OTT video services, which are transmitted via the internet
without requiring users to subscribe to a traditional cable or
satellite pay-TV service, are growing rapidly across Africa.
South Africa's Naspers faces competition from Netflix, Amazon
and local players like Cell C Black, Kwese and Vodacom VideoPlay
who continue to offer alternative video content.
To counter this, it said on Wednesday it merged in the second
quarter its video on demand business Showmax Africa and internet
TV service Dstv Digital Media to form a unit called Connected
Video.
The CEO of Naspers' Video Entertainment business Imtiaz Patel
said in a statement the firm had made a healthy start in its OTT
business through Showmax and DStv Now services, which allow
users to view sports and movies on their mobile handsets.
"It's now time to consolidate those learnings in a single unit
to build the best possible services for our customers," Patel
said.
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Ekdahl, a former managing director for Ericsson's video on demand
service NuVu, will start on Sept.10, the company said.
Naspers' video entertainment business increased subscriber numbers
by 1.5 million to over 13 million subscribers in Africa in the year
to end March, while trading profit rose 29 percent to $369 million.
[nJseV0034a]
(Reporting by Nqobile Dludla; Editing by James Macharia and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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