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Casbaa data predicts robust TV adspend growth

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MUMBAI: The Asian cable and satellite industry in 2003 accounted for almost 190 million multi-channel homes, up 40 million from 2002. 95 per cent of these are pay homes. Pay TV advertising revenues for 2002 were US$2.6 billion compared to an estimated US$14.8 billion in overall ad spend, says data released recently by Casbaa.
 

2003 saw 48 million multi-channel subscribers in India, 12 million in Korea, eight million in Japan, 7.7 million in Taiwan while the corresponding figure for China stood at 100 million, says the new CASBAA data.

Over the last one year, total multi-channel adspend stood at US$2,592 million for the industry but the figure for pan regional advertising buys stood at US$205 million. China leads this market with US$752 million of adspend; followed closely by India at US$739 million; and Taiwan at US$586 million.

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Asia Pacific multi-channel television homes YE 2003
(data in 000s)

2003

Total HHs

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Total TV HHs

Multi-Channel HHs

%TV HH

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Australia

7,347

7,076

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1,543

22

China

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358,127

345,727

100,000

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29

Hong Kong

2,192

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2,162

898

42

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India

176,077

117,972

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48,030

41

Indonesia

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55,059

25,877

4,156

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16

Japan

47,800

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47,400

8,083

17

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Korea

16,200

16,000

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11,935

75

Malaysia

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5,321

5,163

1,216

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24

New Zealand

1,408

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1,389

542

39

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Pakistan

20,761

9,940

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2,684

27

Philippines

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16,530

15,275

1,864

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12

Singapore

973

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963

380

39

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Taiwan

6,953

6,883

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5,785

84

Thailand

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15,907

15,111

1,936

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13

Total

730,655

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616,938

189,052

31

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The data indicates considerable room for growth, wtih the multi channel total TV viewing share now over 50 per cent in multi channel homes in many markets. Currently, adspend in these markets constitutes merely 17.5 per cent of the US$14.79 billion of TV adspend in Asia Pacific outside of Japan.

CASBAA television advertising expenditure estimates
US millions

2002

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Total TV

Multi-Channel TV

Regional buys

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205

205

Australia

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1,966

59

China

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6,270

752

Hong Kong

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725

22

India

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869

739

Indonesia

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552

6

Malaysia

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146

19

New Zealand

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573

17

Philippines

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414

12

Singapore

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241

12

Sth Korea

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1,016

163

Taiwan

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1,302

536

Thailand

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518

0

Total

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14,796

2,592

The data represents statistics endorsed on an industry-wide basis covering the size and value of the Asia Pacific pay-TV market with newly calibrated estimates of advertising revenues, according to an official release. The data has been derived from a six-month consultation process by the Casbaa Advertising and Research Committee with the region’s leading pay-TV channels, system operators, agencies and data providers on both a regional and local basis.

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Participants in the process included representatives from Discovery Networks Asia, the Star Group, Turner International Asia Pacific, Nielsen Media Research, TAM India and Media Partners Asia.

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News Broadcasting

Newsrooms rethink AI, trust and revenue models

Editors and tech leaders debate tools, deepfakes and viability.

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MUMBAI: If yesterday’s newsroom ran on caffeine and chaos, tomorrow’s may well run on code but with a human still holding the pen. At the 22nd edition of the Video Broadcast and Broadband Tech Summit hosted by IndianTelevision.com, some of the sharpest minds in Indian media gathered to examine how artificial intelligence, automation and shifting audience behaviour are reshaping journalism. The session, titled The Newsroom of Tomorrow Tools, Trust, and Business Viability In Focus, did not descend into techno-utopian hype. Instead, it wrestled with a more uncomfortable question: how do you stay relevant, credible and profitable when the audience is changing faster than the headline cycle?

The panel featured Govindraj Ethiraj, Editor of The Core, Dr Nilesh Khare, COO of Sakal Media Group; Prakaran Tiwari, Chief Executive Producer at NDTV Profit; Manoj Padmanabhan, Head of Business Media and Entertainment at AWS; Neeraj Mishra, Key Account Manager at Vizrt and session chair; and Mayuresh Konnur, Bilingual Correspondent at Collective Newsroom, publisher for BBC in India.

Govindraj Ethiraj set the tone with a frank assessment. “The reason people do not consume as much news through us is because they are consuming news through other sources they trust more,” he said. In a fragmented ecosystem flooded with content, trust has become the real differentiator.

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Yet AI is undeniably transforming workflows. Ethiraj admitted he now uses AI tools to proofread his own articles. “Sometimes it is scary how much it picks, but it helps,” he said. What once required layers of sub-editing can now be assisted by machines trained to flag errors, inconsistencies and structural weaknesses.

He pointed to how newsroom roles have evolved. The desk editor, widely advertised over the last 15 years, barely existed in its current form before the internet boom. As digital publishing accelerated, tasks such as curating listicles, ranking stories and optimising headlines became specialised functions. Now, many of those responsibilities can be performed or at least supported by AI systems. The disruption is not hypothetical; it is operational.

Dr Nilesh Khare approached the issue from both a business and technological standpoint. Sakal Media Group is developing its own large language model, built on 60 years of text and photo archives. The goal is independence. “We won’t need to depend on other platforms to develop ours,” he said, underscoring the strategic value of proprietary data.

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For Khare, AI represents opportunity as much as anxiety. It can help expand content across geographies and languages, particularly in bridging North and South Indian markets. It can streamline production and reduce costs. He did not shy away from the implications. “As a journalist I feel bad but as a content producer I feel good that we will require less manpower,” he said, articulating a tension many in the room recognised but few openly admit.

He also highlighted how audience behaviour is evolving. Today, a retail investor can follow a stock using Gemini or GPT instead of toggling between multiple news channels. News is no longer consumed linearly; it is queried, personalised and synthesised. The newsroom must therefore produce content that survives not just on screens but within AI-generated summaries.

Prakaran Tiwari offered a more philosophical reflection. “AI has developed itself and adapted on the basis of how news is consumed. It’s all about giving a perspective,” he said. In his view, the competitive edge will not lie in speed alone but in interpretation. Facts are increasingly commoditised; context is not.

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He also suggested that formats are fluid. While short-form video dominates social feeds, long-form audio is resurging. Govindraj Ethiraj noted that in the United States the 2024 election was described as the “podcast election”, reflecting how audiences are investing time in deeper, long-form discussions. The newsroom of tomorrow must cater to both scrolling and sustained listening.

Manoj Padmanabhan of AWS reframed the debate. Technology, he argued, is not an existential threat but an amplifier. “The power is given to the human journalist with all this technology in their hand, with it acting as a support or assistant to deliver the correct and relevant news to the people,” he said.

The traditional divide between a “normal” newsroom and a “digital” newsroom is fading. “It will not be two newsrooms,” he said. “It will be one newsroom.” In that integrated environment, the storyteller remains central. AI may assist with research, editing and distribution, but editorial judgement remains human.

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Neeraj Mishra of Vizrt echoed the assistive narrative. India, he said, is a market of organised chaos, where news broadcasters are pushing ever-increasing volumes of content. AI will help manage scale. It is not here to replace people but to assist them.

Production barriers are already collapsing. “You don’t need a green screen to produce content now,” Mishra observed, hinting at virtual production tools and real-time rendering technologies. And this, he said, is only the beginning. In a cost-conscious market like India, AI adoption in both B to B and B to C segments is likely to rise sharply. The skills are available, he argued, the real question is whether organisations are willing to invest.

If opportunity was one half of the conversation, risk was the other. Mayuresh Konnur warned that fake news is now being peddled with alarming ease using AI tools. Deepfakes, synthetic audio and fabricated visuals can damage credibility overnight. Several journalists, he said, have already faced instances where manipulated content was circulated in their name.

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“Eventually it becomes a question of how authentic you are in the market,” Konnur noted. In a crowded information economy, credibility is the ultimate moat. Regulations and clear guidelines, he argued, are necessary to curb misuse without stifling innovation.

Mishra added a note of caution against overuse. “AI should not be everywhere. It has to be used optimally,” he said. The value lies not in blanket automation but in strategic integration.

One of the most resonant metaphors came from Padmanabhan. AI, he suggested, is like a brush in a human hand. Powerful, versatile, transformative but inert without the artist. It cannot survive without the human touch.

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Konnur distilled the session’s core takeaway, AI is inevitable, but the art of storytelling will never disappear.

In a media landscape defined by speed, shrinking attention spans and intense competition, the newsroom of tomorrow is not simply a technological upgrade. It is a recalibration. Between efficiency and ethics. Between automation and authenticity. Between reducing manpower and retaining meaning.

The algorithms may write cleaner copy and generate sharper graphics. They may even predict what audiences want before audiences know it themselves. But the enduring task remains unchanged to tell stories that inform, interrogate and inspire.

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And for that, the human newsroom is still very much open for business.

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