I haven’t had a business in over 10 years so I'm out of the loop so to speak. What I’m wondering is at what point (price of ppv) are you taking away viewers from your sponsors (1000+ free-as few as 100 ppv) that can’t or won’t pay over a certain amount for a stream? Seems to me it has to be more sponsor driven than ppv or a fine balance of the two. I am NOT talking about TAR ppv. I look at the TAR format like a ppv fight on HBO. Johnnyt
The largest issue is that pool in general is not an ideal candidate for PPV. In addition to that the current PPV stream model is not well suited to your average fan. Those are two huge hurdles that the PPV streams will need to overcome if they want to increase viewership.
For me personally, I stay away from the TAR stream because it doesn't allow me to rewind or watch it at my own pace. I don't want to pay $35 for a stream, and then catch an hour here or there. That doesn't seem like good value for me. I'd be more inclined to purchase the DVD's, but I also don't have the patience to wait for the DVD's either.
In my opinion you won't see mainstream viewership of PPV streams until you get these features:
- Full pause, rewind, fast forward capabilities
- 7-day access to full stream
- Fast play rules
- Downloadable DVD (such as distribution over iTunes)
- More integrated checkout system (and one-click purchases for existing users)
- Shorter sets (lets face it, your average fan doesn't have the attention span to watch a race to 100, if you want to capture the bigger more lucrative market, you need to cater to the bigger more lucrative market)
If you look at insanely successful products like Netflix, Steam and iTunes you can see several common elements; more convenience over conventional distribution, easy checkout, good value.