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Introduction
Broadcasters are operating in a more fragmented video market. Viewers still watch linear channels, but they also move across pay TV, connected TV, broadcaster apps, websites, social video, FAST channels and streaming platforms. A D2C streaming platform can help broadcasters create a branded direct layer for live and on-demand video without replacing existing distribution.
Why Broadcasters Are Considering D2C
Broadcasters have strong content, established brands and existing audience relationships, but viewer behavior has changed. D2C helps broadcasters respond by giving them a branded service where they can package content directly, collect first-party audience data and test monetization models. For a broader definition, see what is a D2C streaming platform.
D2C as an Extension of Existing Distribution
For most broadcasters, D2C should not be framed as a replacement strategy. A direct streaming service can sit beside existing distribution channels and serve a different purpose. Broadcast and partner channels can continue to provide mass reach, while D2C provides a branded digital destination for deeper engagement.
This can work through catch-up content, digital-first shows, regional content, special events, archive programming or niche audience segments. The right model depends on rights, audience behavior and commercial goals.
Content and Monetization Options
A broadcaster’s D2C service can include live channels, catch-up programming, clips, long-form shows, specials, documentaries, local coverage, community programming and archives. Monetization may include advertising-supported access, subscriptions, pay-per-view events or hybrid models. For more detail, see D2C monetization models.
Audience Data, Rights and Devices
One of the strongest reasons for broadcasters to consider D2C is first-party audience data. A direct service can help show who is watching, which content drives repeat visits, what devices audiences use and which offers convert.
Broadcasters should also review rights carefully before launch and align device strategy with viewing behavior. Connected TV is often important for long-form and premium programming, while mobile and web may matter for news, clips, catch-up access and younger audience segments.
Build, Buy and Risk Considerations
A D2C service can struggle if the content offer is unclear, rights limit the available library or the monetization model does not match audience expectations. For a wider risk review, see common D2C streaming risks. Broadcasters also need to decide whether to build internally or use a platform, which is covered in build vs buy a D2C streaming platform.
How Enghouse Direct-to-Consumer Fits
Enghouse Direct-to-Consumer helps broadcasters, sports organizations and content owners launch branded streaming services for live and on-demand video. It supports direct monetization, first-party audience data and reliable viewing experiences across web, mobile and connected TV.
Explore Enghouse Direct-to-Consumer to review how a branded D2C streaming platform can support live and on-demand video services.
Broadcasters Need a Clear Role for D2C
D2C is strongest for broadcasters when it has a clear role in the wider distribution mix. It should not simply copy what already exists in linear or partner channels. Instead, it should add something the broadcaster cannot easily deliver elsewhere, such as a direct data relationship, deeper content access, digital-first programming or a more flexible branded experience. That clarity helps internal teams understand why the service exists and how success should be measured.
Catch-Up and Archive Content Can Create Added Value
Broadcasters often have content that can continue to create value after its original airing. Catch-up viewing, special programming, local coverage, documentaries and archives can all support a branded streaming destination. These assets can help the broadcaster extend the life of programming and give audiences a reason to return beyond the live schedule. The service does not need to depend only on live channels to have value.
D2C Can Support Commercial Experimentation
A broadcaster can use D2C to test new packages, content segments and commercial models with more direct feedback. Advertising-supported access may fit some content, while premium programming, events or specialist libraries may support paid models. The important point is to connect the offer to audience behavior and rights. D2C gives broadcasters more flexibility to learn what works before scaling the model.
Internal Alignment Matters
Broadcaster D2C projects often involve programming, digital, commercial, rights, marketing and technology teams. If those teams are not aligned, the service can become fragmented. The strongest launches usually have shared ownership of the audience goal, the content plan and the commercial model. D2C works best when it is treated as part of the broadcaster’s business strategy, not only as a digital add-on.
D2C Can Help Broadcasters Serve Specific Audience Segments
Broadcasters often serve diverse audience groups, and not every segment is equally well served by a linear schedule. D2C can help create services for regional viewers, language communities, local audiences, niche programming or digital-first formats. These services can be measured and improved directly, giving broadcasters a clearer view of where engagement and commercial value are developing.