Since the mass adoption of streaming platforms, cable has taken a back seat with one exception: live events. For decades, we’ve associated live events with linear cable. We’re used to seeing major league sports games, award ceremonies and reality competition shows broadcast live on cable networks. Cable providers rely heavily on the revenue generated from live events like sports; in 2022, live sports events comprised 94 of the top 100 most-watched cable telecasts.
In an era of streaming increasingly reliant on advertising revenue, however, live events are taking over the OTT landscape. Netflix recently announced a live golf event with Formula 1 drivers and PGA tour pros; Max has launched a live sports tier to its platform housing coverage of the NBA, NHL, MLB, and more; Hulu’s OTT TV+ offering is now home to the Oscars, Grammys, and Emmys—the list goes on.
Essentially, streamers are taking the best of the traditional TV model, where big moments bring in big audiences and a sense of cultural relevance, and applying it to OTT. The technological abilities of streaming enable content owners and rights holders to better engage and retain users while generating promising revenue for the brand. Below are four opportunities that live events provide for businesses and users alike.
Advertising Revenue
This dual revenue stream (subscription fee + advertising revenue) imitates the long-successful business model of legacy TV, wherein income was tied directly to consumption. As streamers inch their way towards profitability in an aggressive market, live events both large and niche will prove valuable from an advertising perspective.
Pay-Per-View Events
PPV provides a simpler, more predictable revenue model wherein content owners have the flexibility to price content according to its value. PPV offers the potential for significant revenue generation: in 2015, the highly anticipated Floyd Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao fight raked in 4.6 million PPV purchases and $410 million in revenue, making it the highest grossing PPV fight of all time.
Live E-Commerce
Livestream shopping generates conversion rates up to 10x higher than that of traditional e-commerce, with the U.S. seeing an average conversion rate of 33%, and 40 to 54% of frequent live commerce users reporting they typically make a purchase during the live stream itself. These shopping events, most popular in the fashion and beauty sector, often take the form of runway shows, influencer or celebrity try-on hauls, or sit-downs with designers as they explain the inspiration behind their collections.
With interactive capabilities like Q&As or live chats, livestream shopping is a great way for brands to not only generate revenue, but build hype, engage viewers, and nurture a relationship with the consumer.
Live commerce can also be built into live events whose main purpose isn’t the shopping itself. During a livestreamed concert, for example, users could purchase the artists’ album or merch. And in sports, a fan could be prompted with an in-stream pop-up allowing them to purchase a jersey of the player who just scored.
Interactive Community Features
The metaverse provides a great example of what the future of interactive, immersive live events could look like: Ariana Grande’s virtual, in-game concert hosted on Fortnite, which amassed 78 million attendees, included a merchandise store and mini-games for users to interact with throughout.
The Bottom Line
As the streaming landscape continues to evolve, live events will reshape the future of digital entertainment, creating immersive, interactive experiences that captivate audiences worldwide.
2023-11-15T18:10:44Z dg43tfdfdgfd