OTT-to-the-TV viewers will outnumber IPTV viewers by 2013, according to recent research from Informa Telecoms & Media. Informa forecasts that by 2015, 380 million people globally will view online video via connected devices such as TVs, games consoles or set-top boxes from the likes of Apple and Google. This growth will be driven by the […]
OTT-to-the-TV viewers will outnumber IPTV viewers by 2013, according to recent research from Informa Telecoms & Media.
Informa forecasts that by 2015, 380 million people globally will view online video via connected devices such as TVs, games consoles or set-top boxes from the likes of Apple and Google. This growth will be driven by the phenomenal popularity of services such as BBC iPlayer and Netflix. but in contrast, only 163 million users will be watching managed IPTV services from the likes of Verizon, BT and Orange in 2015.
Its abundantly clear that viewing online video via connected devices will be both a long-term and mass-market activity. All of the key ingredients for uptake of these services are in place. Its just a case of consumers getting used to the idea of using them, something that we will be driven by the availability of big brands like the iPlayer, and marketing pushes from the device manufacturers, commented Giles Cottle, senior analyst at Informa Telecoms & Media and lead author of the Internet traffic and services research.
Informas research also shows there will be twice as many OTT TV viewers than IPTV viewers globally by 2015 but in some markets, this contrast will be even more stark.
In the UK, for example, there are already more OTT TV viewers than IPTV viewers, and by 2015, while only 3.6m people will be watching managed IPTV, 27m will be watching online video via the TV.
These figures are not necessarily bad news for IPTV providers, but they do leave operators with some tough questions to ask. Many OTT TV viewers will be using connected devices to watch short-form and catch-up TV services, which are complimentary, rather than competitive, to Pay TV. But it highlights the fact that operators should be adding these features into their own services, or even considering delivering their own Pay TV services via these connected devices, to stay competitive,” added Cottle.