With Siri TV, Apple Will Dismantle the TV Networks

Steve Jobs died without fully transforming television, but the day after he passed away, Apple unveiled Siri, its natural language interface. Though it’s currently only embedded in the new iPhone 4S, Siri could eventually change the face of the TV industry.

Notice I said “TV industry.”

Most observers and analysts believe that Siri’s voice commands could eliminate the need for those clunky TV remote controls. With the blurring and exponential proliferation of television and Web content, telling your TV what you’d like to watch, instead of scrolling through a nearly infinite number of program possibilities, makes a lot more sense.

But from my perspective, Siri’s greatest impact won’t ultimately be on users, or on device manufacturers (though they certainly risk losing market share to Apple). It will be on the TV industry’s content creators and packagers. Why? Because a voice-controlled television interface will fundamentally disrupt the six-decade-old legacy structure of networks, channels and programs. And that’s a legacy that — until now, at least — has been carried forward from analog to digital.

There’s an important underlying precedent here.

If the Internet can be generalized to have one effect across every industry that moves online, that effect would be disaggregation. Choices go from finite to infinite. Navigation goes from sequential to random access. And audiences choose content by the item far more than by the collection. We’ve gone from the packaged and channelized to the unbound and itemized. Autonomous albums are fragmented into songs; series into clips; and magazines and newspapers into articles and individual photos.

As much as we may think that has already happened with video, it is nothing compared to the great leveling that will occur in the voice-controlled living room. Voice-controlled TV means direct navigation to individual episodes, programs and clips. And it will almost certainly lead to a discernible deconstruction of the network and channel structure — not to mention the decomposition of even the aggregated marketplaces like Netflix, Hulu and YouTube.

Here’s the simple reason: No one is going to sit on their couch and say, “Siri, show me NBC’s ‘Community.’” In a voice-activated world, monikers like “NBC” become useless. They don’t stand for anything meaningful to the consumer. They’re just remnants of a decrepit channel structure that’s unraveling. And, in the end, they’ll simply connote the fast-fading allure of mid-20th century mass appeal.

To be sure, the TV majors will lose much of their ability to realize network effects. Already, you’re hearing less about “lead in” and “lead out.” What you are hearing more about, however, is disconnected videos. A program on YouTube, for instance, will sit on a level voice-controlled playing field with an NBC show, and that field will soon become even more level, because Siri will eliminate the menus that structure the artificial hierarchies of content collections.

So how will we be able to get network effects back in video? Let’s look at four possible ways:

  • Branded Content — Players can build a strong brand that stands for something with their audiences. Break.com, Discovery and Oprah are all meaningful and build long-term customer loyalty. (“Siri, show me new TED Talks.”)
  • Curation — Brand the collection with a curation strategy so that the curator’s name and stamp of approval means something to the audience. (“Siri, show me Jason Hirschhorn’s latest movie suggestions.”)
  • Social — In the fully social world that we expect to see, focusing on the virality of content means you tap the human distribution network and social operating system. (“Siri, show me what videos my friends are watching.”)
  • Personal — We’ve already seen the extraordinary value of well-tuned personalized recommendations, with Netflix’s notable prize and other famed stories of the benefits of great recommendations. Increasingly, our own patterns of individual videos and the brands we affiliate with, along with recommendations from friends, will be combined into personalized recommendations we won’t even have to ask for. I have no doubt that Siri will be as good a “Genius” as iTunes is at recommending what else to watch. Ultimately, in the age of data, whoever knows the most about us will be able to give us the best experience.

Beyond disaggregation, personalization is ultimately the most powerful consumer value of digital media. My mother’s TV experience was to walk over to her TV set and turn a dial to select among three channels to satisfy her individuality. But in the next generation, no two people will receive the same recommendations from the millions of content choices available.

Before he died, Jobs now famously told Walter Isaacson, his biographer, that he had finally cracked the TV code. It’s unclear what Jobs meant, what this entailed or what he thought it would lead to in the years to come. So, barring further posthumous disclosure, Jobs’s own predictions of his ripple effects will be a media mystery for now.

One thing that’s clear, though, is that Jobs’s Siri will start the dismantling — or creative destruction — of the TV industry as we’ve known it for the last 60 years.

Ben Elowitz (@elowitz) is co-founder and CEO of next-generation Web publisher Wetpaint, and author of the Digital Quarters blog about the future of digital media. Prior to Wetpaint, Elowitz co-founded Blue Nile (NILE).

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Showing 1-25 of 54 comments

  • Owen Black 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    +1 for using Community as an example. One of the best shows on TV and the executives at NBC who put it on hiatus should be fired instantly.
  • rangerover411 3 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    Apple unveiled Siri and the iPhone 4S the day before Steve Jobs' death, not the day after. Shame to start your piece off on the wrong foot.
  • BenGleck 2 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    So said the anal-retentive, sweating-the-unimportant-small-stuff rangerover411...as he double-posted.

    Couldn't get the one thing you did right, but you felt empowered to criticize the one minor flaw in a forest of information, eh ranger?
  • Alex Cabrera 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    There's a difference between an error in using a commenting system and being a paid, professional technology writer for the freaking Wall Street Journal getting basic facts wrong in the first sentence of an article.
  • rangerover411 2 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    Apple unveiled Siri and the iPhone 4S the day before Steve Jobs' death, not the day after. Shame to start your piece off on the wrong foot.
  • Digital Iconoclast 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    you weren't paying attention; at least the text I read says nothing that contradicts your posting; no "siri was released the day after Steve Jobs died."
  • RoxEroX 6 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    voice control over TV will just lead to an increase in domestic violence. i seriously doubt i will be able to navigate (surf) through channels and menus faster than with a remote. just because apple says ... it will be?
  • haromaster 2 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    TV as a screen saver for your brain will remain the same for many years to come, relax.
  • RoxEroX 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    kick'n back. and elect to bypass time spent on your reply.
  • Jorge 3 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    You're missing the point: it's beyond Siri and Apple. It will probably begin with Siri on Apple TV, but sooner than later all major competitors (HP, Dell, ASUS, Samsung, Sony, Microsoft, etc) will release their own versions of a voice activated tv command center, and that's the core of this whole idea.
  • RoxEroX 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    my point is this, from a human factor point of view, i believe that using a remote will be easier in the long run, especially when there is more than one viewing. I believe that some technologies may not always fit. Example, digital versus analog clocks. You have to read a digital display versus a glance at an analog display. You may also see this with Kinect/XBOX/TV before you see it with Siri.
  • Patrick, Marketing, media, gadget & craft beer enthusiast with a Met fan problem. 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    Microsoft already released it which is why Apple was hell bent on getting to Siri with the new iPhone.
  • Jerseyguy77 5 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    Wow that was a lot of words to say...something. Apple will revolutionize fill in the blank. Meanwhile, I try using this Siri in Manhattan to get directions and it's useless. I think people are willfully ignoring siri's massive limitations.
  • guch20 3 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    Funny, it works great for most of us.

    Maybe you're expecting too much from it. More likely you're just a jealous troll stuck with some clunky POS Android phone.
  • yup 2 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    No jerseyguy is right, it leaves a lot to be desired.  The Nuance voice recognition on my 3GS was flawless, I can't even say "call dad" any more. Any thing I search for ends up a web search any way which google voice search does way better, just not as easy as holding down a key.  I've disabled Siri, not because of privacy concerns, because frankly it just blows.  It's an awesome concept, but still not ready for prime time.
  • guch20 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    Well, that settles it. The two of you are having issues, so it must be a flaw in the Beta software, right? I mean, with literally millions of satisfied users, it couldn't possibly be user error.
  • haromaster 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    Thank goodness your not in charge of product development anyway (wait, do you work for RIM?), luckily there were people who pushed ahead with innovation in industries such as Television despite its "massive limitations" (such as being only black & white,  the necessity for a massive wooden box to hide all the tech, physically having to use a dial to change channels. Oh channels too.)
  • Semblance 2 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    "
    Most observers and analysts believe that Siri’s voice commands could eliminate the need for those clunky TV remote controls."

    HA HA HA HA! All things D is always full of pro-Apple crap. That sentence is hilarious!

    Thank you for mentioning Community, though.
  • haromaster 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    I was thinking the same thing, i mean it would take 50-100 years of innovation for them to put a microphone in a tv that understood the commands "change channel", "power off", "record", thats pie in the sky type stuff...
  • jakebraca 2 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    One word: Kinect.
  • Jonathan Mackenzie 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    Judges, give 500 points to jakebraca.  The question was:  What is the next would be hit product that Microsoft will mismanage?
  • realjjj 2 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    Amusing how so many don't even have a second to wonder if we really do want to talk to our TVs ,or devices in general. Voice is not the fastest,easiest,convenient way to interact with a device.Microsoft had decent voice recognition in Windows a long time ago yet nobody used it .
  • haromaster 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    Microsoft also had tablets PC's back in the day, that nobody used, i think that just because something failed in the past doesn't mean that its doomed forever.

    Apple seem to be pushing on with Siri, Google are (possibly) developing Majel for similar usage, both those companies have proved over recent years they have the influence and knowhow to change conventional thinking of how we interact with products and data, but i guess only time will tell..
  • sanpil 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand
    I read the author name to be Wet Pant. Sorry.
  • JimmyFal 3 comments collapsed Collapse Expand
    Your article is actually pretty spot on. Not boasting, and not trying to one up anyone. But since I started using Bing search on Xbox Kinect I have gained an enormous respect for Netflix of all things. I don't flip through channels anymore, I just sit on the couch and say "xbox bing frontline" or food documentaries, or Clint Eastwood, genres, Dexter, Breaking Bad, you name it Kinect pretty much finds it.

    There's a lot in Kinect that doesn't make you want to speak to it for long, but for searching and finding, I'm hooked. And pausing to go to the can? What's not to love about that? Missing at the moment is channel changing, but you know it's coming. Pause, fast forward, rewind. I'm loving this. But speech is not for everyone. It most certainly is for me though. And it is changing the way I watch TV.
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