New Report 'European Cable: Strategies for Success' Identifies the Issues That Cable Operators Face, Defines Their Position in the Market and Shows How to Maintain a Successful Business Case.DUBLIN Dublin, city, Republic of Ireland Dublin, Irish Baile Átha Cliath, county borough (1991 pop. 915,516), Leinster, capital of the Republic of Ireland, on Dublin Bay at the mouth of the Liffey River. , Ireland Ireland, Irish Eire (âr`ə) [to it are related the poetic Erin and perhaps the Latin Hibernia], island, 32,598 sq mi (84,429 sq km), second largest of the British Isles. -- Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c59832) has announced the addition of European European emanating from or pertaining to Europe. European bat lyssavirus see lyssavirus. European beech tree fagussylvaticus. European blastomycosis see cryptococcosis. Cable: Strategies for Success to their offering. "Cable operators will struggle to keep up with the financial might of telcos, as their profitability is more comparable to that of unbundlers. Cablecos' key assets are not their networks but their subscriber bases and, in order to maintain these, they must ensure access to the best content, delivered in new ways over next-generation infrastructure. The price tag can be high, and cablecos must consolidate or face a dwindling dwin·dle v. dwin·dled, dwin·dling, dwin·dles v.intr. To become gradually less until little remains. v.tr. To cause to dwindle. See Synonyms at decrease. subscriber base." - Martin Scott Martin Scott is the name of:
Cablecos' margins are acceptable and their businesses appear stable but they must not become complacent com·pla·cent adj. 1. Contented to a fault; self-satisfied and unconcerned: He had become complacent after years of success. 2. Eager to please; complaisant. , as telcos, satellite players and DTT DTT Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu (Deloitte & Touch Global Operations) DTT Dithiothreitol (cytology reagent) DTT Digital Terrestrial Television DTT Discrete Trial Training operators are closing in on all sides. European Cable: strategies for success identifies the issues that cable operators face, defines their position in the market and shows how to maintain a successful business case. The report identifies the strengths and weaknesses of the European cable product portfolio and assesses the performance of service bundling to date, indicating how these can be improved. It also looks beyond present cable broadband technology broadband technology Telecommunications devices, lines, or technologies that allow communication over a wide band of frequencies, and especially over a range of frequencies divided into multiple independent channels for the simultaneous transmission of different signals. to suggest how cable operators can provide faster and more diverse services. European Cable: strategies for success weighs the pros and cons pros and cons Noun, pl the advantages and disadvantages of a situation [Latin pro for + con(tra) against] of moving to pre-specification DOCSIS (Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification) A cable modem standard from the CableLabs research consortium (www.cablelabs.com), which provides equipment certification for interoperability. 3.0 technology now, gauges the benefits of M-CMTS M-CMTS Modular Cable Modem Termination System architectures and considers whether it would be wiser for cable operators to wait for full DOCSIS3.0 compatibility. The report also provides an in-depth in-depth adj. Detailed; thorough: an in-depth study. in-depth Adjective detailed or thorough: an in-depth analysis analysis of trends in the pricing of cable and DSL DSL in full Digital Subscriber Line Broadband digital communications connection that operates over standard copper telephone wires. It requires a DSL modem, which splits transmissions into two frequency bands: the lower frequencies for voice (ordinary broadband services See broadband and broadband service provider. , and points to the services that cable operators should be providing. European Cable: Strategies for Success answers your key questions: * What will a successful cableco look like in three years' time? * How will interactions between cable operators, telcos and others shape the overall market? * Do the cablecos have a viable business model for the future? * How has pricing competition developed, and how should it change? * What demand will there be for M-CMTS, pre-specification DOCSIS3.0 and full DOCSIS3.0 infrastructure; what are the critical factors? * Which network upgrade path is best for cablecos? * How much do upgrades cost? * Why move to digital TV? * What are the benefits of consolidation? * How much of a threat is posed by DTT, DTH (Direct-To-Home) Typically refers to satellite TV broadcasting directly to a dish antenna on the roof of a house. See DBS. and telco TV? * What makes a successful retail portfolio? Who should read this report? * Cable operators: identify the product portfolio, retail pricing and route to network upgrade that best suits your business * Investors and analysts: understand the place of cable operators within a converged telecoms-media market * Equipment vendors: focus your marketing according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. our independent analysis of pre-specification DOCSIS3.0, DOCSIS3.0 and M-CMTS architectures, and their roles in a cable operator's strategy * Incumbent operators: develop a view of the competitive landscape; learn from the comparison of prices charged by European cable and DSL operators * Pay-TV pay-TV n. A system for receiving television broadcasts by making subscription payments, as by renting a device that unscrambles the broadcaster's scrambled signal. Also called pay television. operators: identify the issues and limitations that cable operators have yet to address Content Outline: Summary 1 Telcos and broadcasters pose threats from different sides 1.1 Telecoms operators are focusing on services enabled by broadband, including TV 1.2 Established broadcasters hold a latent advantage 1.3 Some cable operators' networks still lag behind significantly 1.4 Regulation may work against the cable operators' interests 1.5 Cable operators must focus on content, including its presentation and delivery 2 Content must remain cablecos' top priority 2.1 Cablecos must continue to improve the quality and range of their content 2.2 Cable operators must prioritise building a national brand 2.3 Telecoms infrastructure increasingly facilitates content delivery 3 Upgrading to M-CMTS should be prioritised 3.1 Footprint limitations can be overcome by alternative technologies 3.2 Provision of higher bandwidths does not necessarily require more spectrum 3.3 (Euro)DOCSIS3.0 will enable increased bandwidth, scalability and new services 3.4 The M-CMTS standard enhances scalability and flexibility while reducing costs 3.5 Increasing downstream bandwidth may be achieved through pre-specification DOCSIS3.0 3.6 Ethernet-over-cable may also be deployed to achieve higher downstream speeds 3.7 Demand for upstream bandwidth is less well addressed than that for downstream 3.8 Cable operators should only employ pre-specification DOCSIS3.0 in small-scale trials 4 Price competition can only take an operator so far 4.1 Broadband prices are approaching rock bottom 4.2 Cable operators must consolidate a value-driven strategy 4.3 The cable broadband pricing portfolio can be streamlined and enhanced 4.4 Bundling services to increase perceived value is key 5 Only large scale will enable adequate content and technology Actions Figures and Tables Figure 0.1: Forecast ROI from four different infrastructure upgrades Table 0.1: Phases of build-out options A-D, 2008-11 Figure 1.1: RGUs within the Western European cable industry, 2001-6 Figure 1.2: RGUs within the Western European telecoms industry, 2001-6 Figure 1.3: Satellite TV subscribers in Western Europe, 2001-6 Figure 1.4: Coverage and adoption of cable services in Western Europe, December 2005 Table 1.1: Estimated proportion of CATV network upgraded for two-way communication in selected European countries at December 2006 Figure 2.1: Per-annum cost of first-division football league rights in selected Western European markets, 1999-2006 Figure 2.2: Typical household downstream broadband demand, 2006-14 Table 3.1: Typical frequency allocations for services in an 860MHz-bandwidth HFC cable network Figure 3.1: The impact of codec compression on the bandwidth demands of IP-based video services Figure 3.2: Comparison of EuroDOCSIS versions Figure 3.3: I-CMTS head-end architecture Figure 3.4: M-CMTS head-end architecture Figure 3.5: Cost of CMTS downstream ports and video EQAM ports, 2002-7 Table 3.2: Details of pre-specification DOCSIS3.0 channel-bonding CPE Table 3.3: Four upgrade options Table 3.4: Phases of build-out options A-D, 2008-11 Figure 3.6: Forecast ROI from four different infrastructure upgrades Figure 4.1: Average price of flat-rate residential 2Mbit/s retail broadband connections in Western Europe, 3Q 2003-1Q 2007 Figure 4.2: Net profitability of selected European unbundlers, 1Q 2004-3Q 2006 Figure 4.3: Net profitability of selected European cable operators, 1Q 2004-3Q 2006 Figure 4.4: Customer penetration of multi-play packages for selected triple-play providers in Western Europe, December 2006 Figure 4.5: Telewest's monthly ARPS for telephony, broadband and TV and total customer ARPU, 2001-5 Table 5.1: Aspects of cablecos' strategy in historical media and future converged markets For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c59832 |
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