By
Dawn Kawamoto
Friday, August 04 2006 11:32 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,39379844,00.htm
Internet Protocol television is expected to attract 63 million subscribers
by 2010--more than a 26-fold increase over last year, according to a study
released Thursday by research firm iSuppli.
The largest jump in numbers is expected to come next year, iSuppli said, when
subscriptions will hit 15 million, tripling 2006 totals. The leap will come
about through a large number of telecommunications titans entering the IPTV
market, said analyst Mark Kirstein, vice president of multimedia content and
services for iSuppli.
"Throughout 2004, 2005 and some of 2006, you had small carriers deploying
services on a regional basis," Kirstein said. "In 2006 and 2007, you have large
carriers like Verizon and AT&T offering IPTV, as well as some international
carriers."
As the big boys belly up to the table and the industry evolves from offering
basic voice, video and data as separate services to one that integrates the
offerings and includes greater interactivity, IPTV is expected to grow to a US$27
billion business from its current level of less than US$2 billion, Kirstein said.
Video services will represent the largest slice of the revenue pie,
accounting for nearly 87 percent of the revenues. Those video services are
expected to expand beyond TV network and cable programming to include a much
larger offering, such as user-supplied content and narrow, niche content.
Expected to differ from traditional TV network programming on several fronts,
IPTV can offer interactivity, integration across multiple platforms and enhanced
services. Interactive functions could include e-commerce, communication and
electronic voting. Kirstein envisions some of the enhanced services to include
on-demand gaming, music and home networking management.
Revenues from media services and advertising to IPTV operators are expected
to account for 14 percent of the US$27 billion revenue pie in the next four years.
These two combined areas currently represent less than 7 percent of the
industry's revenues.
"IPTV changes the proposition (for advertisers)," Kirstein said, noting IPTV
operators will increasingly find ways to allow interactive advertising,
resulting in higher ad rates.