Skip to main content

European Cable Focus on Customer Migration

According to Screen Digest, consolidation has been the central theme of the European cable industry during 2005 and 2006. Major market consolidation, leaving a single dominant player, has occurred in Spain, France, Ireland and the UK and progress has been made in consolidating the market in Germany, Scandinavia and Eastern Europe.

While consolidation has been a recurring theme in cable for many years, it has been the emergence of genuine new competition to cable companies and the affront to cable’s key unique selling point -- triple-play -- that has lit the touch paper under the latest round of merger and acquisition.

The stable financial base required for this flurry of activity was set in previous years as major cable groupings underwent restructurings, while private equity companies took the opportunity to buy into the European cable industry at post-tech bubble rockbottom prices.

Many of these private equity groups have recently sought to sell or bolster their position in the European cable markets and have been a driving force behind the last year’s consolidation. Indeed, investment groups like cable specialist Altice One and cable friendly private equity groups like Cinven have been involved in several of the key deals over the last 12 months.

On the competitive front, the march of IPTV, the continued strength of the satellite pay television sector, and the growth of an often free-to-air multichannel alternative to cable television in the form of DTT has spurred the cable industry to strengthen its own position.

But the added competition and the fact that cable television has reached the top of its growth curve in many countries, means that cable companies are heavily focused on increasing their broadband and telephony subscriber base and thus boosting their Revenue Generating Unit (RGU) count -- the sum of TV plus Internet and telephony subscriptions -- through these new service offers and the up-selling of bundled packages to existing cable homes.

But cable also has another trick up its sleeve in that a large portion of the subscriber base in many markets still needs to be converted to digital TV. This means that the focus on cable companies is all about customer migration, pushing customers to take and spend more with the cable supplier. Done right, this is an easier task than acquiring a new customer and means that following the recent consolidation, many cable operators can now demonstrate significant future upside for revenue growth.

Popular posts from this blog

How Online Video Exceeded Pay-TV Revenue

The global streaming industry has spent the better part of a decade chasing subscriber counts as the primary metric of success. That era is now formally over. New market data from Omdia confirms that the industry has crossed a decisive threshold; one that shifts the competitive playing field from growth-at-all-costs to monetization discipline. For senior executives navigating media, advertising, and technology strategy, the implications extend well beyond entertainment. A Historic Revenue Crossover Online video revenue increased 13.5 percent to $176 billion in 2025, while pay-TV revenue declined 4 percent to $170 billion; marking the first time in the industry's history that streaming has surpassed legacy pay-TV in revenue terms. This is not a rounding error or a statistical artifact; it represents the culmination of more than a decade of structural disruption to the traditional broadcast and cable TV model. Global subscriptions to online video services reached 2.24 billion by the ...