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CBS.COM’s March Madness Becomes a Free-For-All

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Mar 3, 2008 - 2:47:06 PM

By Carl Lindemann

After six month’s preparation, CBS Sports CTO Mark Kortekaas is ready for March Madness that is expected to bring record audiences online for the event. This year, March Madness on Demand’s (MMOD) capacity has been ramped up almost 50% from last year.  The system will be able to handle up to 500,000 simultaneous viewers, up from the previous 350,000. What’s driving these expectations?  For the first time, visitors will be able to access content without any registration.

“The logic is to increase the overall audience. By making it simpler, easier, opens this up to get more audience,” says Kortekaas.
 
Does the online audience steal from the broadcast viewership? According to CBS research, these are additional eyeballs. Many are people watching at places where they only have internet access, others are “two-screen” viewers enhancing their experience of the broadcast product.
 
“This continues the growth curve we’ve seen before. We continue to modify and improve our product, make it better, and the year-after-year growth has been great,” Kortekaas says.
 
Alongside the anticipated audience growth is MMOD’s growth in advertising revenue. This year’s $21 million is more than twice last year’s. Such success is, in part, what’s driving the change to opening the gates to non-paying, non-registered visitors. It is interesting to note that this is very much a traditional broadcast business model – free access paid for by advertising dollars.
 
Does this point to the future of the online media business? More likely, this is an indication of MMOD’s singular success. The audience for March Madness is insatiable, and whatever conventional wisdom there is for managing online media does not apply.  How does CBS Sports succeed in turning MMOD into a free-for-all?  Stay tuned.


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