Paul Sallomi, Global Technology, Media & Entertainment and Telecommunications Industry Leader, and Global Technology Sector Leader
As nations around the world dedicate investment, incentives, and talent to developing the capabilities of artificial intelligence (AI), more and more business leaders are coming to view AI as a catalyst for the next great economic expansion. But lacking a well-developed AI strategy, many worry about missing out on potential gains.
Deloitte’s latest State of AI in the Enterprise survey takes the global pulse of AI, exploring structural and financial implications for business leaders. To find out how early adopters in Australia, Canada, China, Germany, France, the UK, and the US are approaching AI initiatives, read on—or download the full report here.
The takeaway: No matter where your organization is on its AI journey—playing catch-up with global rivals, using a focused project-oriented approach, or pursuing larger-scale initiatives—there are multiple paths to AI success. By examining AI early adopters through a global lens, we’ve identified a balanced approach designed to help you maximize your organization’s unique AI advantages.
Three practices that can help you develop a winning AI strategy:
Balance caution and action. Create a sense of AI urgency in your organization—you need to take advantage of the small window for competitive differentiation. Yet moving too quickly carries its own risks. Let your strategic priorities help guide your AI strategy. Build a strong foundation for an AI-powered future with effective practices for data management, experimentation, operational discipline, and talent development. (Read the full report to learn how other countries are balancing AI-related concerns with strategies to address cybersecurity fears, manage ethical questions, and build trust in AI systems.)
Balance the scale of your efforts. Don’t be afraid to be ambitious. Especially if you’re playing catch-up, your AI initiatives don’t need to start small. Consider pursuing a diverse portfolio of projects that will enhance multiple business functions. Instead of building AI capabilities in house, explore ways to ramp up quickly using cloud-based AI services or partnerships. Remember: As with most new technologies, AI will become easier to acquire over time, with smaller demands on in-house infrastructure, data requirements, and expertise.
Balance your approach to talent. While many organizations are looking to the external market to build AI expertise, opportunities to train existing employees abound. Build an education plan to help you identify and prepare current developers, IT staff, and other employees who could help advance your AI efforts. Develop structured ways to integrate AI into roles and functions—and be prepared to evolve them over time. Develop a vision of your “augmented workforce,” and find ways to move toward that goal.
There's clearly no one-size-fits-all approach to adopting and integrating AI. But as AI-fueled transformation of businesses and industries take shape, the window for differentiation is shrinking. As the technology evolves, combining enthusiasm with a balanced approach to AI goals and execution can help both companies and countries reap the competitive benefits of AI success.
Download the full report: Future in the balance? How countries are pursuing an AI advantage Insights from Deloitte’s State of AI in the Enterprise, 2nd Edition
Craig Wigginton, Global Telecommunications Sector Leader
Momentum is growing around 5G, the fifth generation of wireless technology, slated for rollout around the world in coming years. 5G technology promises to usher in a new, ultra-connected age of digitally networked devices, from phones, tablets, and televisions to refrigerators, delivery drones, manufacturing equipment, and automobiles.
Wireless networks were at a similar inflection point as 4G services launched early in the decade. The United States took action as government made new spectrum available and carriers responded to accommodate twenty-fold growth in global mobile data traffic. The investment in wireless network infrastructure rewarded consumers with better performance within coverage zones at affordable prices, and resulted in robust economic growth. A transformative moment is coming with 5G, but with two important differences. First, the economic stakes are likely to be much higher, where connected devices, applications, and business models could dramatically stimulate economic productivity. Second, the United States is not as well prepared to take full advantage of the potential, lacking needed fiber infrastructure close to the end customers—also termed “deep fiber”—in order to carry the increased data loads beyond just the radio access network (RAN)—where much of 5G technology is focused.
Should 5G achieve its potential, it promises significant benefits for both businesses and consumers, introducing new opportunities to drive productivity, innovation, and job creation. Per a 2011 Deloitte report, the launch of 4G offered the opportunity of some 700,000 jobs; a recent Qualcomm report estimates the 5G mobile value chain could support up to 22 million jobs by 2035.
New infrastructure needed for 5G
5G uses signals from higher-frequency bands of the radio spectrum, including millimeter-wave radio frequencies. Higher frequency radio waves are shorter in length than the signals used by 4G; as a result, they are only able to cover a smaller geographical area and can be blocked by obstacles like buildings and trees. For this reason, adequate geographic coverage for 5G requires a denser network of cell sites and other network access points. Such densification presents a variety of challenges, including current fiber deployment limitations, and the upgrade costs, and deployment cycle times associated with traditional network architecture. Small cells need connections to fiber/cable backhaul to realize capacity and speed potential, just as macro-cells do. Hence, carriers will need to extend fiber much deeper into the network, deploying far greater numbers of network access points including small cells, “homespots,” and hotspots.
Also, while 5G standards in development may focus on a new generation of technology—including capabilities for speed and flexibility to connect the Internet of Things, provide mobile broadband, and supply critical communications—the lifeblood of its potential will come from the wireline network with the ultimate goal to extend fiber deep into the network near the customer. Deep fiber also supports the national infrastructure imperatives of increasing choice between providers for residential and business consumers and closing the digital divide.
5G infrastructure: The $150 billion challenge
Demand for mobile data traffic is projected to quadruple between 2016 and 2020. Yet today, years after the first fiber-to-the-home deployments, only 38 percent of homes have a choice of more than one provider offering speeds of 25 Mbps or more, according to a 2016 FCC Broadband Progress Report. In rural areas, people with access to wireline broadband offering speeds of at least 25 Mbps can also pay three times as much as suburban customers do for the same service. The speed, reach, and affordability of 5G are clearly huge adoption drivers.
According to Deloitte, however, building the necessary deep fiber infrastructure to support 5G backhaul—i.e., fiber infrastructure close to the end customer—is going to take $130–$150 billion in investment over the next five to seven years in the United States alone. Whether 5G fulfills its great promise depends on whether, and how soon, that investment is made.
Meeting the challenge—and seizing the opportunity
Given ever-growing demand for mobile data and the current network capacity shortage, there is a strong business case for investing in deep fiber infrastructure. Investment should come from a variety of private-sector sources, including communications service providers, financial investors, and public/private partnerships.
At the same time, if the government is serious about meeting the national goal of eliminating the digital divide, it must take action to encourage investment in communications infrastructure, including adding fiber assets to carrier networks for improved operational efficiency, and avoiding regulation that limits carrier innovation.
Potential monetization models
To justify investing in 5G infrastructure, providers are seeking new ways to monetize the last mile of their offerings to businesses and consumers. Three potential models stand out:
Adjacent services. Carriers have an opportunity to add new revenue streams by offering integration, network security, and traffic management services that help customers manage and optimize an increasingly complex quantity and mix of IoT devices and ecosystems.
Ecosystem participation. To expand their market or improve their product, over-the-top providers such as streaming services may choose to fund deployment of deep fiber infrastructure, either by owning assets directly or by partnering with carriers.
The last mile as a real estate play. With growing demand for mobile data services, and insufficient existing fiber infrastructure to meet that demand, the fundamentals for deep fiber infrastructure investments are strong. The investment case is particularly strong for REITs, mobile providers, and tower companies.
As interest grows among nontraditional fiber investors, expect the emergence of shared-infrastructure models for last-mile fiber access. In the same way that, after starting by building and maintaining their own towers, wireless providers increasingly turned to tower companies to access shared infrastructure, expect 5G carriers to require shared deep fiber infrastructure. With the ability to lease fiber when needed, carriers will be able to better optimize asset utilization.
The way forward
As 2018 progresses, we observe that 5G networks have been going through field testing and are being rolled out worldwide. The technology has the potential to reshape the way we live, work, and interact. But to achieve the potential of 5G, the private sector must invest now in deep fiber infrastructure—and government must act today to encourage that investment.
Mark Casey, Global Media & Entertainment Sector Leader
2018 looks to be a year of progress and experimentation for smartphone-based augmented reality (AR). Over a billion smartphone users will create AR content at least once this year, Deloitte Global predicts; 300 million will be monthly creators, and tens of millions will make and share content weekly. Tens of thousands of apps incorporating AR capabilities will likely become available during the year, and by year’s end, billions of smartphone users will probably have downloaded an app or operating system update that incorporates AR content creation capability. In all, billions of people are likely to view AR content created on a phone this year.
Thus far, smartphone AR creations typically have been photographs or primitive animations that are exaggerated, artificial, and cartoonish. Starting in 2018, that may begin to change. AR content created on a smartphone will likely look increasingly photorealistic and will often be recorded and shared as video.
Photorealistic AR is being enabled by a combination of software and hardware advances, one of the most significant of which is the launch of dedicated AR frameworks in smartphone operating systems. As of October 2017, a few hundred million smartphones had dedicated support for AR. By the end of 2018, about 800 million smartphones will likely have both an operating system with dedicated AR support and hardware sufficient to power it.
Promising applications
This year, AR could enable users to appear to be singing along with their favorite performer, interacting with a tiger, or juggling balls with a star soccer player, to name just a few examples. AR video will probably be the most commonplace application, simply because the camera app is one of the most widely used smartphone features.
One major AR genre is likely to be games, the largest category of apps available. Game developers could use AR as a differentiator to encourage new downloads. AR is also likely to be integrated into popular game apps and distributed via updates to current users.
During 2018, an abundance of home decoration apps will likely launch as well, although in most instances they will complement rather than replace a visit to the showroom. These apps can enable users to see—with varying degrees of accuracy—how a sofa with a certain fabric might look in their living room, for instance, and even to walk around it. However, until these apps can reveal how firm or well-constructed the couch is, they are likely to remain just one of many inputs to the final purchase decision.
In general, enterprises will likely experiment enthusiastically but pragmatically this year with possible applications. Aside from marketing opportunities, such as the ability to place an AR-generated animated company logo anywhere, there are also possibilities for AR to assist with sales, technical guidance, and aftermarket support.
Bottom line
While AR is likely to drive device usage, app downloads, and smartphone sales this year, discrete app revenues for AR content will probably remain less than $100 million globally. Core enabling technologies such as cameras, sensors, and processors should continue to improve over the coming years, however, helping enable the range of applications to grow rapidly. By 2020, Deloitte Global expects direct AR revenues to surpass $1 billion.
This essay is an abridged version of “Augmented Reality Takes Another Step Forward,” published in Deloitte Insights in the Wall Street Journal CIO Journal and CMO Today.
The Wall Street Journal articles are derived from Deloitte Global’s 2018 Predictions report, which looks at trends across the technology, media and telecom ecosystems over the next one to five years. The full report can be accessed at www.deloitte.com/predictions.
Craig Wigginton, Global Telecommunications Sector Leader
For nearly two decades, Deloitte Global has issued an annual Predictions report, which focuses on trends, transformation and opportunity across the telecommunications, technology, media and entertainment ecosystem. This year, one of our 11 Predictions incorporated data from Deloitte’s recent Global Mobile Consumer Survey to consider how consumer smartphone behavior may evolve in 2018 and beyond.
When looking at how consumers may interact with their mobile devices going forward, Deloitte Global predicts that most adults of all ages will continue to be comfortable using their phones a lot—even hundreds of times per day. Instead of “always, anytime, for anything” usage, however, we predict that consumers will become more focused about their smartphone interactions, and will consider changing their behavior usage when it is distracting them from activities that they want (or need) to concentrate on more fully. Already, we’ve seen an effort to avoid distracted driving; consumers in 2018 may also take steps to limit distracted sleeping, distracted walking and distracted talking.
Deloitte Global predicts that 45 percent of global adult smartphone users in 2018 will worry they are using their phones too much for certain activities, and will consider actions that refine usage, including deleting certain apps, turning off audio notifications, and keeping devices stored in a briefcase or purse. Further, Deloitte Global predicts this concern will be highest for young people who have smartphones, with nearly two-thirds of 18- to 24-year-olds around the world feeling they are using their devices too much, and with over half trying to control usage.
Deloitte Global notes the need to exercise caution in defining appropriate smartphone usage. Smartphones now act as figurative Swiss Army Knives for consumer needs, serving as wristwatches, radios, TVs, computers, cameras, video recorders, maps, newspapers, gaming devices, magazines and much more. Placed in that context, glancing at a phone 50 or more times per day is not, in and of itself, a sign of excessive use; rather, it shows what an exceedingly useful device the smartphone is. In addition, potential distractions during activities such as driving may be reduced as smartphone technologies continue to become more sophisticated—for example, voice recognition, personal digital assistants, Bluetooth devices and other hands-free functionality.
Moreover, there is variation in attitudes and behaviors around the world. Fewer than one in five Japanese smartphone owners think they use their smartphone excessively, while nearly three in four Mexicans with smartphones are concerned and nearly two-thirds were actively trying to limit usage. In most countries, the percentages of those worried about overuse and of those trying to cut back were very similar. In the Nordic countries, the proportion of Finns worried about phone usage was about half that of Norwegians.
And of course, not all usage is equal. Checking one’s phone while watching TV or a film, commuting on public transit, or out shopping is generally benign. According to the Predictions report, it seems likely that when people talk about cutting back on phone usage, they are not talking about these instances.
Bottom line
Both for the telecom industry and for individual users, the goal should not be to strive for some arbitrary number of glances at a phone each day. In fact, as consumers watch ever more video on smartphones instead of TVs, as they perform work tasks on smartphones instead of computers and as m-commerce continues moving to the smartphone, Deloitte Global believes that the number of daily glances will continue to rise.
Instead, the focus for 2018 can be on balance in usage. It is possible that with new technologies to promote safety, along with increasing consumer awareness of good phone etiquette, that consumer behavior patterns may organically change. This in turn presents new opportunities for phone manufacturers, software/app developers and network operators to explore growth in areas like increased m-commerce, m-payments and maturing smartphone apps. The powerful combination of consumer behavior and enterprise opportunity is likely to help us to stay safe, engaged—and get the most from our valued mobile devices.
Paul Sallomi, Global Technology, Media & Entertainment and Telecommunications Industry Leader, and Global Technology Sector Leader
Deloitte Global recently released its annual Predictions report, which looks at transformation and opportunity in tech, media and telecom over the next one to five years. In part of our report, Deloitte Global predicts that in 2018, large and medium-sized enterprises will intensify their use of machine learning (ML)—an artificial intelligence, or cognitive, technology that enables systems to learn and improve from exposure to data without being programmed explicitly. Deloitte Global predicts that the number of implementations and pilot projects using the technology will double compared with 2017, and they will have doubled again by 2020.
Today, most enterprises using ML have only a handful of deployments and pilots under way, but, according to Deloitte Global, progress in five key areas should make it easier and faster to develop ML solutions. These vectors of progress are:
In response, technology vendors are creating compact ML software models to undertake tasks such as image recognition and language translation on portable devices. Semiconductor vendors are developing their own power-efficient AI chips to bring ML to mobile devices. With smartphones an increasingly viable deployment option for ML, the number of potential applications is growing.
Collectively, the five vectors of ML progress should double the intensity with which enterprises are using this technology by the end of 2018. In the long term, these vectors should help make ML a mainstream technology. Enterprises interested in ML may wish to consider the following:
Interested in learning more? Our full Predictions report is available at www.deloitte.com/predictions, and a recent US cognitive technology survey is online at www.deloitte.com/us/cognitivesurvey. As always, I welcome your thoughts and feedback.Today, most enterprises using ML have only a handful of deployments and pilots under way, but, according to Deloitte Global, progress in five key areas should make it easier and faster to develop ML solutions. These vectors of progress are:
Mark Casey, Global Media & Entertainment Sector Leader
Recently, Deloitte Global released its 2018 Predictions report, which considers what trends may transform and disrupt media, entertainment, technology and telecommunications in 2018 and beyond. This year’s report contains 11 separate Predictions, many relevant to companies in the media and entertainment ecosystem.
In one Prediction, Deloitte Global asserts that by the end of 2018, 50 percent of adults in developed countries will have at least two online-only media subscriptions, and by the end of 2020, that average will have doubled to four. In total, Deloitte Global estimates there will be 680 million subscriptions and about 350 million subscribers this year.
The report further predicts that a fifth of adults in developed countries will pay for or have access to at least five paid-for online media subscriptions, and by the end of 2020, they will have 10. For these adults, aggregate spend on digital subscriptions they have access to (paid for by themselves or by someone in the household) is likely to average over $100 per month by 2020, or over $1,200 annually.
Here’s a quick overview of how different categories of digital subscriptions may grow.
At the start of 2018, we expect there will be about 375 million subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) subscriptions worldwide. The number of SVOD services a household may have access to is likely to increase through the end of the decade as more production houses and content owners launch over-the-top (OTT) services. By the end of 2020, we expect that in mature SVOD markets such as the US, an individual may subscribe or have access to multiple TV services spanning many genres, including drama, comedy, sports and kids.
In non-English-speaking markets, we expect more local language content to be created to drive demand for OTT services. As more local language content is developed, SVOD services will broaden their appeal; fluency in English or a willingness to consume dubbed or subtitled content will no longer be necessary.
By the end of 2018, we expect there will be about 20 million digital-only news subscriptions worldwide. We expect news providers to focus increasingly on generating revenue from subscriptions, typically as a complement to advertising, given the challenges they have encountered during years of reliance on ad revenue alone. Whereas certain titles had a 10:90 ratio of subscription to ad revenue in 2012, we predict it may be 50:50 by 2020.
By the end of 2018, we expect there will be about 150+ million music subscriptions. Subscriptions for music services are about $10 per month in the US, €10 in Europe and £10 in the UK – about the price of a CD. In 2015, the average per-stream rate for online music videos worldwide was $0.001, half as much as in the previous year. $10 is equivalent, in revenue terms, to the royalties for 1,000 streams.
Growth should continue to increase for years to come – the number of subscribers is still a fraction of the number of ad-funded consumers, and any smartphone can be a repository of or a conduit to music services.
At the start of 2018, we expect there will be about 35 million subscribers to video game networks that enable online play. The number of subscribers may appear quite small, but it is worth bearing in mind that the number of latest-generation consoles is likely to remain under 100 million at the end of 2018, so 35 percent penetration is quite respectable. Furthermore, at $5 per month, 35 million subscribers are worth an additional $2.1 billion in annual and predictable revenue on top of the money made by selling the games and consoles in the first place.
Growth in the number of online subscriptions is likely to be driven by an increased emphasis on online multiplayer, rather than individual, games.
The total number of online media subscriptions, as well as the average number of subscriptions per individual and household, should grow by at least 20 percent in 2018 and continue to increase in the medium term. This is a positive development for the media industry.
It is also the case that the media industry cannot rely on online subscriptions alone; the sector should also remain focused on advertising – but with ad formats and an ad load appropriate to its customer base.
Finally, the media industry should also consider how best to sell content on an individual article, track or edition basis, and other revenue models, including tips and contributions, should also be considered.
What’s your take on the future of digital subscriptions? I welcome your comments and invite you to read the full 2018 Predictions report.
Mark Casey, Global Media & Entertainment Sector Leader
I’ve been thinking lately about the accelerating corporate trend of setting up venture funds—and the seeming inevitability of Silicon Valley as the destination for these funds. Sure, some of the world’s greatest innovation stories have emerged from the corridor between San Jose and San Francisco. Sure, the Valley is inundated with unicorns. Sure, there are thousands of promising start-ups there that need financial backing today. All those things may be true, but still I wonder whether there are other ways to invest, innovate, and grow in the venture world—or if doing so really does require making an “all in” Silicon Valley play.
Looking beyond Silicon Valley
Silicon Valley has, beyond a doubt, produced some of the world’s game-changing businesses, and therefore merits considerable investment attention. But asset prices in the Valley are buoyed by steady and significant capital flows, not to mention free marketing in the form of extensive media coverage, and the cost of setting up shop to invest in Valley start-ups makes doing so not for the faint of heart.
That’s why I was excited when I visited Tel Aviv for the first time, in early 2016, and came away with a strong sense of two things:
1. Israel has a fine array of start-ups, with groundbreaking IP—and top talent behind it. In effect, Israel has established its own “valley”—and is justifiably proud of it. But here, asset prices and the costs of investing are noticeably less than in Silicon Valley.
2. There are probably other “valleys” around the world, which do not get the same degree of investment attention as Silicon Valley but also feature great assets, intellectual property, and capital—making them attractive investment opportunities.
That’s my hypothesis: There are many “valleys” in the world. Wherever there are innovation centres fuelled by government incentives and digitally connected talent—places like Tel Aviv, Berlin, Moscow, Bangalore, and even Shenzhen and Beijing—there are attractive investment propositions.
Creating a globally diversified frontier investment fund
So, how does a company get exposed to a fully diversified and globally rich choice of assets that meet their investment parameters—without getting bogged down in excessive and fixed set-up and infrastructure costs?
The challenge is to manage a range of factors that can inhibit an ideal global investment architecture, ensuring that the investing company can secure the best assets available, at the best prices available and an acceptable cost of investing, on a global scale.
Imagine a virtual “fund of funds” (VFOF) approach to frontier investing, where a portfolio of investment funds is created. It’s virtual because we don’t want to get slowed down by all the administrative and legal bureaucracy involved in setting up actual funds. Here’s how it works for our VFOF of the world’s “valleys”:
The real magic, of course, will be in the implementation. Many company executives will say, “We’d love this but just don’t have the infrastructure to do this—it’s why we invest the way we do” or “We have little choice and can’t just wait around, so co-investing with trusted players in established markets, well, what’s wrong with that?”
We’ve been working on some ideas and I believe there is an answer—that creating global investment leverage without significant consequential costs is a real possibility. An illustrative model of what’s involved is presented below.
The magic of the process occurs in the interplay between the theory of digitivity, the Red Queen hypothesis, and a range of future industry scenarios – it’s important to have as much optionality as possible built in.
The VFOF keeps executives focused, boards satisfied, and shareholders confident that they won’t be missing anything too serious.
Interested in moving forward with the idea? Would you like to share your thoughts? We’d love to hear from you.
Today, the world’s internet users number in the billions. Technology-enabled newcomers are disrupting industries, from healthcare and transportation to retail and media. And companies of all kinds are pushing the technological envelope to the point that self-driving cars and drone-based product-delivery systems are becoming viable.
It might seem that the digital era, which took flight in earnest a quarter-century ago with the popularization of the World Wide Web, is already mature. But it’s actually just beginning, especially for the enterprise. The changes of the past few decades—in how we communicate, shop, work, consume media, and more—are minor in comparison with what’s to come.
For companies across all industries, one major trend will be the continuing transition away from producing and selling physical products, to service-based solutions supporting flexible consumption models. Instead of purchasing on-premise servers, for instance, enterprises are increasingly likely to turn to infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) solutions. And instead of buying shrink-wrapped software, businesses are more and more likely to subscribe to software-as-a-service (SaaS) solutions.
Powered by machine learning, advanced analytics, falling prices for bandwidth, and processing power and ubiquitous connectivity, this transition promises to keep accelerating. As companies of all kinds, producing everything from printers to jet engine manufacturers, increasingly adopt flexible-consumption, service-delivery models, buyers will benefit from lower upfront costs (along with a shift in spending from CAPEX to OPEX), instant scalability, increased agility, and lower risk.
Service-delivery models offer benefits, including more predictable revenue streams and enhanced customer engagement. Instead of touching the customer only at the point of sale (and possibly later, if issues arise with the product), organizations that offer goods and services via a flexible consumption model have the opportunity to build and maintain an ongoing relationship—which can lead to greater brand loyalty, decreased selling costs, and new ways to create value for customers that drive increased revenue.
To make a successful transition from selling products to providing services, companies need to consider three critical concepts:
Be ready to embrace a fundamentally new business model. This transition will affect every aspect of the business, including Branding, Investor Relations, R&D and product development, IT infrastructure and operations, sales-force training and compensation, tax, and regulatory compliance.
Don’t underestimate the effort required. The challenges of making a transition to a flexible consumption model are many and varied. The regulatory and tax implications of shifting from selling products to providing subscription services can be complex, especially if you operate internationally and/or operate multiple businesses. Each and every business unit and function of the enterprise will have its own transformational roadmap with unique issues and opportunities to assess.
Make a plan for transforming your business. The complexities of orchestrating a top-to-bottom transformation are significant and no business discipline or function can be left behind. A successful transition to a services-focused model requires getting all stakeholders aligned and executing in concert—from your management team to your partners and vendors. Achieving success requires a clear model of the transformation journey; a detailed roadmap defining opportunities, milestones, and metrics; and good governance involving all stakeholders.
Whether you’re ready for it or not, the shift to flexible-consumption models is happening, and it’s accelerating rapidly. Whether you adapt successfully is up to you.
I welcome your feedback, and invite you to review the results of the Deloitte survey on flexible consumption at the enterprise level for additional insights.
As Warren Buffet says, “Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.” Among M&A dealmakers, too often the focus is on the price aspect of the deal—CEOs haggling over and agreeing to terms. But what happens after the handshake—how the companies are integrated—is given short shrift. The result? Deals that fail to deliver the expected value.
This is particularly true of deals involving media companies, which can be vastly different from companies in other sectors, and difficult to integrate as a result.
Smart media M&A dealmakers see the handshake as just the beginning of any given deal. Before that fateful moment, they look forward to assess whether and how their companies can be integrated in three important areas: culture, operations, and cash flow and forecasting.
You’ve heard the saying “culture eats strategy for breakfast.” I’m here to tell you that culture devours M&A deals, too. Doing a media deal and want to avoid egg on your face? You’d better understand the cultural issues at play.
For instance, telecommunications and technology companies are currently buying up media companies for impressive sums, hoping to create value by bringing together content creation and distribution. (See Comcast’s acquisition of NBC Universal, Verizon’s acquisitions of AOL and Yahoo, and AT&T’s acquisition of Time-Warner.) Telcos and tech companies, which are often engineering focused, usually have very different cultures from media companies, which, relatively, tend to employ lots of creative types and have cultures that reflect that fact.
Integrating corporate cultures is an art form—but it’s essential if you want your deal to generate value. Give this factor the attention it requires to get it right.
Companies involved in mergers and acquisitions typically hope to drive operational efficiencies in areas from supply chain, manufacturing, and marketing to distribution and customer service. But because media company operations are typically so distinct from those in other industries, integrating operations after a media M&A deal can be especially challenging. And because the media business can involve taking sizeable financial risks—content creation and acquisition costs can be enormous, but there’s no guarantee that the marketplace will be interested in your content—answering the question of how your combined company will integrate operations is of the utmost importance to driving deal value.
It’s also important to consider issues related to the legal structures involved in, and the tax implications of, the deal. Often, for example, media companies and other businesses take very different approaches to asset structuring. If you’re not careful, media M&A deals can have suboptimal tax consequences, and generate lots of extra work for both management and boards.
Companies in media M&A deals can have significantly different cash-flow profiles. Media companies with subscription-based business models generate predictable cash flows, compared to industries where cash flows and forecasts are lumpier—like tech. As dividend plays, meanwhile, telcos desire steady cash flow—but media M&A targets don’t necessarily map to the telco cash-flow profile. Moreover, there may be significant cash opportunities at the outset of an M&A deal, which could affect the new entity’s taxation. How will you combine the companies in your media merger or acquisition? Have a clear answer if you want the deal to work.
Listen to Mr. Buffet, no slouch at M&A himself. For a successful media M&A deal, look beyond the terms of the deal to how, exactly, your companies are going to integrate. You—and your investors—will be glad you did.
What’s your take on media M&A? Have anything to add? Join the conversation below.
Listen to Mr. Buffet, no slouch at M&A himself. For a successful media M&A deal, look beyond the terms of the deal to how, exactly, your companies are going to integrate. You—and your investors—will be glad you did.
What’s your take on media M&A? Have anything to add? Join the conversation on LinkedIn or Twitter.