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Cost-cutting going on at ESPN — and it should make everyone nervous

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Slightly dated article but a very important read.....


Myles Udland

Jul. 10, 2015, 10:26 AM

There are major cost-cutting measures underway at ESPN.

And it should make everyone — yes, everyone: sports leagues, cable companies, advertisers, ESPN employees — nervous.

According to a report from The Hollywood Reporter, the so-called "Worldwide Leader in Sports," is currently looking to cut $100 million from its 2016 budget and $250 million from 2017.

And these cuts are coming from the top: ESPN's parent company, Disney, is demanding savings.

ESPN has said on the record that the numbers reported in THR's story are factually incorrect.

The first thing ESPN has reportedly done to trim costs is save on talent. But Keith Olbermann and Bill Simmons leaving ESPN will not save $250 million in 2017.

A report from The Wall Street Journal, however, makes it seem like these cuts aren't just about saving money, but are really moves that seem to be made in response to a quick devolution of the company's business model.

The Journal reports that ESPN has lost 3.2 million subscribers in more than a year. Since 2011, ESPN's reach in US households has fallen 7.2% after having nearly 100% of the pay-TV market, or about 100 million households.

And so things have changed quickly for ESPN.

ESPN, though ubiquitous in most US homes, is actually an extremely expensive channel for your cable provider to bring to you. According to a Wall Street Journal report from August 2014, ESPN costs about $6.04 per person for a cable provider.

By comparison, channels like TNT, Fox News, TBS, and NFL Network all cost less than $1.50. And so while channels like HBO and Showtime are considered "premium channels," ESPN is head and shoulders more costly than other channels it is often bundled with.

bill-simmons-29.jpg
Amy Sussman/Getty ImagesBill Simmons, formerly one of the biggest stars at ESPN, was let go earlier this year.

Now, given that it is, again, the "Worldwide Leader in Sports," and sports are considered just about the only live TV event that still demands viewers watch, well, live, advertising space on ESPN is coveted.
But according to The Journal, Disney has chafed at just how much advertising ESPN is putting on its broadcasts — and how this is eating into cross-promoting other Disney content.

Via The Journal:

As it trims costs, ESPN is also looking for new ways to boost revenue. In previous years, Disney’s ABC network received four minutes of time to promote its new shows for the fall during each NBA finals game it aired. This year, ESPN, which manages the NBA rights for Disney, cut that amount by about 75% so that it could sell more ads, people with knowledge of the matter said, a move that angered ABC executives.

And so ESPN, which accounts for about 25% of Disney's annual profit, seems to be caught in a pickle: It needs to boost revenue but cut costs. And this all while the price of its most coveted content — live sports — goes through the roof.

A new NBA deal, announced last October and taking effect as of the 2016-2017 NBA season, will see ESPN's average annual fees to broadcast the league triple — to $1.47 billion from $485 million. In football, ESPN currently pays $1.9 billion a year to broadcast "Monday Night Football" in a deal with the NFL that runs through 2021.

This is not cheap content.

monday-night-football-patriots-panthers.jpg
AP Images

But perhaps the most worrying part of the report is the deal ESPN struck last year with Dish Network's new Sling TV service, a streaming-internet-TV service that costs just $20 a month.
According to The Journal, Disney reached a deal with Dish to cancel its agreement to include ESPN on Sling TV if more than 3 million Nielsen households — or homes that count for the all-important Nielsen ratings — got rid of ESPN after May 2014.

According to The Wall Street Journal's sources, this threshold has now been crossed.

So now the question is: Will ESPN go it alone, offering something like HBO's "over-the-top" (outside of a traditional cable bundle) HBO Now streaming offering, or figure something else out?

The economics, at least as The Journal calculates them, are not favorable.
 
Sling TV in action. Per The Journal, ESPN would need to charge $30 a month for an "over-the-top" offering to make the same amount of money it does from traditional cable companies that include the network's channels as part of a bundle. HBO Now, in contrast, charges $15 a month for its new bundle. Netflix costs $8 a month.

But the existential questions ESPN faces are most pressing not just for the cable industry, but also the advertising industry, the content industry, and the sports leagues themselves.

Again, outside of live awards shows like the Grammys or Oscars, sports events are one of the only things that companies can more or less count on to be viewed live. This gives everyone — the athletes, the leagues, the TV companies, the cable companies, and advertisers — some sort of leverage when negotiating how much they want to be paid for the event.

An athlete can demand more salary, a sports league demands higher fees, the TV networks demand higher ad rates, the cable companies demand higher prices from their subscribers (you), the advertisers demand higher fees from clients, and so on.

These are seriously lucrative events.

milwaukee-bucks-owner-wesley-edens.jpg
Morry Gash/APThe newest owners of the Milwaukee Bucks.

But if we look at how much money was just doled out in two days of NBA free agency — $1.4 billion (!) — and how the NBA's salary cap is expected to explode when new TV money kicks in, the leagues aren't exactly behaving like any major market correction is coming.
Last year, the Los Angeles Clippers were sold for a whopping $2 billion.

And now, a stand-off between the city of Milwaukee and its hometown Milwaukee Bucks franchise over a new arena could see a team that was sold for $550 million two years ago become a more than $1 billion franchise if moved to another city, like Las Vegas, seemingly overnight.

And so in the NBA, the party is on.

The NFL, meanwhile, seems to be prepping plans to go global, planting two games in London every year for a decade under a new deal with English soccer club Tottenham Hotspur.

However, under the surface of how the NBA and other US sports leagues are distributed, things are changing, and they are changing in a big way and changing quickly.

Right now it seems like nothing can stop the NFL's cultural dominance or the NBA's meteoric rise.

But nothing lasts forever.

http://www.businessinsider.com/cost-cutting-is-coming-to-espn-2015-7#ixzz3fVfxftyJ
 
Could there be a bubble in sports team valuations? The rich guys that buy these teams don't make the $ from the operatioms, they make it on the resale. (I think that is correct. I'm just a casual reader on sports business.) They can afford to lose some money. Disney is another case, a publicly traded company. Shareholders live quarter to quarter. At what point do the higher contracts with leagues stop and reverse to lower price tags? If revenue falls, Disney would need to do something on the cost side to offset that, one would think. There are only a few bidders and if they say "no mas," then that would change the dynamic quite a bit. Any TV folks out there?
 
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Could there be a bubble in sports team valuations? The rich guys that buy these teams don't make the $ from the operatioms, they make it on the resale. (I think that is correct. I'm just a casual reader on sports business.) They can afford to lose some money. Disney is another case, a publicly traded company. Shareholders live quarter to quarter. At what point do the higher contracts with leagues stop and reverse to lower price tags? If revenue falls, Disney would need to do something on the cost side to offset that, one would think. There are only a few bidders and if they say "no mas," then that would change the dynamic quite a bit. Any TV folks out there?
Yankee fans in this area are already feeling the bite. Comcast has (to date) canceled their dealings with YES and that station is no longer offered.

Not too much of a big deal right now. But come the spring it will be for many fans.
 
ESPN made some deals that, looking back, we're not beneficial to them. But they ar still on top of the mountain when it comes to bringing in cable fees so I don't think many in the industry are shedding tears. We are still early in the process with people cutting the cord with cable, so it should be interesting to see how things evolve in the future. I wonder if 10 years from now, watching Sportscenter will be considered archaic like print media is considered today.
 
I can stream literally any sporting event televised anywhere in the world to my computer for free. So do I, a Yankee fan, care that Comcast, my theoretical TV provider, dumped YES? Nope. Today I'll watch any college football game I want. I'll never turn on my TV. I despise MMA but a couple weeks back right before I went to bed I saw someone tweet that the Rousey fight was about to start. Eh, let me see what all the fuss is about I thought. Took all of 5 seconds to find a stream. Cat's out of the bag, horse is out of the barn, choose your favorite animal escaping analogy. The current sports television business model is unsustainable. This is going to crash and it's going to crash hard.

By the way the Rousey thing reinforced my belief that MMA is asinine. People watch that nonsense?
 
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Slightly dated article but a very important read.....
cable tv the way it is known and operated will be gone less than 5 years

espn scenario is that parent disney said you must chop x and y over the next 2 years. now espn is making just as much revenue as they have been making but their operating costs have gone up and they lost subscribers, so say espn channels being on basic cable gave espn 6 dollars a subscriber and say they were in 100,000,000 homes a month, that is 600,000,000 coming in to espn before they sold one ad for anything event in the month; i think they lost between 5 and 10 million subscribers in the last year plus; the bigger element is that they mortgaged a lot of their future in rights deals across big golf/tennis coverage, nfl, nba, mlb and college conferences; that is all guaranteed money going out and it gets more expensive per year; another thing is when you let an olberman, cowherd, simmons walk that for one year is about 7-10 million dollars in salary; guys like skip and screamin A get 3-4 per year each; berman and bob ley are getting more than that; lead company executives are making high 6 figure to low 7 figures themselves so it is about budget reform and monetizing the product is this new way of life

print newspaper industry went away because of web/dgiital/smart phone the next day's lead story no longer is waited for on page 2 it is on twitter

Myles Udland

Jul. 10, 2015, 10:26 AM

There are major cost-cutting measures underway at ESPN.

And it should make everyone — yes, everyone: sports leagues, cable companies, advertisers, ESPN employees — nervous.

According to a report from The Hollywood Reporter, the so-called "Worldwide Leader in Sports," is currently looking to cut $100 million from its 2016 budget and $250 million from 2017.

And these cuts are coming from the top: ESPN's parent company, Disney, is demanding savings.

ESPN has said on the record that the numbers reported in THR's story are factually incorrect.

The first thing ESPN has reportedly done to trim costs is save on talent. But Keith Olbermann and Bill Simmons leaving ESPN will not save $250 million in 2017.

A report from The Wall Street Journal, however, makes it seem like these cuts aren't just about saving money, but are really moves that seem to be made in response to a quick devolution of the company's business model.

The Journal reports that ESPN has lost 3.2 million subscribers in more than a year. Since 2011, ESPN's reach in US households has fallen 7.2% after having nearly 100% of the pay-TV market, or about 100 million households.

And so things have changed quickly for ESPN.

ESPN, though ubiquitous in most US homes, is actually an extremely expensive channel for your cable provider to bring to you. According to a Wall Street Journal report from August 2014, ESPN costs about $6.04 per person for a cable provider.

By comparison, channels like TNT, Fox News, TBS, and NFL Network all cost less than $1.50. And so while channels like HBO and Showtime are considered "premium channels," ESPN is head and shoulders more costly than other channels it is often bundled with.

bill-simmons-29.jpg
Amy Sussman/Getty ImagesBill Simmons, formerly one of the biggest stars at ESPN, was let go earlier this year.

Now, given that it is, again, the "Worldwide Leader in Sports," and sports are considered just about the only live TV event that still demands viewers watch, well, live, advertising space on ESPN is coveted.
But according to The Journal, Disney has chafed at just how much advertising ESPN is putting on its broadcasts — and how this is eating into cross-promoting other Disney content.

Via The Journal:

As it trims costs, ESPN is also looking for new ways to boost revenue. In previous years, Disney’s ABC network received four minutes of time to promote its new shows for the fall during each NBA finals game it aired. This year, ESPN, which manages the NBA rights for Disney, cut that amount by about 75% so that it could sell more ads, people with knowledge of the matter said, a move that angered ABC executives.

And so ESPN, which accounts for about 25% of Disney's annual profit, seems to be caught in a pickle: It needs to boost revenue but cut costs. And this all while the price of its most coveted content — live sports — goes through the roof.

A new NBA deal, announced last October and taking effect as of the 2016-2017 NBA season, will see ESPN's average annual fees to broadcast the league triple — to $1.47 billion from $485 million. In football, ESPN currently pays $1.9 billion a year to broadcast "Monday Night Football" in a deal with the NFL that runs through 2021.

This is not cheap content.

monday-night-football-patriots-panthers.jpg
AP Images

But perhaps the most worrying part of the report is the deal ESPN struck last year with Dish Network's new Sling TV service, a streaming-internet-TV service that costs just $20 a month.
According to The Journal, Disney reached a deal with Dish to cancel its agreement to include ESPN on Sling TV if more than 3 million Nielsen households — or homes that count for the all-important Nielsen ratings — got rid of ESPN after May 2014.

According to The Wall Street Journal's sources, this threshold has now been crossed.

So now the question is: Will ESPN go it alone, offering something like HBO's "over-the-top" (outside of a traditional cable bundle) HBO Now streaming offering, or figure something else out?

The economics, at least as The Journal calculates them, are not favorable.
 
RU will never see the money they think they are going to get.
RU spends way more than they will ever make and will never be able to compete and will never make any money. They will always be in the red regardless of their claims to the contrary. Honestly, if RU is doing well then the rest of us are majorly screwing up somewhere!
 
I'm still trying to figure out why this news should make me nervous.

I'm actually happy when I read that ESPN is losing money. All I have to do is remember how they tried to destroy the Big East.

Perhaps they should stop grossly overpaying to obtain the rights to broadcast sports events. Athletes will simply have to settle for $10 million per year rather than $25 million.

And all I have to remember is how Disney recently fired about 250 American citizens in Orlando, forced them to train their Indian replacements and threw the American citizens out on their arses.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/04/u...t-disney-train-foreign-replacements.html?_r=0

They tired to do it again, but the bad PR sort of forced them to stop.
 
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