Airtel may take the most direct competitive hit from JioFiber because, along with content bundles for its mobile services, it is one of the country's largest TV service providers.
Business
Standard : Three years after elbowing into the Indian
wireless phone market with free calls and data, billionaire Mukesh
Ambani is back at it.
This
time, Asia's richest man is handing out TVs to hook users on movies
and entertainment shows via internet. The tycoon is wedging into a
business teeming with players from rival mobile carriers to Netflix
Inc and Amazon.com Inc.
Ambani's
JioFiber
broadband service, scheduled to start Thursday across India, comes
with a high-definition television and set-top boxes at no charge for
annual lifetime subscribers. The offer by Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd,
the tycoon's wireless powerhouse, includes subscriptions to most
premium streaming services with prices starting from Rs 700 (about
$10) a month.
The
fiber-TV salvo comes days after Jio formally swept into the No. 1
spot for wireless services after free calls and cheap data lured
hundreds of millions of subscribers and left rivals Bharti Airtel Ltd
and Vodafone Idea Ltd struggling under mounting debt. Airtel, backed
by tycoon Sunil Mittal, and billionaire Kumar Mangalam Birla's Idea
are also trying to lure users by offering access to TV and movie
content.
Telecom
carriers around the world are adding entertainment content to their
offerings as a way to compete for users and add revenue, especially
in markets where the number of mobile subscriptions has reached
saturation. In India, video-on-demand growth itself is explosive,
according to researcher Boston Consulting Group.
The
market could leap to $5 billion by 2023 from $500 million last year,
BCG estimates. The boom has set Bollywood production houses, carriers
and streaming services racing to feed demand for TV shows and movies
and compete for users. Paying subscribers will probably rise to as
many as 50 million, while users of advertising-supported
video-on-demand will reach 600 million, BCG predicts.
To
gain the upper hand in the streaming business against well-funded
competitors like Netflix,
Amazon.com and Walt Disney Co's Hotstar, Jio will need to go beyond
just offering cheaper access via bundled services, said Shailesh
Kapoor, founder and chief executive officer at Mumbai-based
consultancy Ormax Media Pvt.
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