iWorld
Brightcove predicts seismic shift in global streaming
Mumbai: Brightcove has predicted a significant global shift in how brands, enterprises, creators, and influencers engage, influence, and interact as they emerge as producers with true agency and ownership of their distribution and platforms and not just creators of their content, according to Brightcove Inc.
With video streaming increasing and the value of the market, according to Fortune Business Insights, set to top $1.6 trillion by 2029, the trusted leader in streaming technology is expecting significant changes, including diversification amongst creators and a shift to more engaged direct marketing models for content owners.
Commenting on the same, Brightcove chief executive officer Marc DeBevoise said, “Platforms such as YouTube and Netflix have helped take the industry forward to where we are now, but we do not believe these aggregator platforms and services are going to be enough going forward.”
“We see a fundamental shift to owning content, its distribution and monetization, and its distribution platform, with the development and release strategy to super-serve the most loyal and highest-value followers, customers, and fans. The internet and streaming have allowed all of these producers to have a more defined and controlled voice, truly own their digital future, and control how their stories are told. Brightcove calls this phenomenon the producer economy,” added DeBevoise.
The producer economy is the concept that brands and creators can now have more control over content creation, distribution, and monetization by building robust, multi-channel businesses across multiple established platforms and creating their own direct-to-audience platforms for their deepest and most loyal users, adding control over their first-party data.
Brightcove highlighted its key predictions for this emerging trend during Brightcove PLAY Season 1, a streaming experience that features over 30 episodes of unique expert insights on how businesses can leverage the power of streaming to grow their digital businesses and reach. These predictions include:
- Creators will seek broader distribution and new ways to monetize content, including working with and extending beyond existing aggregators and services. Creators will diversify to own their own capabilities in creation, distribution, and audience, creating their own direct-to-consumer channels, endpoints, sites, apps, and free ad-supported streaming TV (FAST) channels.
- All companies and brands with consumers or customers on the internet will embark on further digital transformation and expand their audience reach across various owned and controlled channels, utilising social networks and platforms.
- The streaming ecosystem will evolve to enable creators to become producers with the ability to create, upload, store, manage, distribute, own their own platforms, own their data, and measure their content at all times.
“The move from creator to producer is critical. We currently operate in a robust market for streaming, and we also know how rapidly things can change. Brands and businesses must be able to tell their stories and stream videos to audiences on all digital platforms, including their own and third-party platforms. If you’re not ready now as a company, you will need to be very soon, or you won’t have the consumers and customers you have today,” said DeBevoise.
iWorld
Mumbai pani puri stall goes viral with water gun filling stunt
Instamart’s Holi activation swaps matka for blasters, video sparks laughs and soggy puri debates online.
MUMBAI: Pani puri just got a high-pressure upgrade because in Mumbai, even street food is practising its aim for Holi. A pani puri vendor in the city has become an overnight social media star after he was filmed firing paani into crisp puris using colourful water guns, part of a playful festive activation by quick-commerce platform Instamart ahead of Holi. The clip, shared widely on Instagram and Linkedin, shows the vendor ditching the traditional steel matka for toy blasters, blasting flavoured water straight into the golgappas with impressive accuracy while a crowd of office-goers, students, and passers-by gathers, phones out, recording the spectacle.
The stunt was designed to spotlight Instamart’s Holi collection of water guns, now shifting from childhood toys to serious adult purchases. Premium models like the German-engineered SPYRA (known for power and range), alongside NERF and Toyshine blasters, are already seeing demand as buyers gear up for the festival with high-performance gear bought with grown-up money.
Netizens had a field day with the video. One user quipped, “There are two kinds of Holi people: The ‘I’ll sit inside’ ones. And the ‘give me the biggest water gun’ ones. Instamart clearly built this for the second category.” Another likened it to “a deleted Holi scene from Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani,” capturing the mix of amusement and mock horror over potentially soggy puris.
With Holi still weeks away, the viral moment signals that festive shopping and the playful chaos it brings has already begun in Mumbai. In a city where street food is sacred, watching pani puri get the water-gun treatment might just be the splashiest sign yet that the festival of colours is loading up for a big, wet comeback.






