Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • The Hollywood Reporter

    Charter CEO on the AI Opportunity and the Value of Including Streaming Services in Carriage Deals

    By Georg Szalai,

    1 days ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2xQBze_0vSlMmCt00

    Cable giant Charter Communications’ CEO Chris Winfrey discussed the impact of AI, including on costs, at an investor conference Tuesday.

    During an appearance at the Goldman Sachs Communacopia + Technology Conference in San Francisco, which was livestreamed, he was asked if AI is more hype or reality. “I think AI is very much reality. The question is: How fast is it really going to come and how fast is it going to be deployed?” he said. “We’ve been investing in, really starting with machine learning, and AI now increasingly, for some time, but really from a service function. And by that I mean not only investing in customer-facing machine learning and AI capabilities, through IVR [interactive voice response], through chat, all the things you might imagine, but probably even more so to improve the quality and the ease of the job that our front-line employees do.”

    That can include the use of AI to provide “a better set of information to the agent that allows them to make a better recommendation, and increasingly, not even have them need to make the recommendation because the machine is actually listening to the conversation, doing real voice-to-text translation,” the Winfrey said. “There aren’t 10 different best ways to solve this problem. There’s really one, and providing that to the agent in a way that allows them to get to a better answer faster and actually show more empathy along the way [is the goal]. That works not only for the customer, obviously, but it works for our agents as well in an environment where you have turnover and you have training expenses and you want to have our employees not just here for the short term, but to develop a career with the company. And having tenure means a better service experience for the customers.”

    Is there any financial upside for Charter in the use of AI and machine learning? “As part of our service investment on the cost side, we’re already seeing the benefits,” Winfrey said. “There will be a flywheel that takes place, and when it catches, it’ll be a significant impact [on] not just the service capabilities, the service infrastructure, but the cost as well.” But the Charter CEO added: “It’s a little bit difficult to estimate the timing of that. I think it’s already starting to happen, but I think there will be some bigger, dramatic steps that come along the way.” He didn’t provide further details.

    Asked how early in the AI opportunity Charter was, Winfrey argued it was only “in the first or second inning.”

    Charter, in which John Malone’s Liberty Broadband owns a major stake, last week unveiled a new multiyear carriage deal with AMC Networks , a year after its carriage dispute with The Walt Disney Co. made headlines. While financial terms were not disclosed, Charter and AMC said the new pact will see AMC+ made available to Spectrum TV Select customers at no extra charge, the latest carriage deal to include streaming services, similar to the Disney deal that included Disney+.

    Winfrey mentioned the AMC deal on Wednesday as part of sharing broader thoughts on better aligning Charter’s assets and content relationships for the streaming age. “We have not made full use of the assets that are available to us to support internet,” including its video and mobile offerings, he told the Goldman conference. “We had moved away from bundling video because the price-value proposition, or the value proposition to consumers, had gone down over time as programmers increased the cost of programming, didn’t provide flexibility and then started to sell around with direct-to-consumer applications,” the Charter CEO explained. “We’re not there yet. We’ve got still a ways to go to operationalize the deals that we’ve already done. But we now feel that the ability for us to put that video charge on a broadband bill makes more sense because there’s real value that sits behind it. These DTCs already with what we just announced, the latest being AMC+, is $40 of value in retail DTCs that the customer no longer has to get charged [for] twice.”

    By making better use of its assets that way, “we can advantage internet, which is very similar to what cable’s done historically in the past,” while “getting higher average revenue per user (ARPU) … and actually better margin in cash flow per household,” Winfrey said.

    Charter lost 393,000 residential pay TV subscribers in its second quarter , compared with a loss of 189,000 customers in the year-ago period. It also dropped 154,000 residential internet customers, due mainly to the end of Affordable Connectivity Program government subsidies for low-income households, which will continue to affect results over the near term, as Winfrey again signaled on Wednesday without providing more detailed guidance.

    Expand All
    Comments /
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Local News newsLocal News

    Comments / 0