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CNN Joins Streaming with CNN+

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The record growth of the streaming industry is stoking the interest of many companies in the media. CNN is hiring hundreds of people and developing dozens of programs for a subscription streaming service that will launch early next year, the cable news network said in a report on Monday.

Covid-19 ushered in a wave of interest in streaming as people confined in home were looking for ways to kill their boredom. Movie streaming services like Netflix raked in millions of dollars as people shunned cinemas in an apparent shift from the old system to a new one. Now CNN wants its share of the boom.

According to the report, the streaming service called CNN+ will exist side by side with CNN’s existing television networks and will feature eight to twelve hours of live programming a day. Further details given by the news TV station explains why it is launching the streaming chapter now.

Jeff Zucker, the chairman of WarnerMedia News and Sports and president of CNN Worldwide, portrayed CNN+ as the evolution of video news and the start of a new era for the company.

“CNN invented cable news in 1980, defined online news in 1995 and now is taking an important step in expanding what news can be by launching a direct-to-consumer streaming subscription service in 2022,” Zucker said in a statement.

The executive in charge of CNN+, chief digital officer Andrew Morse, said “this is the most important launch for CNN since Ted Turner launched the network in June of 1980.”

That’s because it is an urgent bid to keep up with changing consumer demands.

While tens of millions of people access CNN through a subscription to a cable or satellite television bundle, all cable — and broadcast — networks have taken a hit due to cord-cutting in recent years, and the popularity of products like Netflix has shown the growing appeal of streaming alternatives.

CNN can’t just sell its current live programming via streaming due to lucrative and long-term deals with cable distributors. The company generates more than a billion dollars in profit annually, largely from cable subscriber fees and advertising.

So CNN is effectively building a parallel track, right next to its existing TV track, to serve both existing cable subscribers who want additional programming and customers who don’t have cable at all.

Zucker framed it this way in his statement: “On top of a television offering that has never been stronger, which remains at the core of what we do today, we will offer consumers a streaming product that grows the reach and scope of the CNN brand in a way that no one else is doing. Nothing like this exists.”

The new streaming service will launch in the first quarter of 2022. Morse said in an interview that it will have three components: Eight to twelve hours of live programming a day; original series, some brand new for CNN+ and some from the network’s archives; and something Morse called an “interactive community.”

He said the latter will give subscribers the ability “to engage directly with our talent and experts about the issues that matter most to them.”

The price tag for CNN+ will be announced later, as will specific programs and the live schedule. The service will launch first in the United States and will roll out later in other countries. Producers have been piloting possible shows in recent weeks. Morse said the shows will be led by “some of CNN’s most prominent talent, as well as several new faces,” alluding to some planned hires.

Morse also emphasized that the daily programming will be differentiated from what CNN already produces on TV.

“It’s not going to be a news headline service,” he said, citing opportunities for “more deep dives” into subjects like climate change; space and science; and race and identity.

“You’re also going to see things that surprise you,” he added, hinting at the possibility that CNN anchors will be showcased in new ways.

CNN has about 4,000 employees, making it one of the largest news operations in the world. Morse said CNN is hiring about 450 people for CNN+, from producers to engineers to marketers.

The sizable number of job openings is a reflection of CNN parent WarnerMedia’s investment in the product on the heels of the HBO Max streaming service launch last year.

“We are going to take a pretty big swing here, and the company’s behind it,” Morse said.

CNN+ will be entering a crowded environment of streaming news. The broadcast networks all have free streaming channels that act basically as news wheels, running a mix of live headlines and taped stories.

Morse argued that the broadcast networks “lack the resources” to launch something as ambitious as CNN+.

Fox News has a three-year-old streaming service called Fox Nation, but it is billed as an “entertainment” product, and is largely known for right-wing opinion programming.

Other rivals in the news space, like The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, have big subscription businesses, but they are text-based, not video-based. CNN+ will be “focused on video” at launch, Morse said, though “as we understand how customers are consuming the service, we can totally think about new kinds of formats,” including podcasts and long-form articles.

Surveying this landscape, Morse concluded that CNN+ will be “very different from anything else that’s out in the marketplace.”

In the industry-wide race for subscribers, one of the billion-dollar questions has been: How many people might be willing to pay for news coverage?

Times CEO Meredith Kopit Levien said earlier this year that The Times sees a market “of at least 100 million people who are expected to pay for English-language journalism.”

When asked about the potential reach of CNN+ in the future, Morse said “we think, given our brand reach; given our credibility; given our trust; given the fact that we reach 290 million across linear and digital platforms globally, that there’s a really substantial audience opportunity for us.”

Tekedia Live – Scaling A Startup and Getting into YCombinator – July 22 @ 7pm WAT

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On Thursday, Tekedia Live will host the team from Mecho Autotech. Mecho is one of the fastest growing startups in Nigeria today. They made me good and I admire their excellence and execution spirit. And for all they did and doing, Y Combinator accepted them. The CEO of the  Tekedia Capital portfolio startup, Olusegun Owoade, will be at Tekedia Mini-MBA to explain how they did what they did – and how you can prepare for Y Combinator.

Thur, July 22 | 7pm-8pm WAT | Scaling A Startup and Getting into YCombinator – Olusegun Owoade, CEO Mecho Autotech (2021 Y Combinator) | Zoom Link in Board

Join the best school here by registering today.

Experiences Vary In Nigeria – Modulate Yours and Respect The Cubana Team

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Good People, do not use Nigeria’s averages to judge people in our nation (case in point: Obi Cubana and his team). That Nigeria continues to underperform does not mean that everyone feels it that way. I grew up in Ovim, Abia state, and while in primary school, I experienced people returning home with helicopters. In short, there is a Helipad Road in Ovim, close to my alma mater – Secondary Technical School Ovim.

As you drive to it, right now, you will see a new  28-classroom building equipped with computers and robots (see photo). Not shown is the automobile lab, woodwork lab, etc building. What is a secondary school doing with a new 28-classroom when it has dozens already? Men and women have TOUGH LOVE for their community – you want the next generation to be ready to compete in the world.

Until I came to Owerri for FUTO, I did not notice the mess in the nation; village life was great and everything was there. So, as we attack people, do not think that everyone is the same!

LinkedIn Comment on Feed

It’s Nigeria that has been slowing some people down, there are those whose speed of thought and execution prowess is way above what Nigeria can handle, so to them, it’s hugely frustrating watching Nigeria’s pitiful crawl to progress.

When did government start building schools or providing electricity infrastructures to communities? Our people built these things and handed them to government, it’s government that is even slow in taking over.

Perhaps the most pragmatic people in Africa can be found in the land of rising sun. My people are never fans of bureaucracy and the inefficiencies it breeds, for them, just state what needs to be done, what it will cost, and when it’s starting; and you see people voting with both their hands and pockets.

A community government works well for our people, this imported governance system has never been effective or close to being efficient, rather it only saps people’s energy, encouraging laziness and mediocrity.

You don’t need government to sponsor scholarships for Igbo communities, just tell your people that their neighbouring community have started doing it, and they will get involved immediately. Schools, markets, health centre, churches, they build them with ease, no stories.

 

Global Festival Mobility and Countries in COVID-19 Woods in an Era of Travel Analytics

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In 2019 and 2020, and early this year, both Christians and Muslims across the world celebrated their festivals and performing religious rites under the strict measures and controls put in place by the relevant stakeholders for total containment of the COVID-19 spread and impacts. Aside the religion-driven activities, people also participated in ceremonies where the measures were either observed merely or strictly.

Some days before this year’s celebration of Eid-l-Adha by Muslims reports indicate that a number of countries were having a third wave of the virus with the emergence of variants such as Alpha, Beta, Delta among others. “In those countries with low COVID-19 vaccination coverage, terrible scenes of hospitals overflowing are again becoming the norm. But no country is out of the woods yet”, said Tedros Adhanom Gebreyesus, during his biweekly press conference. The global health management body also noted that the Delta variant of SARS-COV-2 has been detected in over 100 countries.

Exhibit 1: Where the Delta variant has spread to

Source: World Health Organisation, 2021

In spite of the warning from the body and relevant government agencies, our analysis indicates that people in Ireland, United Kingdom, United Arab Emirates, Canada, Australia, United States, Greece, Bangladesh, Philippines, Malaysia, South Africa, Pakistan, Netherlands, India, Belgium, Nigeria, Spain, France, Mexico, Brazil, Germany, Italy, Thailand, South Korea and Japan showed significant interest in traveling between July 12 and July 18, 2021 than understanding the variant in relation with the virus. It is also surprising that people’s interest in face mask and social distancing was not encouraging during the period.

Exhibit 2: Countries and level of interest in select indicators [July 12-July 18, 2021]

Source: Google Trends, 2021; Infoprations Analysis, 2021

Our analyst notes that it is imperative that people in these countries observe the measures because the global health body and infectious disease experts have stressed that the variants are deadlier than the type that occurred during first and second wave of the virus.  From the insights, we expect significant behavioural change campaign from disease control agencies or departments in the countries because it is clearly shown that public are losing interest in observing the critical protocols for total containment of the virus spread. It has also emerged that concerned stakeholders need to consider travel analytics in their efforts of tracking people’s behaviour during movements.

As Commercial Space Era Begins, U.S. Universities Introduce Relevant Courses

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American universities are now creating courses for the Space industry. I received this from Thunderbird School of Global Management. Call it proactive product evolution: creating things which markets want. Yes, as the space industry booms, there will be jobs in that industry, and some schools are already going ahead to create courses accordingly.

As Bezos, Musk and Branson blast off, the booming space sector needs executives, managers, and principled entrepreneurs, not just engineers and scientists. Space business will surely spawn millionaires to join this first class of space-baron billionaires, with taxpayer support.

Professor Greg Autry is the world’s top academic expert on the complex and dynamic commercial space sector, and he’s leading our launch of a new master’s degree in space policy and business at ASU’s Thunderbird School of Global Management, delivered in Los Angeles.

Director-General and Dean Sanjeev Khagram (Stanford PhD who taught at Harvard) is also available to talk about space entrepreneurship, potential regulation and governance, public-private collaborations, economic inequality and other ethical challenges, future sustainable industries like asteroid mining, and higher ed trends represented by Thunderbird’s first-of-its-kind graduate degree in outer space business management.

Yes, very soon, you will see graduates who host master’s degrees in space policy and business.