1 / 14

Competition and Cooperation in a Networked World

Competition and Cooperation in a Networked World. Couch Potato Famine: Prospering Through an Era of Disruptive Change in Media. Part I: Three Titanic Forces Converge Open Standards cause barriers to entry to fall – lots of new entrants & business models Broadband unleashes video

Télécharger la présentation

Competition and Cooperation in a Networked World

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Competition and Cooperation in a Networked World

  2. Couch Potato Famine: Prospering Through an Era of Disruptive Change in Media • Part I: Three Titanic Forces Converge • Open Standards cause barriers to entry to fall – lots of new entrants & business models • Broadband unleashes video • Many-to-many networks causes collaborative distribution • Part II: Network Economics • The behavior of network goods • Competition vs Co-opitition • Who Commoditizes Who? • Strategies for Content Owners

  3. I. The Behavior of Network Goods • We are primarily interested in many-to-many networks • Characterized by the fact that their usefulness is determined by the number of members • YouTube, eBay, Skype, Lime Wire, MySpace, AIM, all P2P networks, fax machines, telephones, etc. • Just because it is delivered through a network doesn’t mean it’s a network good. • Most content is delivered today on 1-to-many (broadcast) networks • These are not network goods even though they are delivered through a network – their usefulness is not dependent on the number of users • Yahoo, Television networks, most web sites

  4. II. Competition and Co-opitition Among Networks • Consumers are compelled to use the biggest network • First-to-market is an even bigger advantage in many-to-many networks • In zero-sum networks, the winner enjoys a positive tipping point, the loser a negative one • The bigger the network the greater the lock-in

  5. Benefits + Network Size Loss > Price + Switching Costs Benefits > Network Size Loss Switching Consumers Basic switching Benefits > price + Switching costs • To switch consumers from the market leader, the upstart needs to exceed their benefits while min-imizing price & switching costs • Since there’s no price or switching costs, benefits of the upstart > network size loss • For some many-to-many networks the market only wants one Network Switching Benefits + network size gain/loss > price + switching costs

  6. Case Study: iTunes • Steve Jobs writes a letter inviting music companies to abandon DRM (open & compatible) • iTunes has 90% share of legal market • EMI agrees, most don’t • iTunes has the option of licensing Fairplay DRM, if music companies agree to mandate it. Co-opitition Among Network Competitors • The leader’s size advantage is neutralized and consumer utility increases when services become compatible • Incompatibility is more expensive than compatibility • Maintaining your own compliments • Price wars • Marketing costs to tout advantages of proprietary standards • Lower market share • Once the market leader has gotten his market share under incompatibility, they often switch to compatibility

  7. Music Dist. - Physical Digital Music Dist. Music Label Music Label Best Buy Wal-Mart Borders. iTunes 90% Consumer Consumers (Content isn’t king) Content and Distributors Are Compliments • Complimentary partners in a network will attempt to commoditize each other • While content owners strive to commoditize distributors, large distributors try to do the same to content owners • Distribution networks only exist (legally) when the partners’ business models are aligned

  8. What It Means for Big Media: Who Commoditizes Who? Leverage Map • We adopt the point of view of media companies because distributors should know their best strategy • Leverage means the negotiating power of the two parties, distributors and content owners • At the top, network distributors range from weak on the left to strong • Distributors are weak when they are non-zero sum and there are several • Distributors are strong when they are zero-sum and stronger still when there is only one dominant distributor Network Distributor’s Leverage Weak (Fewer Competitors, Zero-Sum) Strong • Web Video Games • ABC • ESPN • MTV • NBC • BBC • Local News • CBS • WSJ Content Owner’s Leverage Weak (Brand Strength, Unique Content) Strong • FT • NY Times • Music Labels • Movie Studios • Oxygen Media • Associated Press • Book publishers • Amateur Video • Reuters

  9. What It Means for Big Media: Who Commoditizes Who? Leverage Map • On the left are content owners, ranging from weakest at the bottom to strongest leverage at the top • Content owners are weak in this negotiation when they have undifferentiated content or weak brand identity • Music labels have weak brand identity with their bands so aggregators are needed • Strong brands with highly differentiated content like Grey’s Anatomy and ABC or WSJ have strong leverage • Strong brands are not so reliant on aggregators Network Distributor’s Leverage Weak (Fewer Competitors, Zero-Sum) Strong • Web Video Games • ABC • ESPN • MTV • NBC • BBC • Local News • CBS • WSJ Content Owner’s Leverage Weak (Brand Strength, Unique Content) Strong • FT • NY Times • Music Labels • Movie Studios • Oxygen Media • Associated Press • Book publishers • Amateur Video • Reuters

  10. What it Means for Big Media: The Grey Zone • The grey zone is where there is a dominant distributor(s) and your brand or product is undifferentiated • In the grey zone, your only choice is to partner, and your partner will set the terms • You’ll still have your own websites, but you won’t get much distribution from them • To get out of the grey zone, you can either distinguish your product (difficult) or weaken your distributors (shift to compatiabilty) • Large distributors keep content owners in the grey zone by remaining strong and zero-sum if possible

  11. What it Means for Big Media: The Yellow Zone • Content owners in the yellow zone are not strong, but neither are the distributors • Their best deal is to co-exist, meaning they will have their own websites and also have distribution partners • Weaker brands will get most distribution from partners, stronger ones (NY Times) from their own sites • Their strategic goal is to strengthen brand and content esteem to make it into the green zone • Foster many distributors by imposing reasonable terms on start-ups Widgets may allow a “distributor bypass”

  12. What it Means for Big Media: The Green Zone • This is the best place for content owners with strong brands and products and weak distributors • There aren’t many companies in the green zone today. Green zone companies will partner on their terms and distribute themselves • Their goal is to keep distributors weak and plentiful • A special case is massive multiplayer online games, which are their own many-to-many networks • Note that with social networking tools a show or news event becomes a mini many-to-many network and a destination

  13. What it Means for Big Media: The Embattled Red Zone • The red zone is where both content owners and large distributors are strong • Viacom is suing YouTube, CBS, Fox and NBC form a consortium, ABC is going it alone • The consortium is really a coexistence strategy. They are engaging multiple distributors (AOL, MySpace, Yahoo) thereby commoditizing them and shifting the consortium into the green zone • They are leaving YouTube with amateur video • Most are also tepid in their partnership with iTunes because they don’t want to end up in the grey zone like the music companies • Hot properties with strong brand associations are different than old shows who need aggregators

  14. In Summary • We believe media is only 30% invented • We are entering an era driven by the economics of attention • Content owners and new distributors will compete over the variables in the switching equation • And struggle for leverage to avoid being commoditized To Learn More, Contact Us: Bruce Benson Senior Managing Director Entertainment & Media FTI Consulting Bruce.benson@fticonsulting.com 203.606.3854

More Related