Television Asia Plus | October 2020

Page 25

THE FINAL WORD How 5G will change the game for Asian streaming services By Paolo Cuttoreli, Vice President and General Manager, APAC, at Evergent game in 8K resolution in a fully immersive experience, making viewers feel that they are in the middle of the action to an extent never seen before. After the game, the 5G connection will be cutoff, and the viewer will be back on 4G. Developing nations will leapfrog legacy fixed-line phone infrastructure and skip straight to 5G connected smartphones. In 2018, 360 million people came online for the first time. The accelerating growth in internet users of nearly a million new users a day is changing the digital landscape. But it’s also creating investment opportunities for the OTT services’ big players in Asia. Embracing a combination of innovation and emerging technologies such as 5G are the ingredients to the secret sauce required to attract a wave of new customers while also retaining and providing existing ones with new digital experiences that can be monetised.

By 2022, there will be 280 million 5G subscriptions in the Asia Pacific alone and 5G service revenue is expected to reach US$4.5 billion. The mass deployment of 5G will change the future for many industries, including over-the-top (OTT) streaming services. Predictably, we are witnessing the transformation of video distribution as big-name players enter an increasingly crowded market. To stay in the game, all players within the video ecosystem will need to innovate to keep up with the pace set by technological change and consumers’ evolving demands. In many parts of the world, the arrival of a global pandemic slowed down 5G rollout plans. AIS, Thailand’s largest telco, has over 42 million subscribers and has helped implement 5G networks across 158 hospitals. It has also played an important role in ushering in a new era of telemedicine. 5G connected robots have removed the need for direct contact between medical professionals and patients when delivering medication, which reduces the risk of contact and infection. After securing an early advantage over their neighbours, Thailand is surging ahead by expanding 5G throughout other areas, including shopping malls and Bangkok’s financial district. However, if we zoom out to look at the bigger picture, it reveals that 5G rollouts have exploded across the entire Asia Pacific (APAC) region in 2020. Last year, the world internet usage

index revealed that Southeast Asia has three countries in the top five. In the Philippines, users average 10 hours and 2 minutes of screen time every day. Thailand was not far behind with 9 hours and 11 minutes, and Indonesia clocked up an impressive 8 hours and 36 minutes every day. OTT streaming services rely heavily on technology to keep their offerings up-to-date. Providers are also challenged with meeting the rising demands of consumers who are becoming overwhelmed with the myriad of options at their disposal. 5G promises to open new, exciting possibilities for the kinds of services that can be delivered over mobile networks. The arrival of 5G in Asia will also intensify the OTTwar and create a virtual land grab. Forward-thinking industry leaders are already paying close attention to predictions that 5G network coverage will support more than 35% of the global mobile user base by 2024. Video will inevitably remain the primary driver in mobile data consumption in a world where fully immersive content with 8K resolution becomes the standard expectation from digital users. 5G infrastructure will unlock a wealth of opportunities for network operators. Content creation is evolving and paving the way for new business models that will drive new revenue streams. Sessionbased billing of content is a model that will quickly materialise. For example, 5G will enable viewers to access a football

The big question is which service providers will catch the wind first? The big winners will be those who invest in the tech that gives access to more content to a wider range of consumers. The next generation of networks will enjoy greater streaming capacities while fundamentally changing how and where viewers consume content. Our devices will require networks to transmit massive sums of data in near real-time. These are just a few reasons that highlight how 5G will transform OTT streaming and give network providers options in terms of content production. After months of being in lockdown, our reliance on a fast network with the bandwidth to stream content has dramatically increased. 5G will turn the challenge of millions of screen-addicted users hungry for more content and bandwidth into an opportunity. For OTT streaming providers, it will open up a vast market across the Asia Pacific region for audiences demanding new digital experiences. By contrast, audiences won’t care about the technology under the hood that brings these experiences to life. They will be motivated by seamless access to their favourite movies, TV shows, and live events from any device anywhere, and at any time. Southeast Asia is one of the most internetaddicted regions on the planet. But the question is, who will be the providers that invest and open up new markets and services to lead the charge forward?

October 2020 television asia plus

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Articles inside

How 5G will change the game for Asian streaming services

4min
page 25

How a global ‘forced experiment’ has helped innovate video production in Asia

5min
pages 24-25

AVIA hosts first virtual summit

1min
page 23

China Daily Roundtable: Creative industry insiders talk survival strategies amid the pandemic

2min
pages 23-24

IPV: Creating Video Remotely in Lockdown

1min
page 22

Hong Kong International Film and Television Market welcomed close to 7,000 international buyers

1min
pages 22-23

The Asia TV Forum & Market to go fully digital in 2020

1min
pages 20-23

The 35th MIPCOM goes live online

2min
pages 20-21

Bringing video game magic to the big screen

4min
pages 19-20

Celebrating superwomen on ZEE5 Global

3min
page 18

Meet Taiwan’s rising star of short formats

3min
pages 17-18

3 Ways to approach OTT monetisation

3min
pages 16-17

Surviving a pandemic: A look at the evolving tastes of Asian consumers in OTT and pay-TV viewership

10min
pages 12-14

A Message from the Editor

1min
pages 3-4

Why TV5 is one Filipino broadcaster to watch out for

4min
page 11

pocket.watch: Pushing the boundaries of content by kids for kids

4min
page 10

Studio 100 Media appoints head of licensing

1min
page 9

ABP Network announces a strategic role revision

1min
page 9

Fugitive gears up for growth by establishing an international network of senior sales consultants

1min
page 9

TAICCA and CATCHPLAY announce joint investment in SCREENWORKS ASIA to Build Taiwan’s content powerhouse

1min
page 8

iQIYI releases The Long Night, the fifth suspense drama of its highly-acclaimed ‘Mist Theater’

1min
page 8

Moonbug partners with Tencent Video to expand its reach across China

1min
page 8

Pay-TV services revenue in Japan to grow at 1.9% CAGR over the next five years

1min
page 7

84% of Indonesian consumers are willing to see ads in exchange for free streaming video

1min
page 7

COOCAA, Clip TV announce strategic partnership and co-branded smart TV package

1min
page 7

Upstream broadband usage, faster speeds spike higher in Q2 2020

1min
page 6

CP Communications, Mobile Viewpoint bring next-gen IQ-Sports Producer Series to market

2min
page 6

Vietnam Television launches dedicated 4K studio

1min
page 5

Synamedia zeros in on industrial-scale piracy with new intelligence-first security model

2min
page 5
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