Freed from behind the paywall, they talk about how the negotiations with
carriers and their vision of the future.

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304603704579326781949947414

ESPN's Internet Rollout Tests Television Cash Cow

Sports Channel Seeks to Profit From Demand for Online Video Without Pushing
Away Pay-TV Customers

By SHALINI RAMACHANDRAN, AMOL SHARMA and MATTHEW FUTTERMAN
Jan. 26, 2014 11:02 p.m. ET

BRISTOL, Conn.—In the control room of ESPN's headquarters, a row of screens
shows video feeds going out to cable providers for each of its television
channels. But a growing part of ESPN's future lies across the room, where a
similar setup tracks transmissions to the Internet.

On a recent Saturday, technicians were busy streaming several dozen games,
some at the same time as they were on television and others that weren't
televised at all. Damon Phillips, in charge of the service, used a tablet
computer to monitor how many people were watching online.

"I'm obsessed with this," he said, pointing to the usage tally, which he
starts checking at 5:30 a.m. while on his exercise bike. "I look at it all
day long."

The app, called WatchESPN, is part of an aggressive push by ESPN into
online services as pay television matures. ESPN pioneered sports TV on that
medium and for three decades rode a steady rise in U.S. cable and satellite
TV subscriptions. These now have leveled off and appear to be contracting.
ESPN is at the forefront of the TV industry's efforts to expand into
Internet distribution.

The company, which generates about 40% of majority owner Walt Disney Co.'s
operating profits, sees the app as a way to cash in on growing demand for
online video. But with its TV offerings still lucrative, ESPN is walking a
fine line, trying to avoid doing anything that might encourage customers to
drop their pay-TV subscriptions.

It is a challenge others in the business also are wrestling with. ESPN's
strategy is to allow only pay-television subscribers to stream games that
air on ESPN TV channels.

The sports network has devised a complex business model. Although the app
is delivered over the Internet, ESPN collects money for the app from pay-TV
providers such as cable companies, which pay for the right to offer it to
their customers. For ESPN, a second revenue stream comes from advertising
on the app.

The WatchESPN app also includes a strictly online channel, called ESPN 3,
that shows lower-profile sports such as rugby, polo and small-college
athletics. For that, in most markets, users don't need to be pay-TV
subscribers.

The dual strategy results from years of experimentation and debate inside
ESPN, and in the industry more broadly, over how to deal with the
saturation of the pay-TV industry and thirst for online video. Time Warner
Inc.'s HBO, for instance, has said it might offer a version of its HBO Go
app to Internet users for a subscription fee, depending how the pay-TV
industry evolves, though for now HBO plans to continue limiting access to
subscribers who pay for the premium channel.

Most network owners, including ESPN, say the risk of cannibalizing their
pay-TV businesses is too great to offer stand-alone online subscription
services. It isn't clear they could charge enough to be as profitable as
deals with pay-TV providers. Revenue from mobile advertising, while
growing, isn't nearly enough to replace TV ad dollars. Media companies also
would have to take on customer-service responsibilities now handled for
them by cable and satellite companies.

Yet content providers face the reality of weakening pay-TV subscriptions.
ESPN lost roughly 1.5 million subscribers between September 2011 and
September 2013, according to Nielsen data provided by the company. Part was
from dropped pay-TV subscriptions and part from downgrades to lower-cost
packages not including ESPN. The company says the changes haven't affected
its TV ratings materially.

ESPN President John Skipper calls the losses "marginal," given that the
sports network reaches into 98.4 million households. Still, he doesn't
dismiss the threat.

"Pressure on the system provides peril for ESPN," Mr. Skipper said in an
interview. "But ESPN, as long as the system doesn't break up, is in fine
position." He said WatchESPN makes pay-TV subscriptions more valuable.

Several hurdles lie in ESPN's online path. Professional sports leagues,
which already collect huge sums for TV rights, see an opportunity in the
next decade from selling their digital rights or offering games via their
own streaming-video services. For ESPN, acquiring streaming rights is
complicated and becoming more costly.

Pay-TV providers such as cable companies, for their part, are likely to
push back as ESPN, which is already the most expensive cable-TV network,
raises its prices to offer WatchESPN.

Limiting the online viewing of TV channels to pay-TV subscribers, a
strategy also pursued by most other TV-channel owners, carries risks.
Besides excluding customers who have "cut the cord," it excludes "cord
nevers": sports fans, mostly younger, who have never subscribed to a cable
or satellite service.

And if operators such as cable companies pass on to subscribers the fees
ESPN charges them, the higher cost could prompt more to disconnect. Some
pay-TV executives say rising prices are a major reason customers bow out.

Mr. Skipper, a 58-year-old former Spin magazine executive who took the helm
of ESPN in 2012, acknowledged a "dissonance" between its instinct to
disseminate its content as widely as possible and the usage restrictions
designed to safeguard the core television business. "There's no denying
there's a certain element of protection and defense," he said.

Though the company has internally considered a stand-alone broadband
offering, "it's not close yet."

As for what ESPN's endgame is, Mr. Skipper said the company plans a lot of
online experimentation, but its priority is to protect pay-TV profits: "Our
calculation right now is we're going to ride this. We're going to ride it
as long as it makes sense."

ESPN still has growth opportunities in TV, Mr. Skipper added, including a
new college sports network it is launching this year with the Southeastern
Conference and expansion in Latin America.

ESPN first tried online distribution in the early 2000s, well before most
other networks. Leading the effort was Sean Bratches, who dealt with cable
and satellite companies. Known for his vast cuff link collection and
coordinated ties and pocket handkerchiefs, Mr. Bratches cut an unlikely
figure for a technology innovator.

He came up with an unorthodox initial business model for ESPN: It would
charge the providers of high-speed Internet service a per-subscriber fee to
make sports available online to their customers.

The idea faced opposition internally from executives who wanted a more
traditional Web approach of giving away content while making money on ads.
Mr. Bratches argued that ESPN could extend to the Internet its cable model
of earning money from both ads and subscriptions. He prevailed, and in 2001
ESPN launched its first broadband service.

It struggled to gain traction. Some Internet-service providers balked, not
used to paying for content. ESPN executives blamed the rough start also on
their website's clunky design and lack of live events. To lift usage, they
started putting online some games airing on their flagship TV channel.

But by 2010, when ESPN began a round of contract renewals with pay-TV
distributors such as cable companies, the industry's subscriber growth had
slowed sharply. Both sides worried that making TV content available online
could encourage more pay-TV subscribers to disconnect. In negotiations with
Time Warner Cable, ESPN hashed out a deal to combat that with the limit on
online access.

The result was the WatchESPN app. Its simple design, which grew out of a
paper sketch by Mr. Skipper, allowed tablet and smartphone users to tap
on-screen boxes to play ESPN channels. It launched on mobile devices in
April 2011.

The earlier broadband service, by then named ESPN 3, could be accessed
through the new app, but phased out televised games. It has charted a new
course as a place for thousands of events that the company has the rights
to but that don't make it to TV, such as cricket and collegiate gymnastics.
ESPN has enlisted some colleges to handle production of their own events,
to expand offerings while keeping costs down.

Though ESPN 3 can be accessed without a pay-TV subscription in most
markets, the company is careful not to market it as a product for cord
cutters.

"We want to be conscientious that we don't overplay our hand," Mr. Bratches
said in an interview at his New York office, stuffed with all manner of
sports paraphernalia: books on Jerry West and Muhammad Ali, football
helmets, a bowling pin, a punching bag and baseball bats.

The WatchESPN app has been downloaded 25 million times. Its viewership
remains far below television's. Some 26 million people watched college
football's national championship game Jan. 6 on television, but just
773,000 saw it online with WatchESPN.

Still, as ESPN has renewed deals with cable and satellite operators, it has
cited the app as a justification for rate increases. Its flagship channel
is already by far TV's costliest, at $5.54 a month, according to market
researcher SNL Kagan.

Access to the app raises the price. Time Warner Cable and Verizon
Communications Inc.'s FiOS service, which offer the app to their
subscribers, pay ESPN 19 cents more per subscriber each month than does
Dish Network Corp., which doesn't support the app, according to papers from
a court case involving ESPN and Dish last year. Dish is currently in
negotiations with ESPN for a contract renewal.

DirecTV has balked so far at ESPN's asking price for streaming video
access, said a person familiar with the matter. However it is likely to
negotiate for those rights when its contract with ESPN expires at the end
of this year.

At ESPN, the broadband push has meant a cultural shift for a TV-centric
company.

Getting software engineers to move to ESPN offices in the sleepy
Connecticut town of Bristol wasn't easy. A key hire last year was Ryan
Spoon, an eBay Inc. alum and former venture capitalist, who has hired
veterans of major Silicon Valley companies.

Now a team of ESPN engineers is developing algorithms to link online
programming options to users' tastes and affinity for certain teams, sports
or cities. ESPN executives have taken product advice from the likes of
Apple Inc. Chief Executive Tim Cook, a fan of the Auburn Tigers, and Google
Inc. Chief Business Officer Nikesh Arora, a fan of cricket.

In ESPN's control room, balloons on an overhead screen track how heavily
WatchESPN is being used around the country, while analysts monitor
bandwidth usage to make sure the video streams don't hiccup en route to
users.

Getting streaming rights can be problematic. ESPN has had the right to
televise Monday Night Football since 2006 and struck a deal with the
National Football League in 2010 that allowed streaming of the game to
desktop, laptop and tablet computers. Yet ESPN can't stream it to
smartphones.

Mobile-phone rights to the Monday game weren't on the table when ESPN last
renewed its deal with the NFL. Verizon owns the streaming rights to Monday
night, Sunday night and Thursday night NFL games, and has just agreed to a
four-year contract extension that will also allow people to watch Sunday
afternoon home-market games on mobile phones.

ESPN keeps having to pay leagues more. In the contract it negotiated with
the NFL in 2011, the network agreed to pay an average of $1.9 billion a
year, up 58% from before. And last year, ESPN and Major League Baseball
reached an eight-year deal that, at $700 million a year, was double the
earlier price. Streaming rights were a factor in the increase, said a
person familiar with the matter.

ESPN is working on perfecting sales of ads for the app. It says it sold app
ads to some 200 brands in 2013. But these haven't been enough to fill every
available ad break.

Partly that is because the technology to serve up ads into the app isn't
yet very advanced and can't always find spots of the proper length to
insert. When TV viewers see commercials, app users are sometimes shown
filler material.

ESPN is talking to broadband providers about other Internet products, such
as an ultra-high-definition version of its TV channels that would be
offered only to people who upgrade to faster tiers of broadband.

"We innovate with the consumer in mind and with the philosophical default
that we are going to adopt new things," Mr. Skipper said. "We are not going
to resist."

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