Media Sector Trends – India
R Kannan
The Indian media landscape has undergone a tectonic shift
from linear-first models to a "connectivity-first" ecosystem,
fundamentally restructuring how 1.4 billion people consume content. By 2026,
the boundaries between satellite, physical cable, and fibre-based streaming
have merged into a unified digital experience dominated by high-speed 5G. This
evolution marks the end of simple customer acquisition and the start of a
high-stakes battle for monetization, retention, and cultural authenticity.
I. The Great Migration: The Twilight of Traditional Pay TV
Traditional "Big Screen" experiences are being
re-engineered for a digital-native audience. As 5G Fixed Wireless Access (FWA)
and fibre reach over 100 million households, the reliance on satellite dishes
is fading in favour of software-defined viewing.
- DTH
and the Urban Exodus: Urban high-ARPU households are moving away from DTH due to
"rain fade" and installation hassles. A 12% drop in paid DTH
subscribers in 2025 signalled the peak of "Cord-Cutting".
Urbanites now prioritize IP-based delivery for premium entertainment,
viewing DTH merely as a utility for news and sports.
- DD
Free Dish (The Rural Powerhouse): Rural markets have gravitated toward the government’s
free service, creating a massive captive audience by removing monthly
subscription burdens. Private broadcasters now use a "Freemium"
pivot—offering watered-down versions of premium channels—to maintain reach
without cannibalizing their paid subscriptions.
- Hybrid
Solutions:
Legacy operators are deploying Android-based Hybrid Set-Top Boxes
to aggregate linear TV and apps like Netflix and Disney+ into a single
interface. Local Cable Operators (LCOs) have shifted to a
"broadband-first" strategy, treating TV as a loss leader to
prevent data subscription churn.
II. The Streaming Renaissance: OTT and Digital Media
By 2026, the OTT sector has matured into a $5 billion
market focused on extracting value from every minute of user attention.
- Market
Dynamics 2026:
- Connected
TV (CTV):
Reached 50 million units, replacing traditional cable for affluent
households.
- Micro-Dramas: 1-2 minute vertical scripted
dramas designed for "binge-scrolling" have exploded in Tier 2
and 3 cities.
- Hyper-Localization: Non-Hindi viewership now
accounts for over 65% of the total market.
- Sporting
Behind Paywalls:
The era of "free sports" has ended. Major events like the IPL
now use hybrid monetization where premium features (4K, interactive stats,
multiple angles) are locked behind paywalls.
- Aggregation
2.0: To combat
"subscription fatigue," services like Tata Play Binge and Airtel
Xstream have become "Operating Systems of Entertainment,"
bundling 20-30 apps under one bill and providing unified search across all
platforms.
III. Technological and Regulatory Pillars
- Infrastructure: 5G FWA (e.g., JioAirFiber) has
bypassed the logistical challenges of laying fibre in dense cities,
accelerating the decline of traditional cable.
- Generative
AI:
Localization costs have dropped by 40%. "Neural Dubbing" allows
shows to go "National" on day one by digitally altering actors'
lip movements and cloning voices to preserve emotional texture.
- Regulation: The implementation of the Digital
Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act has shifted platforms toward
first-party data. Additionally, the domestic IndOS operating system
represents a push for Indian strategic autonomy against global tech
duopolies.
IV. Strategic Comparison: 2024 vs. 2026
|
Feature |
2024 Status |
2026 Trend |
|
Monetization |
Primarily SVOD (Subscription) |
Hybrid (Ads + Subscriptions + PPV) |
|
User Interface |
App-centric (Switching apps) |
Aggregator-centric (Unified Search) |
|
Sports Delivery |
Free on Mobile (Acquisition) |
Pay-per-view / Premium Tiering |
|
Video Format |
16:9 Horizontal (TV-first) |
9:16 Vertical (Mobile-native) |
|
Ad Targeting |
Generic / Device-based |
Addressable / Household-level (CTV) |
|
Interaction |
Passive Viewing |
Shoppable Video (UPI Integrated) |
V. Business Model Transformation
Successful entities have adopted the "AND"
strategy: maintaining traditional revenue while scaling hyper-modern
digital streams.
- From
Pipe to SaaS:
Telcos and DTH players now act as SaaS platforms, managing identity and
payments across dozens of apps. They use AI models to predict churn and
trigger personalized interventions (like WhatsApp discounts) if viewing
time drops.
- Shoppable
Video: AI
identifies products in real-time within content, allowing users to
purchase items via UPI without leaving the stream. This
In conclusion, the 2026 Indian media
revolution is defined by the transition from simple connectivity to
hyper-intelligent distribution and cultural authenticity. The winners in this landscape
are the "Frictionless Players" who remove the barriers to paying,
choosing, and understanding content through AI and aggregation. As new media
officially overtakes linear television, the battle for the "Home
Screen" has become a race for the industrialization of attention.
Ultimately, the industry has realized that survival depends not just on owning
the cable, but on owning the entire customer relationship across every square
inch of glass.
For detailed report : Contact rajakannan@rediffmail.com