Last month, Dish Network dropped most of the Turner Networks, the most notable being CNN, especially given this being an election year. And while, they reported a small drop in subscribers for the third quarter, the belief was that the loss of Turner nets was not a big deal. Rather, according to the Wall Street Journal article, "Subscriber growth has been hurt by quality-of-service issues, Dish said,
including not meeting its own standards for installations, answering
subscriber calls in an acceptable time frame, and equipment reliability.
The company warned that these issues could affect revenue growth in the
future."
Cost control is a driving factor in the cable game as consumers fight the high cost of cable television by dropping their service for OTT programming. Dish recognizes the challenge of keeping their subscribers and limiting price hikes, especially those caused by higher license fees. At the same time, Dish is focusing on the online market with possible plans to build out their own low priced video service. That may be a hard business to pull off unless Dish can integrate its license fee deals for online content with its satellite deals to assure the best rate for license fees.
Turner won't be their only problem. The article reports that the CBS deal will also expire by year end. Watching what happened to Time Warner Cable after its war with CBS, Dish may be more willing to negotiate with a broadcaster like CBS, then with a cable programmer like Turner.
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