Thomas Hawk listened in on
TiVo's quarterly results conference
call yesterday, and was kind enough to share with us his thoughts and observations about what was said, and was
able to glean some very interesting information about where the company is headed and what's in store for the coming
months. Some highlights: that TiVo to Go should be out
before year's end and that they plan to rollout their video on demand service (which is
a joint venture with Netflix) sometime within the next 12
months:TiVo was out with their earnings after the close today. Analysts had expected TiVo to lose about 44 cents a share
for the quarter ending October 31st and they only lost 33 cents a share. A year ago they were losing 11 cents a
share.
In the earnings conference call after the announcement TiVo
CEO Mike Ramsey was asked to discuss TiVo's prioritization and timeline on a number initiatives. When asked to
prioritize their upcoming initiatives Ramsey responded in the following order:
1. TiVo seems to be placing a great hope in the future of the TiVo/DVD recorder combo. Personally I think that this hope is misplaced. Although its a nice feature, ultimately with a 4.7 gig maximum storage space on a DVD youre limited. I dont think people really care about this and I think the longer-term sales numbers will be disappointing. Of course TiVo had to mention this as it is important to a number of their hardware partners.
2. A more interesting area is the whole concept of TiVo to Go. TiVo to Go will allow users to get content off of their
TiVo boxes (although Id imagine not off of the HDTV DirecTV unit) and transfer the file to a PC or a laptop for remote
viewing. The exciting thing that came out of the conference call was that CEO Mike Ramsey said to expect before this
before the end of this year. Yikes! That s coming up quick. Im looking forward to seeing this roll out.
3. My personal favorite - the standalone HDTV TiVo DVR. In Ramseys words, they have seen huge demand for the
DirecTV HDTV unit currently on market. This demand is causing TiVo to reconsider coming to market with a standalone
HDTV DVR. Not exactly an announcement but its nice to know that they are thinking about this.
4. Broadband content delivery. Ramsey said that the Netflix deal is real and not just a general agreement or hype. He
said to expect a rollout of this deal within the next 12 months and sees this as the starting point of a longer
initiative of delivering content via broadband. TiVo envisions a living room that has content inputs from both
broadband and broadcasts and wants to own the machine in the living room (as does Microsoft of course).
5. Although not as pressing of a priority right now, the last priority mentioned was continued development of the
cable card.
Some other observations that came out of the call. TiVo has doubled their retail distribution in the last year
primarily by introducing their products in Target and Costco, which provide huge distribution.
80% of TiVo owners have a broadband connection in the house. Although TiVo is not presently using this connection it
can be activated with a simple software update by TiVo at any time. There are currently 2 million TiVo boxes out there
that have broadband capability.
TiVo does receive ad revenue from their stand alone units as well as a share of ad revenue from the DirecTV units
(although it does not appear meaningful at present).
As would be expected, this upcoming Holiday Season will be their top quarter and they have high hopes. They expect to
add 575,000 to 700,000 subscribers in this upcoming quarter. 375,000 to 425,000 from DirecTV and another 200,000 to
275,000 from standalone TiVos.
Nobody asked any really hard questions or pressed TiVo much on the
banner ads in the fast forward button. But then again
its really only selected analysts that get approved to ask the questions on these calls and they were pitched some
fairly easy balls by their analyst friends today.
Thomas Hawk is a digital media writer and enthusiast living in the San Francisco Bay area.