Since the advent of digital satellite television broadcasting in Nigeria in 1994, Nigerians have witnessed a steady growth in the sector with as many as 14 operators licensed to distribute TV content. Of the lot, only DStv, HiTV, MyTV, DaarSat and of recent, StarTimes and GOtv readily come to mind.
DStv has been the flagship of pay-TV for close to
two decades. It is the standard by which satellite TV programming and content
is judged. As a premium content provider with compelling programming, DStv
became an aspirational brand of television service to many. What makes DStv
tick is the uniqueness of its channels and content: The line up include Cable
News Network (CNN), M-Net’s productions (now on AfricaMagic channels),
SuperSport’s football and other sports, other premium TV franchises from
overseas, made available to subscribers of DStv.
DStv has progressively made pay-TV content
available to its subscribers across different economic levels through the
unbundling of its bouquet. GOtv is digital terrestrial television (DTT)
that operates on a second-generation digital video broadcast technology
(“DVB-T2”) popularly known as T2.
The advent of GOtv coincides with the country’s
effort to comply with the International Telecommunication Union’s (ITU) goal of
migrating TV broadcasting from an analogue to digital platform by the year
2015. In addition, MultiChoice, the parent company of DStv has gone one step
further, as they have partnered with Details Nigeria limited, providers of
GOtv, to give Nigerians premium TV content at an affordable price.
GOtv offers many advantages: it is easy to
acquire and install, actually a Do It Yourself device with an optional aerial
antennae. It does not require a dish to receive signals; neither does it
require special expertise to activate. Almost all its channels, about 32, are
familiar to DStv subscribers. The DVB-T2 superior technology, that GOtv
operates on, offers a broader spectrum than the first generation digital video
broadcast technology (DVB-T) popularly known as T1 and is considered more efficient.
While T1 allows for an upload of about 20 channels on a platform, T2 offers a
broad range of about three times that size, meaning about 60 channels on its
platform given the same bandwidth. T2 also offers crystal clear picture and
sound, giving subscribers a feeling of total enjoyment anytime they watch
television. Most importantly it is a leapfrog technology; a cost saver for the
discerning Nigerian.
With less than N10, 000, anyone can acquire a
GOtv decoder, install it by himself (a simple process akin to connecting your
DVD to your TV) and instantly begin to enjoy premium content for as little as
N8, 000 or N9, 500 for GOtv and GOtv Plus respectively. This package comes with
a three-month free subscription.
At the expiration of the initial three months,
GOtv subscribers would have to renew their subscriptions depending on either of
the bouquets they choose for N1, 000 and N1, 500 respectively.
In assembling the channels and the content of
GOtv, the providers have achieved the set objective of liberalising the pay-TV
terrain in Nigeria.
An analyst said that since the subscription is
less than 10 percent of the minimum wage, this is the first time premium TV
content can be said to have been truly democratised. GOtv bouquet has a total
of 25 channels while GOtv Plus has all the 25 channels on GOtv plus additional
seven channels, including CNN, Sony Entertainment TV (SET), SuperSport Blitz,
NatGeo Wild, Disney Junior, MTV Base and the primary AfricaMagic channel;
bringing the total to about 32.
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