Jcool0 wrote:"Just across the border in Utah, the Jazz have seen a 44% decline in viewership this year during the team’s second season deploying its over-the-air strategy. The Jazz have also reportedly lost about 50% of its media revenue from the switch."
This doesn't surprise me, modern home setups aren't made for OTA.
From a business perspective, I would think you can resolve this problem by creating a streaming service that allows for games on demand as well as live and just airs pre game, game, post game, and nothing else instead of making a whole station. Charge the minimum amount required to break even rather than try to make a profit.
You reduce the costs of all the broadcasting stuff you have to buy for the OTA, all the costs of production for all the other content you are now longer filming and all the costs of all the other people running spots junk shows no one watches.
You are probably now at break even at like $2-$3 a user for just the streaming platform itself (not counting the costs of production which are a wash regardless of what you do), and now a season pass for the Bulls is $12-$18 dollars and can be watched on any device like any modern person would want to do.
This feels like the way these teams should have gone to me. I think all the time / energy spent trying to create a full network and air all this other stuff, and pay for all the broadcast rights OTA is just a huge waste, and where they are losing all the money. You do the above, and you're going to get a way bigger subscribe base.
Hell, once you go this route, you can also mix down games to remove all dead time, FTAs, and other things for the on demand watch or have highlight versions, and you can do forced ad watches on all the on demand stuff too. The experience is probably much better for the typical user and much cheaper to create.