In Europe, algorithms replaced the channel lineup—now broadcasters must merge
BCG reports that in a survey of 3,500 consumers across the UK, France, Germany, and Switzerland, streaming and social video platforms reach 97% of viewers and account for 64% of weekly viewing time, with Gen-Z spending far less time on linear TV and heavily using algorithm-driven discovery. The article argues European broadcasters face subscription saturation, rising competition for advertising, and pressure from global streamers and YouTube/social video, and outlines six strategic imperatives including cross-border partnerships/M&A, broader distribution (including on social platforms), hybrid monetization, GenAI adoption, and regulatory modernization.
Key Takeaways
- Attention has consolidated: streaming/social platforms reach 97% of viewers and take 64% of weekly viewing time in key Western Europe markets.
- Gen Z is structurally different: only 16% of their viewing time is linear; discovery starts with recommendations, not channel-surfing.
- YouTube is now a living-room competitor (41% of UK in-home YouTube viewing on TV sets in 2024) and, with short-form, is resetting expectations for engagement and ad tolerance.
- Subscription growth is nearing limits; the next fight is advertising—hybrid tiers, new ad formats, and cross-platform ad scale will decide winners.
- BCG’s playbook: cross-border partnerships/M&A, broader distribution (including social), diversified revenue (e.g., micropayments), integrated GenAI adoption, and regulatory modernization to level the field.
Why It Matters
This is the European version of a global truth: “TV” is no longer a box or a channel—it’s an algorithmic surface area. If viewers use 4–5 services and global players reliably occupy three slots, national broadcasters are fighting for the last inch of the home screen—and the ad stack behind it. The meme to watch: broadcasters shifting from protected incumbents to roll-up challengers (Freely-like distribution, M&A, shared ad marketplaces) while using GenAI to close the product/personalization gap without Big Tech scale. Regulators are now part of strategy, not compliance.
Read full article at bcg.com