WaxLyrical
Honorary Master
Which begs the question. If every single household in South Africa applied for Premium, would MC reduce the price, as the minority no longer has to "subsidize" the cost of sports rights?
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Which begs the question. If every single household in South Africa applied for Premium, would MC reduce the price, as the minority no longer has to "subsidize" the cost of sports rights?
Which begs the question. If every single household in Subsaharan Africa applied for Premium, would MC reduce the price, as the minority no longer has to "subsidize" the cost of sports rights?
If you have DStv you'll know that repeats are a pretty standard part of many/most channels syndicated services worldwide. Besides, a certain degree of repeats is desirable for many viewers, for obvious reasons. My own PVR scheduling quite often requires that I find another time for a desired doccie/show.Doing repeats like DSTV?
https://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showth...-for-money?p=21538501&viewfull=1#post21538501
If you have DStv you'll know that repeats are a pretty standard part of syndicated services worldwide. Besides, a certain degree of repeats is desirable for many viewers, for obvious reasons.
Yes of course. But that assumes you have an alternative delivery mechanism like internet with an acceptable and affordable costs & bandwidth. Not quite the case yet for most of DStv's market.That's exactly why replay/VOD has been created in most developed countries (unlike DSTV where it's a few series here and there).
DSTV forces you to get the repeats unlike first world countries, and then puts them back on another channel.
No need to have 300 channels if you replay 5 times the same thing, just put 60 and leave the rest available on replay.
Which begs the question. If every single household in South Africa applied for Premium, would MC reduce the price, as the minority no longer has to "subsidize" the cost of sports rights?
MonoChoice's failure and refusal to adapt is the real problem: MonoChoice's business model is based on the archaic thinking that MonoChoice decides when and what it will allow subscribers to view content, and that is the nature of satellite broadcasting.
I expect that the real reason that people switching to streaming services is simply that streaming services have structured their businesses models around putting choice and control in the hands of their subscribers.
I expect many people would consider convenience and flexibility to be more important compared to competitive pricing.
It should be clear that MonoChoice succeeds where sport is concerned but fails to satisfy in many other aspects that consumers consider when choosing what service they are willing to pay for.
J
I’m now cancelling all my packages. Netflix and pub for sport!
No they won't, they will / going crying to government that Netflix has an unfair advantage, then the EFF is going to burn down Netflix like they threatened a few years ago to burn down TwitterHave no fear everyone. At some stage, they will change their tune...propose a full online only package as well as a sports package or pay-as-you go on-demand service for sports etc.
They'll then state that this is a genius move on their behalf, that they have been planning it for years, that it was completely their idea, had nothing to do with heavy criticism or growing competition and that they were waiting for the market to be "ready".
I mean come on guys, SURELY they know what their customers want? They are sooooo smart.