The local newscast defines the image of the station, and now more than ever local stations need up-to-date newscasts to keep audiences tuned in. Local stations have problems that the bigger markets do not have, tapping into news and information-gathering networks for state, national, and international news, sports, business, entertainment, politics and weather. The newsgathering services they utilize truly define their on-air and online brand. They can even build audience share with videos, audios, graphics, photos, text, newsroom systems and online multimedia. It will take this kind of up-to-date technology and style of newscasts to attract the younger people in today's market.
Digital Television's Impact on News Profitability
Multimedia is appealing not only to young people and seniors alike. But it creates a quandary for advertisers and networks as they try to sell advertising in what has been an unpopular medium, the internet. Statistics show that internet advertising does not work as well as TV ads, in spite of the fact that $100 billion of assets are now managed online (Survey 11). Yet the quandary must be solved soon, because soon every network must go digital. Some TV providers who have begun to really see the light are the broadcast networks such as ABC and CBS and local affiliate stations that broadcast the network content over the airwaves. Attempts to go full HDTV broadcasting has happened not only because the broadcast folks are simply being good TV citizens, but because the FCC has mandated a transition from analog to digital TV. Eventually, all broadcasters will need to turn off their analog signals and send out DTV broadcasts. It will be DTV, and not HDTV broadcasts, since lower-resolution 480p or even 480i signals can be broadcast (HDTV 2007).
George Gilder says "The Internet will be the central nervous system of the new global economy." In 1998 only 40% of households had a PC and only 20% of those were connected to the Internet and only 2% were regular users. Internet consumers purchase less than $1 billion per year in goods and services, compared to $8 trillion annual market. Besides these holdups, going digital is not a cheap transition for broadcasters or consumers. This cost breeds skepticism about programming on high-definition format, and how readily consumers will adopt the new technology completely. According to FCC mandate, the big four network affiliates in the top 30 markets are required to be broadcasting digitally. Eventually all stations will be able to transmit digitally, and stations are supposed to stop sending out analog signals-in a complete digital conversion, making older TVs obsolete.
It won't happen. Bob Turner, vice president of engineering at Belo says, "There are a few thousand (digital) sets out there in the whole U.S., and that's it."
Eighty-five percent is supposed to be the magic cut-off number. If digital set penetration is not 85% in a market, a station does not have to shut off analog broadcasting.
I have to admit, I'm a little skeptical about HDTV," says James Marsh, senior broadcasting and publishing analyst at Prudential Securities. "It just doesn't seem to me something that consumers are really clamoring for right now." One top network official says it's hard to believe Congress would allow millions of people to be suddenly shut off from TV. "It's a joke. Twenty to 25 years from now, analog will shut down." Turner says he doesn't know what the solution will be. "I know that we have 15 stations to go on the air ourselves, and I am concerned about it. I'll say that for sure. it's economically devastating to the small stations" (RTNDA, 2006).
The cost to broadcasters will vary widely, Turner says. Figure $3 million for a tower and up to $1.5 million on a transmitter building. Some towers may be strong enough to handle the additional load-with added support-but even that will be expensive. Transmitters cost $500,000 to $1.4 million. Antennas are $180,000 to $500,000, depending on configuration. Turner says to figure $3 million to $5 million just to get on the air. Add some digital equipment in the control room, like a file server and some routing and other related equipment, and you're up to $5.5 million to $6.5 million. That's just for what's called "pass through," meaning that digital signals coming in to the station can be broadcast digitally. Those figures don't include anything to gather or originate digital programming. This will be the biggest hold-up in the digital market.
While digital studio equipment is heading down in price, transmitters are holding steady, and towers are getting more expensive. "It's going to get much worse when you have 1,200 stations trying to get on," says Turner. "The problem is just awesome."
Smaller markets, the ones least able to afford...
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