Content Distribution Network (CDN) in the world some time this year. That may or may not turn out to be true but just the fact that he thinks it likely is saying something given the likes of Akamai, Level 3 and others.

If you know anything about the distribution of video and other big media on the Internet, you know that it is dependent on CDNs which are gigantic local caches of content. So when you request that YouTube video in Cape Town, it appears to stream internationally at high speed but actually you’re just getting a local copy from Google’s Global Cache CDN in South Africa.

This makes for much more efficient use of the main arteries of the Internet although how CDNs should be implemented and by who is a subject of much debate. Netflix has built its infrastructure entirely on Amazon’s cloud infrastructure which makes them a completely virtual organisation. It’s impressive just how flexible and efficient at content delivery Netflix is. No doubt the competition is not far behind it but just to say that remarkable things have been achieved in the last six years in both video compression and content distribution.

An opportunity for Google?

So, a bold move for an African country would be to scrap the digital switch-over entirely and invest all that money planned for a digital broadcast network into broadband fibre and wireless infrastructure to support OTT service provision. Bold but inconceivable. I think we all know that is never going to happen. The digital switch-over ship has sailed and there is too much money already committed to it. It is officially too big to fail. However, that wouldn’t stop a smart company from doing the right thing.

Google already operates its own CDN network in Africa. There are Google Global Caches in South Africa and Kenya and doubtless other countries on the continent. It is well-positioned to manage the delivery of content on the continent. Arguably, as a company, Google understands African media markets better than most international internet companies having invested significantly over the last four to five years in local offices and local talent in Africa.

An African digital television service could be a low-barrier opportunity for new content-makers and a great way to promote thriving national industries like Nollywood to the rest of the continent. It would be an opportunity to innovate service delivery perhaps creating new super-low-bandwidth options or perhaps overnight updates or local WiFi-based mini-caches of television content.

Are Google the best company to do this? They certainly have all it takes although it doesn’t mean that someone else might not do it faster and better. The three takeaway points I want to leave you with are these:

  • The switch-over to digital broadcasting in Africa is a slow-moving train wreck.
  • OTT television services are growing faster and more efficiently than you might have imagined.
  • The combination of 1 and 2 could mean a different television future for Africa.

This article by Steve Song originally appeared on Many Possibilities and is published with permission.

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