August 2013
www.tvbeurope.com
TVBEurope 63 News & Analysis According to Robert
Ambrose, Media & Entertainment Industry director at Oracle, media customers find it hard to create a business case for investment in big data. There is a risk of ‘emperor’s new clothes’, he says, but only if you take a technology for technology’s sake approach. “If you start with an understanding of the potential data sources out there (web transactions, customer data, transaction/consumption logs, demographic data, service requests, social media, etc) and then think about the business pain points you’re trying to address (targeted marketing/ advertising, reduced subscription churn, better content investment) then big data analytics has huge potential to deliver competitive advantage to media companies.” Andy Brown, chairman at
WPP-owned consultancy Kantar Media, says, “A fundamental limitation of big data is that it doesn’t collect attitudinal data. It tells you who is watching, but not why, or why they prefer this content over that. So it’s essential that we retain classic market
research — such as panel measurement — alongside return path data and social media data.” He adds, “Twitter is very
aggressive at trying to penetrate the TV ecosytem to the point where they are launching a Twitter TV ratings service in the US. Can we evaluate a programme’s engagement using social media?” Big data is one of the most
talked about topics in Silicon Valley, according to Larry Kaplan, founder and CEO of Software Defined Video Infrastructure (SDVI). “In the Valley they always talk about the consumer, of which the exemplar is Amazon. What Amazon has done in terms of analysing big data to predict consumer habits, and feeding back into the supply chain to package and distribute media to the consumer, is nothing short of amazing. The question is how we can apply this to broadcast.” Since internal production and
distribution processes are more structured and predictable than unstructured data culled from the internet, could big data techniques be used to optimise how a broadcaster’s internal processes operate?
“Broadcasters already have
a business with a lot of intelligence built in,” says Tony Taylor, CEO, TransMedia Dynamics. “Metadata is embedded in content to greater or lesser degree. We can help broadcasters make better use of it to improve their operational performance.” TMD integrated its
Mediaflex Content Intelligence tool into the
media asset management system at Irish broadcaster RTÉ. The whole
“By extracting as much technical and intellectual information as possible we open the data up for the broadcaster to make business decisions on the performance of internal processes such as transcodes, content movements and publishing,” says Taylor.
“Big data analytics has
huge potential to deliver
system is claimed to save RTÉ over £300k a year by harvesting and analysing metadata from files coming into the broadcaster, then routing the content without manual intervention into the appropriate workflow [see IT Broadcast Workflow Wrap-up, page 16].
competitive advantage to media
companies” Robert Ambrose, Oracle
According to Kaplan, what is needed in order for the broadcast industry to take full advantage of big data is a virtualisation of
the facility and its services. Virtualisation starts from the concept of a facility as a collection of types of resources; one resource for storage, another for processing and so on. “The percentage of a facility’s asset base in use at any one time is strikingly low,” he says. “Fixed facilities are generally very over provisioned because of the inability to change their configuration. Software control over these utilities would help broadcasters achieve very significant benefits from pooled resources.” Kaplan’s company is
promoting an enterprise software suite to feed into a virtualised plant. “Once facilities are designed around the notion of pooled resouces
that can be configured and changed in software then the whole notion of big data techniques can be deployed to intelligently manage it,” he says. “Software defined networks and FIMS (Framework for Interoperable Media Services) and AMWA and EBU framework are keys to making virtualisation possible.”
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12 |
Page 13 |
Page 14 |
Page 15 |
Page 16 |
Page 17 |
Page 18 |
Page 19 |
Page 20 |
Page 21 |
Page 22 |
Page 23 |
Page 24 |
Page 25 |
Page 26 |
Page 27 |
Page 28 |
Page 29 |
Page 30 |
Page 31 |
Page 32 |
Page 33 |
Page 34 |
Page 35 |
Page 36 |
Page 37 |
Page 38 |
Page 39 |
Page 40 |
Page 41 |
Page 42 |
Page 43 |
Page 44 |
Page 45 |
Page 46 |
Page 47 |
Page 48 |
Page 49 |
Page 50 |
Page 51 |
Page 52 |
Page 53 |
Page 54 |
Page 55 |
Page 56 |
Page 57 |
Page 58 |
Page 59 |
Page 60 |
Page 61 |
Page 62 |
Page 63 |
Page 64 |
Page 65 |
Page 66 |
Page 67 |
Page 68