It’s easy to forget about TV in summer. Sunshine, holidays and a drop off in content mean viewers are less likely to tune in compared with other times of year.
So providers should be working harder than ever to retain their viewers. Research from Sanford Bernstein shows that pay-TV subscriptions are falling. It found that subscriptions dropped by 1.4 per cent in the third quarter of 2015, compared to a 0.9 per cent gain in the third quarter one year earlier.
And it’s a well-known fact that customers are a lot more expensive to get back: the cost of acquiring new viewers is far higher than retaining them. Competition is fierce and if you lose customers, they have more choice than ever to go somewhere else.
Know your customers
But there are things you can do to act now. You know more about your customers’ viewing habits than they do. And you can use that to your advantage. One way of doing that is to offer more relevant content.
With that insight, you can make suggestions for content that viewers may not be aware of. That will give them the most out of their service and keep them loyal.
You should blend elements of personalization into the customer’s viewing experience. For example, provide subtle viewing suggestions through their electronic program guide.
Flexible models
Subscription packages ought to make viewing content across devices easier, as everything is in one place. Fragmented viewing habits, where customers have a number of pay-as-you-go deals at the same time, can land them with the extra cost of paying to watch content on their phones.
Remind customers that they can access your content from anywhere and on any device and ensure your services are optimized for all platforms.
Analyze this
Offering services across devices also means you can view customers’ habits, preferences, likes and dislikes with greater accuracy. So, for example, this may mean offering similar content, or box sets of a show when that series ends. It may be in offering different sports content in the off-season.
It may even mean offering payment breaks and more flexible pricing and bundling that reflect how the viewer uses your service, in order to keep them as a customer, and reduce the risk of the dreaded churn.
When it comes to the seasonal drop off, analytics can also be used on a higher level.
Look for trends. Is it always the same people who leave and come back? What types of customers are demographically most likely to leave your service during the Summer? Once you start asking those questions, you can start targeting specific ‘at risk’ customer groups.
As consumers become increasingly savvy in the way they pay for their TV services, it’s up to you to become equally intelligent and flexible with their services.
Make sure that the summer slowdown doesn’t turn into a permanent drop in your subscription services uptake.
Find out more
To find out how you can improve your services and maintain a loyal subscriber base, take a look at Cisco’s Service Provider Video Solutions.
Nice read. I am curious why you didn’t make the a la carte suggestion for package content? The flexible content only focuses on the ability to view anywhere on any device. Is that really the issue? I read several articles stating viewers are leaving because they are tired of paying for content they don’t use.
My situation for example. I paid $104.76 for the package I needed to view the three channels I liked, and one channel my wife liked. I made the decision to goto internet TV and over the air three years ago, and now I have my a la carte menu and pay $21 per month. I still can watch on any device, anytime and anywhere.
Also, the algorithms used to track my viewing habits and make suggestions for content are worthless. I had a binge on foreign films for a few months. Now a year later, those are still the only real suggestions coming up, and I know I am missing a lot of content. Tastes change with the seasons. Pushing me consistently down the path of content I have grown tired of is the fastest way to lose this customer.
sherie haines
It’s strange that I’m reading this because I had decided to do away with the tv next year .
I seem to watch things on the I pad or I phone and tv never gets watched as they’res never anything on tv .
I think the licence is overpriced as well .
All we have is re runs and Xmas will show the same things every year … so what’s the point.