Public Service Media in the Platform Era: The Cases of Britain, Denmark, and Greece
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Platformisation and TV Transformation
3. Public Service Remit (PSR) versus Innovation in a Competitive Setting of New Challenges
4. Diversified Dynamics: The Case of BBC, DR, and ERT Broadcasters
5. BBC Broadcaster’s Online Services Dynamics
6. DR Broadcaster’s Turn to Online Services
7. ERT Broadcaster and Its Streaming Services
8. Research Questions and Methodology
- What does multi-platform remit mean to each of the PSM organisations in Britain (BBC), Denmark (DR), and Greece (ERT)? Are the relevant multi-platform services part of an official management portfolio?
- Is there a long-term and effective policy defence of PSM organisations against a background of growing competition, thriving in a digital environment dominated by tech giants and OTT subscription-based models of television content distribution?
- What are the strengths and weaknesses of PSM organisations in Britain, Denmark, and Greece, perceived by their managerial executives, related to the sustainability of the PSM system?
9. Research Results
10. The Value of Public Service Remit (PSR)
11. The Renewed Operational Strategy
12. PSM Sustainability in the Platform Era
13. The Significance of a Stable Funding Model
14. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- In your opinion, what is the value of public service media (PSM) in the digital age framed by an explosion of choice in terms of platforms and devices over which the audience members can watch television (e.g., VOD services offered by Netflix, Google, You Tube, Apple, Amazon, and Facebook)? Has the concept of PSM been rendered outdated?
- Do you think that the streaming platforms will eventually force the public service media (PSM) to adopt a type of platformisation strategy? If so, where does the difference lie between the public service broadcasters and the commercial broadcasters?
- Do you think that the future of broadcasting is related to the platformisation of communication and the abandonment of public service broadcasting (PSB) values? What are the main principles that should frame future policy reform in the field of public service media (PSM) to guarantee sustainability and prominence for the public service broadcasting (PSB) system?
- What are the main ventures of the national public service broadcaster within the digital field? How do you evaluate the response of the audience in your country? Overall, do you think that the national public service broadcaster has proved efficient in extending the creation of public value outside its designated space to the online environment at large?
- Does the regulatory framework in your country favour the evolution and sustainability of public service broadcasting (PSB) in the digital field, at the same time enabling the PSB system to meet its obligations?
- What are the policy measures already taken for a thriving PSB system in your country against a background of digital revolution?
- To what extent does the national public service broadcaster face pressures regarding its funding model and why? Does the funding system of the national public service broadcaster need to be adjusted and, if so, in what direction?
- To what extent has the success of on-demand audio-visual content providers affected the production of original domestic programming on the part of the public service broadcaster in your country?
- To what extent do you think that the public service broadcasters in your country adopt investigative journalism practices?
- Has data journalism been integrated into the newsroom of public service media (PSM) in your country and, if so, in what ways? How has data journalism adoption affected the work of national journalists?
- Given the technological and financial challenges and pressures faced by newsroom members, do you think that the decline in human resources of the public service broadcaster in your country resembles that of the commercial broadcasters?
- How is the public service broadcaster in your country coping with the challenges of social media? Has public service television profited from the possibilities of social media to engage new audiences without compromising public values?
- To what extent have the public service media (PSM) organisations in your country turned to big data with the aim of providing personalised services? Is there an emphasis on young audiences?
- In the aftermath of all the major changes instigated by the digital revolution, has the national public service broadcasting (PSB) remit developed and, if so, in what ways?
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Country | 2006 | 2010 | 2015 | 2019 | Change % (2019/2015) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
North-Western Region | Austria | 9 | 151 | 269 | 324 | +20.45 |
Belgium | 137 | 839 | 1.414 | 1.630 | +15.28 | |
Germany | 3 | 1.233 | 1.720 | 2.659 | +54.59 | |
Ireland | NA | NA | 45 | 75 | +66.67 | |
Luxembourg | NA | 14 | 53 | 73 | +37.74 | |
The Netherlands | NA | 302 | 2.014 | 2.421 | +20.21 | |
UK | NA | 583 | 2.884 | 3.003 | +4.17 | |
Nordic Region | Denmark | 4 | 218 | 433 | 548 | +4.2 |
Finland | 70 | 170 | 380 | 467 | +2.0 | |
Norway | 60 | 225 | 502 | 650 | −4.7 | |
Sweden | 52 | 532 | 952 | 1.338 | +4.3 | |
Southern Region | Cyprus | 21 | 62 | 81 | 91 | +12.3 |
France | 4.627 | 12.177 | 17.441 | 19.060 | +9.3 | |
Greece | NA | 55 | 75 | 208 | +177.3 | |
Italy | 201 | 651 | 76 | 208 | +173.6 | |
Malta | NA | NA | 19 | 57 | +200 | |
Portugal | 1 | 648 | 1.518 | 2.098 | +38.2 | |
Spain | 398 | 858 | 2.896 | 4.237 | +46.3 | |
Turkey | NA | NA | 533 | 1.497 | +180.8 |
Country | 2010 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | Change % 2019/2018 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
North-Western Region | Austria | 0.00 | 21.86 | 38.74 | 61.88 | 88.12 | 122.45 | 38.97% |
Belgium | 0.00 | 13.61 | 28.92 | 47.85 | 81.57 | 125.51 | 53.86% | |
Germany | 5.94 | 365.42 | 586.97 | 860.17 | 1195.49 | 1603.54 | 34.13% | |
Ireland | 0.00 | 9.91 | 14.26 | 19.54 | 29.86 | 44.56 | 49.20% | |
Luxembourg | 0.00 | 0.61 | 1.44 | 2.45 | 4.21 | 6.57 | 55.86% | |
The Netherlands | 0.00 | 43.25 | 73.49 | 106.76 | 180.50 | 280.19 | 55.23% | |
UK | 1.49 | 633.09 | 936.22 | 1191.33 | 1474.43 | 1902.86 | 29.06% | |
Nordic Region | Denmark | 3.99 | 81.47 | 118.03 | 178.96 | 252.09 | 330.46 | 31.09% |
Finland | 0.00 | 38.25 | 63.30 | 87.84 | 122.15 | 160.89 | 31.71% | |
Norway | 19.14 | 131.80 | 168.51 | 219.37 | 275.37 | 334.19 | 21.36% | |
Sweden | 0.00 | 157.55 | 210.42 | 213.76 | 272.82 | 354.67 | 30.00% | |
Southern Region | Cyprus | 1.49 | 0.00 | 0.39 | 1.12 | 1.92 | 3.10 | 61.17% |
France | 0.00 | 114.00 | 185.91 | 274.42 | 414.40 | 676.15 | 63.16% | |
Greece | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.73 | 13.41 | 21.71 | 33.80 | 55.66% | |
Italy | 0.08 | 63.66 | 108.50 | 172.17 | 309.12 | 579.65 | 87.52% | |
Malta | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.24 | 0.71 | 1.29 | 2.15 | 67.46% | |
Portugal | 0.00 | 0.56 | 8.96 | 18.10 | 30.60 | 53.05 | 73.38% | |
Spain | 0.00 | 52.95 | 118.65 | 193.14 | 308.92 | 445.54 | 44.22% | |
Turkey | 0.00 | 19.30 | 37.77 | 76.09 | 143.38 | 229.03 | 59.73% |
Britain | Denmark | Greece | |
---|---|---|---|
PSM vs. commercial media position in media market | Strong public service and commercial broadcasters. PSBs dominate in news delivery, with BBC1 being the most used channel for news purposes. | Strong public service broadcasters and successful commercial media outlets. | Weak public service broadcasting corporation and strong commercial broadcasters in terms of audience ratings. |
Financial pressures | Newspaper groups have been affected by the financial drop. | Commercial media have been afflicted by financial pressures. | All media outlets are still going through a difficult phase as result of the COVID-19 pandemic, but it is print media that has suffered the most. |
Operational changes in PSM field | BBC has merged the domestic and world-oriented TV news channels under the pressures of inflation and increasing costs. | Reallocation of funding from linear channel DR1 to the digital news platform dr.dk, the audio platform DR Lyd, and the cross-media youth platform DR Ung. | ERT launched its own news webpage: ertnews.gr (February 2021), and a new 24 h thematic channel focusing on news (since March 2022 on a pilot basis and since September 2022 on a fully operational basis). |
Trust levels in PSM system | Public service broadcasters (BBC, Channel 4, and ITV) are the most trusted news organisations. | DR News and TV2 Nyhederne (including TV2 News) rank high in trust levels compared to other media brands. | Slight increase in trust levels regarding ERT public service broadcaster (2023). |
Trust levels in media overall | Lower trust levels for tabloid outlets and news brands oriented towards opinionated journalism. | High trust levels in news media and particularly in public service news. | A high proportion of the population (82%) declares medium or low/no trust in media (2022). Declining trust levels in news brands overall. |
News consumption patterns | Increasing use of social media as news sources. | Slight decline in the use of TV, print media, and social media as news sources. Online platforms are the most used news sources, with podcast popularity being on the rise (2022). Public service media and commercial operators invest considerably in podcasts. | High use of social media as news sources in a highly fragmented digital market. |
Media market particularity | A highly politicised mass circulation commercial national press and a PSB system headed by the BBC. | Part of the “Nordic welfare model” characterised by the central role of PSM and the considerable indirect and direct subsidies for privately owned media (printed and digital newspapers). Switch from financing public service media via a licence fee to taxation. | Large number of digital news media outlets in a fragmented news media ecosystem. Small market for printed news; however, with many national daily newspapers’ titles in circulation. |
2019/2020 | 2020/2021 | |
---|---|---|
BBCiPlayer accounts overall (average weekly accounts signing in to the platform) | 9.1 million | 10.7 million |
BBCiPlayer under 35-year-olds’ accounts (average weekly accounts signing in to the platform) | 2.9 million | 3.2 million |
BBCiPlayer Streaming Time (average weekly hours played through iPlayer) | 32.2 million hours | 39.7 million hours |
BBCiPlayer—% of the BBC TV viewing that is delivered by iPlayer (all audiences) | 11% | 12% |
BBCiPlayer—% of the BBC TV viewing that is delivered by iPlayer (16–34 years old) | 35% | 37% |
BBCiPlayer programme streams | - | 6.1 billion programme streams |
BBC Sounds—plays of radio, music, and podcasts | - | Close to 1.3 billion plays |
BBC Sounds accounts overall (average weekly accounts using the service) | 2.9 million | 3.5 million |
BBC Sounds accounts by 16–34 years old (average weekly accounts using the service) | 500 thousand | 572 thousand |
BBC Sounds streaming time (average weekly hours played through Sounds) | 8.9 million hours | 10.9 million hours |
BBC News online users (on average per week) | - | 19 million online users |
ERT | BBC | DR | |
---|---|---|---|
The core of public service remit (PSR) | Informing, educating, and entertaining the citizens, ensuring pluralism and independent transmission of news, promoting audio-visual works of discourse and art, and ensuring universal access to PSM services. | To act in the public interest, serving all audiences by providing impartial, high-quality, and distinctive services, which inform, educate, and entertain. Audiences value the role that the PSBs play in connecting communities, providing trusted, independent, and entertaining news. | Bringing the Danes together with an impact. |
The value of public service remit (PSR) in the platform era | PSM place emphasis on specialised content related to culture, history, and society based on their authority, sensitivity, and objectivity, as opposed to the primarily popular entertainment-oriented content of globalised platforms. | PSM connect communities and provide trusted, independent, and entertaining news, aimed at supporting the whole media ecosystem. | PSM have ambitions (supporting democracy, contributing to national culture, and strengthening national communities) that fill a considerable gap in the commercialised media market. The platform era dictates new means of ambitious implementation. |
The strategy dictated by the platform era | Developing streaming platforms is required by PSM. ERT broadcaster adopted the international trends in TV technologies by developing and improving the digital platform ERTFLIX, available at no extra charge. | Collaboration between PSBs and the commercial sector based on different but distinct business/operational models aimed at benefits for the overall media industry. | Becoming fully digital is not merely an objective, but a necessary means of serving DR’s public service ambitions. The strategy is heading towards the gradual abandonment of flow TV channels and linear radio services. |
Principles of future PSM policy aimed at sustainability | Principles permitting complementarity of streaming platforms’ services and linear TV provisions. Enhancement of quality level in audio-visual production. | Principles related to providing diversity of high-quality content, wide availability and universality of public service content, financial stability, and companies with the scale to reach audiences and negotiate with global platforms. | Principles related to strengthening legislation on how tech giants and digital platforms operate and ensuring brand attribution of content providers so that PSM content can be recognisable by the digital users. Principles ensuring full editorial independence of PSM and transparency in recommender algorithms on digital platforms. |
Efficiency in extending public value to the online environment | Yes, based on the development of live-streaming content and SVOD services (ERTFLIX platform), a news portal (ertnews.gr), a sports-related news portal (ertsports.gr), and an audio-podcast platform (ertecho.gr). | Yes, based on SVOD services (BBCiPlayer platform), an audio app (BBC Sounds), and BBC news online (bbc.com/news). | Yes, based on several digital products: digital streaming platform (DRTV), digital radio and podcast platform (DRLYD), online news website and apps for children (dr.dk), and conversion of former flow channels to digital channels (DR3). |
Regulation framework and sustainability of PSM | PSM have been incorporated in the priorities of the digital field’s development plan. | Measures have been set out to maintain and reinforce PSM in the future (e.g., simpler, faster regulatory structure for the BBC, acknowledging the global digital marketplace and modernised regulation, ensuring prominence of PSM on all platforms). | Regulation framework is aligned with digital development and is supportive of PSM digitalisation. |
Policy measures taken for a thriving PSM system | Collaboration with EBU for a digital development plan, transferring to the ERT efficient practices adopted by successful European PSM. | PSM organisations collectively fulfil statutory purposes and correspond to service-specific requirements, such as fulfilling quotas and standards in the content they deliver. In return, they receive regulatory benefits (access to spectrum, prominence on electronic progamme guides, and licence fee revenues for BBC). | A White Paper (June 2021) exposes the challenges to be addressed for a thriving PSM system. A new “tech giant office” is in progress by the Ministry of Culture, with the mission of policy development and regulation formation concerning tech giants. |
Possible adaptation of PSM model of financing | In the new context of intensifying competition, new ways of increasing ERT’s budget should be found, suggesting as options: (a) an increase in the advertising revenue and (b) a case-by-case fee increase in relation to the volume or type of content that the digital user wishes to have access to. | No, since stable public funding of the BBC broadcaster is essential, a system publicly supported and framed by accountability to the public for how the licence fee is spent is essential. The licence fee remains at its current price in 2023/2024, and a rise is expected in line with inflation. | Already implemented: DR cut down its budget by 12% in the period 2019–2020 based on a political decision of 2018 (the initial agreement was 20%, but it was cancelled in 2020, according to the interviewee). The media licence fee was abolished and replaced by funding from general taxation in 2018. |
How the success of on-demand content from global tech giants has affected original domestic PSM programming | Since 2020, ERT has invested primarily in domestic scripted drama productions and secondarily in domestic non-scripted broadcasts after a decade of hiatus in audio-visual works. | Emergence of “super-inflation” trend in the media industry (in the form of increasing costs for productions). Against the huge expansion of the global SVOD providers, the UK market expanded by 20% in the last five years, with over-the-top media services having grown by 86%. | The rise in foreign content provided by tech giants poses a serious threat to Danish citizens’ understanding of national culture, history, and language. |
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© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Karadimitriou, A.; Papathanassopoulos, S. Public Service Media in the Platform Era: The Cases of Britain, Denmark, and Greece. Journal. Media 2024, 5, 646-670. https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia5020043
Karadimitriou A, Papathanassopoulos S. Public Service Media in the Platform Era: The Cases of Britain, Denmark, and Greece. Journalism and Media. 2024; 5(2):646-670. https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia5020043
Chicago/Turabian StyleKaradimitriou, Achilleas, and Stylianos Papathanassopoulos. 2024. "Public Service Media in the Platform Era: The Cases of Britain, Denmark, and Greece" Journalism and Media 5, no. 2: 646-670. https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia5020043