He said that the networks seem to be concerned that the enormous revenue streams targeted at these dumb televisions will go away if they change the model. Schmidt disagrees. He thinks people will watch even more television if it’s augmented with the Internet.
I can't imagine why they'd be worried. It's not like other advertising driven revenue models that came online earlier have been getting ground down into pulp or anything.
The networks are in the business of selling advertising (and buying or producing content as advertising delivery vehicles). What's more, they get the lions share of the money spend on TV advertising - there aren't substantial amounts being bled off to intermediaries.
Google is in the business of selling advertising, but not content. And they are in the business of standing between the advertiser and the content producer and taking a hefty percentage of the dollars spent on advertising. And they've proven to be very adept at business.
A large amount of advantage major networks hold over even cable channels is their ability to deliver large audiences to ad buyers. Because everything is pretty manual and there is no big auction network or the like, an ad buyer can't easily purchase the same reach of say 5M households that the network provides by placing their ads on 1000 programs each with 5000 viewers.
Once it's just as easy or easier to reach your audience through many small programs, the money will start to flow away from big TV and into smaller productions. That money will allow the upstarts to increase production value, competing more effectively. And whatever money is still going to the major networks will be getting a substantial slice taken out by the intermediaries and their "value add".
But Eric Schmidt says it won't be a problem. I mean, they can trust google, right?
> He thinks people will watch even more television
In 2008, the average American 12 or older watched 1,704 hours of television: 4.7 hours per day. Schmidt thinks people will watch more than that much Google TV? I weep for humanity.
Google's philosophy with Google TV and network television stations amounts to "why buy the cow when we can get the milk for free?"
In so many words, the issue is that Google wants to profit from network television without paying for the content or infrastructure. The networks have a legitimate right to be angry when they pay for the content and distribution and Google wants to profit off of that for free.
How is this any different to Google News? Google is just letting users discover through a better unified interface the TV content that is ALREADY available on the web for free.
They are providing a service for both users and the TV networks. The TV networks, like newspapers and other old-world publishers before them with google search and news, just don't understand it.
Google's had issues with those people, too. And book authors and publishers because of Google Books.
The issue is that Google TV is layering their ads and content on top of the television that the networks pay lots of money to acquire. So the networks pay all the costs and Google piggy-backs on it for free.
I haven't used Google TV, but I'm pretty sure your post is verifiable bullshit.
If you go to a network's site on your computer and view their content, you also view their ads. If you go to a network's site using Google TV, you view their content and their ads. Where do Google ads come into this?
No, this is all about networks being obsessed with distribution control - you can watch a show on your computer, on your HTPC, but not on a user-friendly HTPC. You can watch hulu on your laptop on your lap, but not on your tablet on your lap, etc etc.
Google didn't create Google TV out of the kindness of their heart. Google created Google TV to make a profit. Just like you see ads on top of Youtube videos, you see ads on top of and around television using Google TV.
So the more popular a television show, the more ads Google gets to show around it, and the more money Google makes. How much of that money gets shared with the networks that actually paid for television show and the costs of distribution? None. And that's the problem. The networks are putting up all the money and Google collects when it pays off.
How is accessing the networks' content through their websites and watching the networks' own ads is "getting the milk for free", if anything the networks here are limiting ad impressions by blocking potential viewers which is incredibly stupid.
Having had the experience of developing for the Google TV (Logitech Revue unit), all I can say is: They're taking something simple and making it complicated.
Look at DVR's. That's an excellent example of taking something simple and making it smart. Tivo didn't make it harder to watch tv, it made it easier, aka watch what you want when you want.
The reason I'm such a fan of the Apple TV is that it made TV even easier. Not only can I watch what I want when I want, I can do it less expensively. By canceling my outrageously priced monthly cable service, I have a relatively low-cost internet connection and spend 2/3 less each month on tv that I ever have before. There's only a handful of shows that I really care to watch, and I get them how I want.
Google TV is more akin to Web TV than anything else. You took away my remote and gave me a keyboard. And you made finding content even more difficult than it was before.
I can't imagine why they'd be worried. It's not like other advertising driven revenue models that came online earlier have been getting ground down into pulp or anything.
The networks are in the business of selling advertising (and buying or producing content as advertising delivery vehicles). What's more, they get the lions share of the money spend on TV advertising - there aren't substantial amounts being bled off to intermediaries.
Google is in the business of selling advertising, but not content. And they are in the business of standing between the advertiser and the content producer and taking a hefty percentage of the dollars spent on advertising. And they've proven to be very adept at business.
A large amount of advantage major networks hold over even cable channels is their ability to deliver large audiences to ad buyers. Because everything is pretty manual and there is no big auction network or the like, an ad buyer can't easily purchase the same reach of say 5M households that the network provides by placing their ads on 1000 programs each with 5000 viewers.
Once it's just as easy or easier to reach your audience through many small programs, the money will start to flow away from big TV and into smaller productions. That money will allow the upstarts to increase production value, competing more effectively. And whatever money is still going to the major networks will be getting a substantial slice taken out by the intermediaries and their "value add".
But Eric Schmidt says it won't be a problem. I mean, they can trust google, right?