Posts Tagged ‘Roku’
Google TV Is A Bigger Deal Than You Think
Google TV Is A Bigger Deal Than You Think
Posted by James McQuivey on June 10, 2010
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It has only been a few weeks since Google announced it would create a brave, new world with its Google TV platform. In all the reactions and the commentary, I have been amazed at how little people understand what’s really going on here. Let me summarize: Google TV is a bigger deal than you think. In fact, it is so big that I scrapped the blog post I drafted about it because only a full-length report (with supporting survey data) could adequately explain what Google TV has done and will do to the TV market. That report went live this week. Allow me to explain why the report was necessary.
Some have expressed surprise that Google would even care about TV in the first place. After all, Google takes nearly $7 billion dollars into its coffers each quarter from that little old search engine it sports, a run-rate of $27 billion a year. In fact, this has long been a problem Google faces — its core business is so terribly profitable that it’s hard to justify investing in its acquisitions and side projects which have zero hope of ever contributing meaningfully to the business (not unlike the problem at Microsoft where Windows 7 is Microsoft). So why would Google bother with the old TV in our living rooms?
Because TV matters in a way that nothing else does. Each year, the TV drives roughly $70 billion in advertising and an equal amount in cable and satellite fees, and another $25 billion in consumer electronics sales. Plus, viewers spend 4.5 hours a day with it — which is, mind you, the equivalent of a full-time job in some socialist-leaning countries (I’ll refrain from naming names).
Google’s goal is to get into that marketplace, eventually appropriating a healthy chunk of the billions in advertising that flow to and through the TV today with such painful inefficiency.
Okay, you give in, you say. TV’s a big deal. But haven’t so many tried this before? That’s essentially the point Steve Jobs used to marginalize Google TV on stage at D8, the All Things Digital conference. With all respect to the man (generally, a genius). He’s wrong.
Yes, it’s hard, yes it has been tried before, but no, Google TV is not in the same situation as Roku, Vudu, Boxee, or even Apple TV. Google TV is different; it’s more ambitious yet more likely to succeed. First of all, timing matters. With broadband penetration at two-thirds of US households — higher in many European and Asian markets — and with home networks in more than a third of US homes, the base layer of high-speed connectivity to and in the home can support Google’s ambitions. Plus, there’s enough content online between YouTube, Hulu, and Netflix, to make it worth the bother of connecting the TV (which, by the way, is why nearly 10 million homes in the US connect their PCs to their TVs to watch that content today, so Google’s asking us to do something millions of us already do).
But the mere combination of content and technology isn’t enough to make this work. There has to be a path to market that is likely to succeed and Google’s list of partners is what makes this worthy of consideration. Sure, Intel has been standing in the background, eager to wedge into the TV business for some time. Logitech hopes to provide the peripherals — boxes, keyboards, pointers, even cameras — that will populate the living room. But none of those partners can drive a large, open market of consumers using Google TV which is precisely what developers will want to see before they ignite the innovation necessary to take the TV experience to the next level.
That’s where Sony comes in. Sony has been selling connected TVs for longer than any other TV maker. It obsesses about R&D and its connected TVs are actually relatively robust compared to some others which rely on cheaper silicon and have a less elegant user interface. Yet Sony willingly set that technology investment aside — giddily, as Sir Howard Stringer himself said — and tied its fate to Google TV. This will make all the difference, giving Google TV a shot at reaching millions of homes by year-end 2011. More to the point, it is Sony’s involvement that will cause everyone else to accelerate their own efforts. Competing TV makers will sign up by the end of the year, mark my word. Cable companies will speed up their TV Everywhere solutions to ensure that they don’t get pushed to one side. Most of all, Apple itself will have to respond.
In fact, Apple will kick itself that it didn’t tackle TV in a similar fashion sooner. Jobs has admitted the Apple TV was a hobby and has painted the entire TV market as nearly impossible to overhaul. But he’s hiding from the fact that his solution — and all the other solutions tried so far — didn’t really bring the kind of power to the TV that Google TV will. The Apple TV, on a good day, is capable of taking your attention for no more than an hour, two at most, and then only if you have paid to rent or download a movie from iTunes. That’s an infrequent scenario at best. Google TV will be a persistent interface that resides on your TV, giving you access to search functions (searching linear programming, web video, and even the general Web to get IMDB facts or background on the season finale of Glee) any time you’re watching TV, not just when you switch the input.
It’s a critical difference that makes Google TV unique compared to all previous attempts to “Webitize” the TV. And it’s the difference that will matter at scale, thanks to TV manufacturers who will support it. And it’s the difference that will matter to developers, who will want to appeal to millions of consumers through a persistent interface, not a sidekick box in the living room. That’s why Google TV is bigger than you think — it will occupy more of your time and attention than you think. Then, once it has your attention, it can begin siphoning away ad dollars. Oops, did I just reveal the nefarious master plan? You bet I did.
5 Reasons Why Google TV Looks Like a Winner
5 Reasons Why Google TV Looks Like a Winnerposted by: Will Richmond Google pulled the curtain back on Google TV (“GTV” for short) yesterday and the debate over whether it will be a game-changer or another in a long line of underwhelming web-TV approaches is already underway. I’m going to plant my stake firmly in the first category – I think GTV looks like a real winner and below I’ve articulated 5 good reasons why. I’m not saying it’s a slam dunk, and there are still some unknowns (starting with price) which will have a huge influence on its adoption. But as I describe below, GTV looks like the right product at the right time. (Btw, if you need more background on what GTV actually is, see my post from 2 months ago “Here’s How Google TV Will Work” and Colin Dixon’s guest post below, “Google TV Unites Web and TV in One Experience.”) 1. Consumers Want Online Video on Their TVs The touchstone of a successful new consumer product introduction is simple – does it solve a problem or fill a need? For GTV, the answer is an overwhelming “yes.” Consumers want a simple, cost-effective solution for watching online video on their TVs. Millions have already availed themselves of alternative – and often sub-optimal – methods for doing so: connecting their laptops to their TVs, buying a Roku/TiVo/connected Blu-ray player, using their gaming console, etc. There is no question here of “do consumers want online video on their TVs?” They do and there’s abundant research supporting the trend already (here, here, here for example). If you need more validation, just ask anyone who’s using Netflix streaming. Moving the online video experience to the TV is the next natural step in the evolution of this exciting new medium. When most online video was short clips and the experience was poor, watching on computers was ok. But now, with HD, full-screen, well-featured experiences gaining prominence alongside the advent of high-quality, long-form programming, the viewing experience wants to move to the living room and the wide-screen HDTV. And it’s a virtuous circle – the more the online video experience moves to the living room, the more high-quality content will come online, further reinforcing the value of GTV. 2. It’s the Full Internet and It’s Open A main point of skepticism regarding GTV is that other web-to-TV approaches haven’t made it big, so why will GTV? It’s a very fair question and I think there are 2 very significant differences between past approaches and GTV. The first is that GTV users get the full Internet, not just the bits and pieces that the device provider has made deals with, or those that have invested the time and money to integrate with the device. Fifteen years since the Internet went mainstream, people are conditioned to expect nothing less than full choice and selection. GTV is the first to recognize that a “no boundaries,” fully-browsable experience is not a nice-to-have, it’s a must-have. The second differentiator is that search is core to the GTV experience, while others have focused mainly on browse. Searching is THE way people are accustomed to finding what they want and the inability to do so simply in other devices and on-screen guides has been a real handicap. GTV blends online expectations into the TV experience; that will feel natural and meaningful for many. As important as the full Internet is to consumers, GTV’s openness is equally important to developers who will build the apps that will make GTV compelling. It’s essential to remember the Internet’s open standards and development tools have driven its success. With GTV, the full brunt of the Internet’s openness is once and for all being brought to the TV, powered by advances in processors that would have been unimaginable until recently. Google’s Android OS and Chrome browser help create the platform – at no charge – to make all this happen. Simply put, developers are going to love GTV and the fruit of their imagination is going to astound us. 3. For Content Providers, GTV Should be Love at First Sight Of course, what good is a new device if there’s no good content? This is a problem that all too often plagues new devices (some of you have no doubt heard me mention “Richmond’s Law” – that you can’t introduce a device AND the content/apps for it simultaneously and expect the device to succeed.) However, in GTV’s case, since it’s really just leveraging all the great content on the Internet, content shortage won’t be a problem. For video providers large and small GTV offers the potential of massive new reach, usage, and importantly new revenue streams, whether from Google ads, their own ads or new paid models. Nothing is required of them, though if they want to optimize for GTV (as with YouTube’s new “Lean Back” UI), they can do so very easily. For cable TV networks in particular GTV is a big-time winner. It doesn’t disrupt their traditional model (see reason #5 below for more on that), but does open up all kinds of new interactive content opportunities. Another set of winners are the independent providers that have already attracted audiences online, like blip.tv, Next New Networks and Revision3. Other winners include print publishers like the NY Times, WSJ, Sports Illustrated, etc, who have been avidly building out their video libraries. The independent and print guys were limited mainly to computer-based consumption, but with GTV they get equal on-TV footing for the first time with their cable TV network counterparts. This will make for an exciting new round of content innovation. Lastly, if past is precedent, we can expect Hulu to dig its head further into the sand and block GTV users. That’s ok, users will just turn to ABC.com, Fox.com, etc. As GTV and more convergence plays emerge, Hulu’s insistence on computer-based viewing only is a self-inflicted bullet to its head (which btw, could be to YouTube’s benefit as it seeks to increase its premium content roster). 4. GTV is Part of a Compelling 3-Screen Experience As important as GTV is to on-TV viewing, it’s critical to see its place in the larger context of a 3-screen, converged world. Today “convergence” is more a slogan than anything. But as Google showed in its demos yesterday (flawed though they were by incongruous Bluetooth snafus), the interplay between mobile, online and TV is tantalizing. Seeing an Android smartphone act as a voice-activated GTV remote control is just the tip of the iceberg. Today we are in just the first inning of consumer expectations for how devices interact (“my contact list synchs to my iPhone – whoohoo!”), but increasingly, as the cloud gains more prominence, the consumer technology battle is going to gravitate to integrated 3-screen experiences. In this respect, GTV must also be seen in the context of Google’s epic battle with Apple. GTV is a rare instance of Google actually being ahead of Apple, rather than playing catch-up (as in smartphones, tablets, operating systems, etc.). For now at least, Apple doesn’t have a TV of its own, giving Google an opportunity gain an early lead in how 3-screen experiences will work. GTV further exposes key weaknesses of Apple’s tightly-controlled, vertically integrated model. While Apple has enjoyed a huge head-start with the iPhone and a smaller one with the iPad, developers are increasingly going to ask themselves whether developing for essentially one company (and to its particular, exacting demands) is better than returning their roots and comfort zone of developing for the open Internet and GTV. As I mentioned last week, Apple vs. Android is looking increasingly like Apple vs. Wintel, and we know how that story ended. While Apple is busy ranting against Flash, Google has been presented with a monster-sized PR opportunity for Android to be positioned as the open, neutral alternative. 5. It’s Evolutionary, Not Revolutionary Possibly the most remarkable thing about GTV is that rather than trying to disrupt the TV ecosystem, Google pragmatically incorporates it and tries to enhance its value. That Google chose to go this route rather than doing something revolutionary that would incent “cord-cutting” is almost miraculous given the company’s nearly dogmatic approach to re-inventing everything it touches. While the cable/satellite/telco set-top box sitting alongside GTV may seem like a ridiculous hack to many, serving little purpose but to preserve the entrenched cable business model, for Google, this “friend, not foe” approach means genuine partnership discussions can ensue for Google with Multichannel Video Programming Distributors (MVPDs). That’s key to GTV not relying on a risky, retail-only distribution model. In my initial post on Google TV 2 months ago, I highlighted the fascinating negotiating dynamic about to unfold between Google and the MVPDs. Some will be frightened of Google and its potential Trojan horse incursion into the living room, while others will be compelled by the upside. One thing is for sure: yesterday’s news that DISH’s set-top box will be optimized for GTV means that GTV’s new features are poised to become key messages in DISH’s advertising. If you’re an MVPD and you don’t have an “Internet-on-TV” story you’re going to be at a disadvantage. GTV adds value to MVPDs by enhancing both the TV experience and also driving more need for bandwidth on the ISP side. For all of these reasons, I think it’s going to be very tempting for many MVPDs to engage with Google. Wrap-up There’s a lot to be excited about with GTV, as a whole new chapter in online video’s rise is set to begin. |
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