-->
Save your FREE seat for Streaming Media Connect in November. Register Now!

Pay TV Loses Numbers in Developed Countries, Gains in Developing

Article Featured Image

While ebbing pay TV subscriber numbers are standard in the U.S., many parts of the world are seeing pay TV growth. ABI Research notes that North American pay TV services lost over 3 million subscribers in 2017, most of whom made the switch to streaming services. Mature markets such as North America and Europe will see either a slight decline in subscriptions or sluggish growth in the coming years. However, the reverse is true in many developing markets. In Asia-Pacific, pay TV counted 656 million subscribers in 2017, a 7 percent year-over-year increase. 

“Pay TV and OTT offerings can vary dramatically between regions and between countries in terms of content availability and price," says Khin Sandi Lynn, an industry analyst at ABI Research. "OTT adoption in mature markets will impact pay TV adoption there, but the more reliable delivery and all-in-one nature of pay TV will prove valuable in those developing markets."

By 2022, the global pay TV market (including cable, satellite, and IPTV) will generate $295 million USD, showing a slow but steady growth despite OTT competition. Pay TV operators are responding the threat by adding over-the-top services to their platforms. For example, DirecTV created the DirecTV Now skinny bundle, and Dish Network created Sling TV. Another strategy is to provide streaming set-top boxes in lieu of cable boxes, so subscribers can access pay TV and streaming services from the same connected device. 

Streaming Covers
Free
for qualified subscribers
Subscribe Now Current Issue Past Issues
Related Articles

How an Evolving Pay TV Infrastructure Can Coexist With OTT

The future belongs to blended servcies. Creating an IP transformation that relies on multicast-assisted ABR streaming is a potential key to quality improvements and cost savings.

In U.S., OTT Revenue Grew 41%, While Pay TV Grew 1% in 2017

According to Convergence Research, OTT is growing at a faster rate than pay TV, but its lower average cost make it far less profitable.

Pay TV Meets OTT: 1 in 5 Get Streaming Service Through Pay TV

Parks Associates data shows that 21 percent of pay TV customers subscribe to a streaming service through their account.

Deloitte Sees Value Gap Between What Pay TV Viewers Want and Get

Consumers no longer understand the point of having access to hundreds of channels they never watch, with all generations dissatisfied.