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cover of episode Behind the Numbers: Forecasting Trends for 2025—Digital Pay-TV Petering Out and Why Livestream Shopping is (and Isn't) Taking Off | Jan 24, 2025

Behind the Numbers: Forecasting Trends for 2025—Digital Pay-TV Petering Out and Why Livestream Shopping is (and Isn't) Taking Off | Jan 24, 2025

2025/1/24
logo of podcast Behind the Numbers: an EMARKETER Podcast

Behind the Numbers: an EMARKETER Podcast

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Ethan Cramer-Flood
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Marcus Johnson
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Oscar Orozco
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Ethan Cramer-Flood:我预测数字付费电视的增长将会停滞,这将导致线性电视的衰落进一步加剧。到2025年,大多数美国家庭将不再拥有任何形式的付费电视。这并非因为人们不看电视了,而是因为他们转向了其他观看方式。数字付费电视平台,例如YouTube TV和Hulu,虽然在早期发展迅速,但由于价格昂贵且增长乏力,最终无法拯救传统线性电视行业。我们可以看到,一些平台已经开始合并或面临困境,这预示着未来线性电视将走向小众化。 价格上涨也是一个重要因素。例如,YouTube TV的价格在短短几年内就翻了一番多,远高于通货膨胀率。这使得数字付费电视对许多消费者来说变得难以承受。 总的来说,付费电视行业的未来将是碎片化的,价格昂贵且选择有限,消费者将是受影响最大的一方。 Oscar Orozco:我认为直播电商在美国将越来越受欢迎。目前已经有超过4000万美国消费者通过直播平台购买商品,预计到2026年将超过5400万。虽然增长速度可能会放缓,但直播电商仍然具有巨大的增长潜力。 直播电商的成功,很大程度上取决于能否创造出引人入胜的购物体验,而不是简单的广告。中国直播电商的成功经验表明,娱乐性是关键。如果美国直播电商能够学习中国的经验,并结合美国消费者的特点,那么它将有望获得持续的增长。 此外,一些社交媒体平台,例如Pinterest,也在积极推动直播电商的发展。零售商与第三方合作伙伴的合作,也将为直播电商提供新的增长动力。 虽然美国直播电商的增长模式可能与中国有所不同,但其潜力依然巨大,尤其是在年轻一代消费者中。 Marcus Johnson:作为主持人,我主要负责引导讨论,并提出一些关键问题,例如直播电商的成功与否取决于消费者是否愿意花大量时间观看直播广告,以及人们减少观看传统电视的时间都去哪里了。我总结了Ethan和Oscar的观点,并对他们的预测进行了补充和评论。

Deep Dive

Chapters
Digital pay TV, initially hailed as a replacement for traditional cable, is experiencing a slowdown in growth. Rising costs and consumer resistance to high subscription fees are contributing factors. This trend raises questions about the future of the television industry and the ability of digital platforms to capture and retain viewers.
  • Majority of US households no longer have pay TV.
  • Digital pay TV growth is slowing due to high costs.
  • Potential for M&A activity and market exits in the digital pay TV space.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Hey gang, it's Friday, January 24th. Ethan, Oscar and listeners, welcome to Behind the Numbers, an eMarketer video podcast. I'm Marcus. Today we'll be discussing why live TV is kind of disappearing and whether live stream shopping is actually catching on.

Today, I'm joined by two gents, both based in New York City. One of them is coming to us live from our studio. He's the director of forecasting. It's Oscar Orozco. Hello, everybody. Hello, listeners. Happy New Year, by the way. I don't know how much longer I can say that. January 24th? Yeah, I don't know how much longer. Like two weeks ago was your deadline. Yeah, you're past the line. I think I can go until February with it. So happy New Year. Happy New Year.

I catch you telling me that in July. We are no longer friends. Principal forecasting writer is also joining us. It's Ethan Kramer Flood. I am also here. Hello. That was also an awkward. That's a tough intro. Let's see if it gets better. Today's fact.

Who designed the world's most valuable brand logo? It's Apple, according to Forbes, valued at $240 billion. Rob Janoff, the graphic designer at Regis McKenna, which is the agency that handled Apple's startup, came up with the logo. The only direction he got from Steve Jobs was to, he said, don't make it cute.

The bite in the apple was added to distinguish it from a cherry because it's got a little stalk at the top as well. As a metaphor for the knowledge users would gain from the computer. And Mr. Janoff's creative director later, after he designed the logo, later pointed out that serendipitously the word bite with a Y is also a computer term, which is pretty cool.

Kind of clever. I like it more after hearing the story. I think there's a story out there about the Nike swoosh also. In general, a lot of these iconic images were created by folks who were just...

doing their job. The amount of money that that person was paid to me was the story there. So Nike's logo is the, is the 13th most valuable, uh, brands and it's like $40 billion or something back in 1971. Phil Knight, who's co-founder of Nike, uh, pays Carolyn Davidson $35. I didn't know. Yeah. And it is the most iconic, you know, I think personally, um,

Yeah. Quickly going back to the Apple, another interesting factoid, the original rainbow stripes in the logo were because the Apple computer was the only one that could show images in color.

Yeah, many iterations away from that. However, this is the Great Behind the Numbers Takeoff Forecasting Trends and Predictions for 2025. It's a great British Bake Off style show for today's episode in which our takers, or bakers, will be cooking up one trend each for you. Three rounds, signature take...

the how it will technically play out challenge and the show stopping argument. Let's meet the contestants predictions. Ethan, what will you be cooking up for us today? I will be talking about digital pay TV and how it is unlikely to live up to its promise. And as a result,

The decline of linear TV will continue. Okay. And Oscar, what will you be baking? Interesting. Well, I'll be talking about live streaming e-commerce, something that seems to be on the fringes of, you know, American consumers' minds these days, but that I think is going to get increasingly popular starting this year, probably

And yeah, we'll talk a little bit about our new, it's a brand new forecast on the topic. Oh, very good. Let's get into it, gents. Round one is signature take. Our chefs will have one minute to explain the premise of their trend. We'll start with Ethan. He's talking about digital pay TV surge petering out. Tell us more. Yeah, so we, like everyone else in this business, has been tracking very carefully the decline of traditional TV for a long time.

So in this case, traditional pay TV, which we could just call cable TV, right? People have been bailing on cable TV for a long time. That is not my big surprise revelation today, but yeah,

What was interesting about that story is that even though you have been hearing about how cord cutters have been growing and growing and growing. So and eventually we had to invent this new term cord nevers, but people who not only they just skipped right over the part where you pay for cable TV and then eventually cancel and how cord cutters and cord nevers collectively were growing and growing and people aren't watching TV, people aren't watching TV.

And we had this pivot point a few years ago where the number of cord cutters and cord knivers exceeded the number of people with cable TV. And that was sort of a jarring moment in theory. But it wasn't really true at the time from the perspective of the TV industry or from the perspective of advertisers and consumers. Because people were still watching a lot of TV. They were just doing it digitally. Right. Right.

And so we had this interesting new phenomenon where digital pay TV, which for a while was called VMVPDs, virtual multi-channel programming, blah, blah, blah. But it's basically YouTube TV, Hulu with live TV, Fubo. People are paying to have the cable TV experience

Digitally, and we had we had categorized that as a digital media phenomenon because it is basically streaming. And so we're saying, oh, well, this is part of the digital revolution. The death of TV continues. But in reality, that experience was exactly like watching TV.

pay TV. You're paying for cable TV. You're getting all the channels, all those people out there that produce TV shows. It's all going the same way and you're seeing it. And for a while there, that was really going like gangbusters so much so that in fact, the majority of this country through last year still had pay TV. It's just a whole bunch of them were doing it digitally. They still are.

And you have the remnants of folks that are paying for traditional cable and satellite TV. And you have all these new folks that are paying for digital pay TV. And,

And it was sort of a quiet reality that most households in this country still actually had pay TV. That has now come to an end. And this is my statement. This is my forecast. Because the digital pay TV phenomenon that kind of was explosively successful for a few years there is starting to peter out. It's really expensive. People aren't gravitating towards it as fast as would be necessary to rescue the traditional linear TV industry forever.

And as of 2025, we have now fully and completely reached the point where the majority of America does not have pay TV. So if you add up the digital people and the traditional people, they do not come to the same total as the amount of people that just have nothing or no pay TV. That

That wasn't even close to a minute. You left your dish in far too long and it is burnt as a result. But you make good points. And it's interesting because the gap between any kind of pay TV households and non-pay TV households is widening very quickly. It's gone from 5 million more pay TV households last year to 5 million more non-pay TV households this year. So a 10 million household swing here.

in a non-pay TV direction. So it's moving quickly. I think it's like a 30 million household gap in a couple of years. Yeah, the gap is going to be enormous. The story is over. Oscar, let's turn to yours. Livestream e-commerce catching on, apparently. Tell us more. Yes. Well, it's something that, for example, it wasn't in my purview about a year ago. It's something I wasn't thinking about, really. And as I mentioned, a brand new forecast.

We've realized that there are over 40 million already, 40 million Americans that have shopped or bought an item through one of these live stream profiles or through a social platform that is hosting one of these events. That was actually last year. So we expect that by next year, 2026, that number will go up to 54 million people

In three years, it'll be up to 60 million. So there's a ton of growth there. To put it into perspective, we talk a lot more about social commerce. And social commerce, we expect that the sort of growth in social buyers, people who are buying on these platforms, will be under 4% growth.

this year, when you look at live streaming e-commerce buying, it's at over 19%. So, you know, again, a lot of conversation about social commerce is what we talk about more frequently here at eMarketer. But live streaming e-commerce is just something that is there. It's growing. We're going to hear a lot more about it. And I think, you know, it's something we need to talk more about. So,

So before we get to round two, quick pushback. The number of live stream shoppers did make a significant jump from last year. It grew like 29%, I think it was, last year. However, we do have it slowing down quite quickly, right? Like in two years' time, it's going to be about 7% growth. So it does seem like it's reached a pretty significant milestone. You get to 50-plus million people doing anything. That's amazing.

That's not nothing, but it does seem from our forecast that it is going to slow down and hit the high single digits quite quickly. I mean, I think it's fair to look at it from that angle. I mean, I would also push back and say, tell me the last, you know,

sort of buying or e-commerce behavior activity that has not only seen this growth that we've been seeing the last few years, but that will sort of continue on into the future there. I mean, I think a lot of this is, is not just the Gen Z, Gen Zers, but we're, we're starting to think a little bit more about Gen Alpha as well, as they begin to age in the coming years into this sort of late teen age and

I think that's what 13 and down, correct? Or ages roughly. Yeah. Let me, let me clarify that we right now this year, they're either one year olds, but they're going to, yeah, I know. So it's still very young, but they're also as they could be as old as 12. So I, okay, exactly as they, let's give it, you know, three, four years where they're becoming, you know, financially independent a little bit more. Their, their, their budgets are increasing. I think that they're going to be pushing that behavior into early adulthood.

Yeah, let's let's be clear about live streaming e-commerce and what it's going to take for this to become as successful as some other options. The future of live streaming e-commerce rests on the assumption that people are going to voluntarily sit down and watch commercials.

live commercials for an extended period of time just as a choice because that's essentially what it is and This has succeeded. I say that jokingly because it sounds terrible, but the reality is in China That succeeded tremendously because they made it entertaining People will sit there and they will watch you are watching a commercial for like hours They'll sit down and watch and then the products change and the hosts change etc And they make it entertaining and people young people in particular

that this was a worthwhile way to spend their day and that, you know, substituted in for watching a TV show or a movie or whatever. And that's what it's going to take here also in order for that growth to remain high. Yeah. I mean, I would push back. Sure. You can, you can classify them as commercials, but it's a little more complicated than that. I mean, I think, you know, uh,

People in general have favorite brands. They have favorite influencers that they follow, that they want to hear about the new products there. I think there's so much potential. It's not just apparel, footwear. Of course, we're talking about so many different product categories. It could be tech products, beauty, cosmetics, things like this.

And so there's just so many different avenues you can go down. I think a lot of it's just also driven by platforms too, Ethan. So I think people are spending so much more time on YouTube, on TikTok, on other socials. Meta in 2023 seemed to pull out of the market, but I fully expect

that this year, you know, maybe it'll be next year that they'll come back into the fray and, you know. I believe Jasmine Enberg, our social expert, expects that. Exactly.

Expect them to jump back in this year. Yeah, even though they did pull out really quickly. It's also hard for America and live stream shopping because to what Ethan was saying, China is such a more advanced comp. Close to half in your report, Ethan, you mentioned close to half of digital buyers in China are live stream shoppers or buyers.

And so trying to stack up against that, you know, is hard. But maybe there's a niche that, you know, America can carve out in terms of getting this right for this different type of consumer. Let's move around to, gents, the how it will technically play out challenge. Our chefs will explain in a bit more detail how they expect the trend to manifest. Let's go back to the pay TV one. Ethan, tell us more about what this looks like in practice.

And you're right. I really like I said way too much in my opening because I already explained the whole thing. In practice, we're looking at 65 million households in 2025 that are still going to have access to regular linear pay TV channels as compared to 70 million that won't. So in practice, we're already starting to see.

the ramifications of the slowdown for digital pay TV and the fact that it is not going to probably end up being a replacement for TV. It's not going to rescue the TV industry because as I, as I mentioned, the players, YouTube TV, Hulu with live TV and Fubo, there was just news already where Disney swooped in and, and,

acquired a majority of Fubo. And I think they're actually going to fold Hulu with live TV into Fubo to create one of the larger TV providers in the country. There is a lot going on with that story. There was a lawsuit related to sports rights and the now defunct attempt to create an app called Venue that was going to combine a bunch of sports. But also what has happened is that Hulu with live TV's growth has increased

almost flatlined. And these digital pay TV providers are confronting the same challenges that traditional cable TV providers confront, which is that it's too expensive and people don't want to pay for it. And so this is not really a growth market anymore. Five years ago or even three years ago, growth was still pretty significant. You'd say, all right, well, maybe there's a way to make money doing this.

Now I'm not sure if they're really, if they're really as sustainable the way these things currently exist. So you're already starting to see some M&A activity. I think you could possibly see some folks exit the market. You're seeing YouTube TV, you know, has to do this massive investment with the NFL Sunday ticket in order to get,

And that worked. It seems to have worked. They've gotten a lot of new people thanks to the NFL. But where is this going to go sustainably over the long term? I don't know. I don't know how far it's going to go. On the price point, I went back and looked. The price of digital pay TV has gone up.

outrageously fast. So when YouTube TV was launched back in 2017, it costs $35 a month. Today, it's 83 bucks. So that's the inflation of 137% over eight years. I went and took a look, that's five times faster than the average inflation rate over that period. Inflation has been high, but 140% is very, very fast. That's a big part of it. It's interesting though, Ethan, because maybe the writing was on the wall here the whole time. If you go back and look

Digital pay TV household. So as you mentioned that, you know, the Hulu plus live TV people, the YouTube TV, they never had their kind of up into the right growth moment. It's been kind of very smooth staircase growth since it was invented. So it is kind of flatlining now, but it's never been on this, you know, astronomical trajectory. I guess the key takeaway is that for the TV industry, for these channels,

that are used to being in everyone's homes and for advertisers and marketers that are used to being able to partner with them and assume that they're going to have access to the majority of the country, like that's just gone. And this isn't going to rescue it. Yeah, I think, and it's consumers who, as usual, they're going to be the ones suffering the most. There's just less options, more expensive products

And ultimately, yeah, we've talked about this a lot. I mean, I think this has been something we've mentioned here maybe for a few years now. It's just kind of this reverse or re-transformation and going back to really the same model we've always had, which is going to be this just like digital cable thing

It costs about $100 a month. It costs the same, and none of these skinny bundles. Everything's going to have to be lumped together. The only potential I do see, guys, and it's kind of this DirecTV, really recent developments there, maybe more of these sports-heavy packages that will be expensive, but that might cater to the right people who are looking to...

move away from traditional cable. And it's usually sports, you know, it's sports that's driving that. And there probably is a future for linear channels in a very splintered way. So you mentioned the skinny bundle, but that it also brings to mind the way that the existing streaming services are increasingly making their TV channels available. So you go to Peacock,

at some point in the future and you'll have a section of it that's just showing NBC and MSNBC or whatever. Well, I guess that's not a good example because Comcast is trying to spin off all their channels. But a lot of these streaming services will have channels available.

So you'll be able to see some of the things that you got to max and you can see your TNT, but you can't see TNT anywhere else. There's no longer that traditional cable experience. Oscar, let's pivot back to your trend for round two. I've got a question here. So in the report, I think, Ethan, you wrote, because you wrote five forecasting trends and it's the one that Oscar was talking about. You wrote about it saying the live stream shopping is catching on. And I'm wondering whether we can say it's,

catching on because even though 50 million Americans will buy something off a live stream this year, our definition is people who bought something just once in the calendar year. Yeah, that's a good caveat. Yeah. How do we think about that? It's the people. Increasingly, people are aware of this

as an option? That's an important caveat. And I think, you know, to your earlier point, Marcus, some of that growth, you know, might just come in something that our forecast is not quite capturing, but it's the frequency, right? Maybe rather than just once or twice, existing buyers will be doing it three or four times, right? Which is, is just as important. Yeah, because it's hard to know of that 50 million. I mean, there might be people who are doing it

once a month. Maybe most of them are, but maybe most of them aren't. And so it's hard to know what the behavior looks like in terms of frequency. It's extraordinarily challenging also from a production standpoint if people aren't doing it regularly. So to our point here, if you're someone who only maybe checks in on live streaming e-commerce once a month,

because you get an inspiration for something you want to go look for. You need that product to be conducting a live stream at that exact moment in time. Yeah. Otherwise, it's not going to work. Right. So in China, that's what they do. They have people there 18 hours a day. So no matter when you choose to log in to look for lipstick or to look for your whatever appliance, you

There is somebody there at that moment producing a live commercial for you. We're not going to be able to do that in the US. That's too expensive, right? You can't have the talent sitting there 24-7 just in case somebody who's like 2 a.m. wants to do their research, right? So if you are a casual, occasional live stream e-commerce shopper, that reduces the chance that you'll actually find what you're looking for. Yeah. Yeah.

And I agree with that. I was going to say, I think two things. Yes. You know, the growth from the U.S. does not necessarily it's not going to necessarily mirror what we're seeing in China. I think it's going to look a little bit different. So it doesn't necessarily mean that that is the future of what it will look like here in five or 10 years. But there are some things to learn for anyone who is looking to get into any sort of, you know, live stream e-commerce business.

events but a couple things i was going to say pinterest look out for pinterest pinterest has been doing an incredible job with a lot of their shoppable media i think they've specifically mentioned integrating it more into the platform i think a lot of growth will come from there and they've had success uh

referencing what I said earlier with Gen Z users recently. So look out for Pinterest. I also think a lot of it will come from retailers sort of partnering with these third party, you know, sort of partners that help build out the infrastructure. So it might not be super consistent events, but, you know, maybe once a year type of things. But I think that's where we're going to see a lot of attention and growth coming from. Okay.

Let's move to round three. Real quick, show-stopping argument. Our chefs will pull out their best closing arguments, 10, 20 seconds, as to why their trend is most likely to happen. Ethan. It's most likely to happen because this is inevitable. What? I have to prove it? TV's been dying for ages. I'm riding the most obvious wave. All right. My prediction is that within five years, linear TV is basically going to be a niche medium.

And, and it's right now we're talking about the death of it, but we haven't actually gotten to a point where literally no one you talk to will have seen that thing that was on TV. Yeah. And if I, within five years, you know, we're going to be at that place really quick. And this is to both of you guys. Um, if one has the answer over the other, the, the,

This shortfall not being made up, you know, so people watching less of the live TV overall, whether it's traditional or digital, those viewers instead watching Netflix and YouTube, presumably, or is that old pay TV time going to social media instead?

Where's that time going? I think that's a great question. I think it's going to other types of video content. So the short form social media, the reels, the shorts, absolutely. We have that data point. And if I remember correctly, it basically balances out. So the amount of time that people are spending in front of video

is sort of like, you know, a huge drop in TV time, increase in subscription OTT, bass channels, whatever, all the streaming kind of things. And it kind of balances out and we're all spending about as much time in front of the big screen as we used to. And consider audio too. We keep hearing about video podcasts and videos on platforms. So yeah, there as well. Oscar, real quick, what's your closing argument?

Yeah, awareness is increasing. Ethan, you said this very well in the report. But I expect that in the next three to five years, not only will awareness increase frequency of use and again, look out for Gen Alpha. I think they're going to carry this into adulthood, this activity, this shopping behavior. So that's where a lot of the growth will come from. Very nice. Time to crown our star taker or baker.

It's Ethan. It wasn't even close. To read all of Ethan's trends, five of them, pro subscribers can head to emarketer.com and search for US forecast trends to watch in 2025. The link is, of course, in the show notes. I'm kidding, Oscar. They're both really good arguments. Thank you so much to you both for being here today. Thank you first to Ethan. My pleasure. Go read the report. Three more nuggets in there for you. Yes, indeed. Thank you to Oscar. I nearly fell out of my chair, but thank you. That was a lot of fun. Definitely check out the report. How good Ethan was.

Yeah, always is. Definitely read the report. Great job. Thanks so much, Marcus. Yes, indeed. Thanks to the whole editing crew, Victoria, John Lance and Danny, Stuart who runs the team and Sophie who does our social media. And thanks, of course, to everyone for listening in. We hope to see you on Monday for Behind the Numbers, an eMarketer video podcast.