Ep. 54: Paolo Pescatore - The Future of Media in a Converged World Podcast By  cover art

Ep. 54: Paolo Pescatore - The Future of Media in a Converged World

Ep. 54: Paolo Pescatore - The Future of Media in a Converged World

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

In episode 54 of "A Guy with a Scarf," host Carlo De Marchis interviews Paolo Pescatore, an industry analyst with over 25 years of experience covering telecommunications, media, and technology convergence.The Analyst's Unique ApproachPescatore has evolved from analyzing mobile devices to examining "the connected user in the converged world." His hands-on methodology is striking: he's converted his living room into an "experience center" with multiple 65-inch TVs, set-top boxes, and devices. "It drives my family insane. They never know which remote control to pick up," he admits, but this allows him to "practice what I preach."Innovation and Adoption ChallengesWhen discussing technological disruption, De Marchis remains skeptical about the next transformative device. "I still believe that the smartphone is the thing that changed our lives," expressing doubt about AR glasses achieving similar adoption. "I've seen a lot of fantastic technology but until they get adopted, like seriously or at a certain level, I don't see it really impacting."Media Fundamentals vs. Distribution RevolutionDespite technological advances, content remains king: "It's still all about unique storytelling, it's all about content and having programs people are willing to watch. That hasn't changed, that will always remain the same."However, distribution has transformed dramatically. Traditional broadcasters slow to embrace cloud workflows have been "left behind," while Netflix has "changed consumer behavior" fundamentally.Streaming Wars: Different Players, Different ChallengesNetflix stands alone: "Netflix has paved the way for everyone... everyone just felt okay, well Netflix has got the playbook, let's copy." Traditional media companies couldn't replicate this success due to legacy challenges.Amazon's strategy varies by region - "opportunistic" in Europe versus "all in on NFL" in the US.Apple faces awareness challenges despite quality investment: "For their part is just driving the awareness and letting people know of the content they have."The Return of the BundlePescatore predicted "the return of the big bundle but being delivered via IP now" - recognizing that while cord-cutting dismantled traditional packages, consumers still want comprehensive content delivered through modern infrastructure.Retention Over AcquisitionIn today's saturated market: "I'm of the opinion there aren't that many subscribers to go out there and acquire. Before you can even think about acquiring customers, all of the focus should be on customer retention."Creator Economy and Generational ShiftsUsing his three daughters (ages 11-17) as a focus group, Pescatore observes: "When you look at the young generation today, they're growing up in this culture where it's very much driven by those social platforms." This represents a fundamental shift in media consumption patterns.Future TechnologyDespite current skepticism, Pescatore is excited about smart glasses potential. The Ray-Ban Meta collaboration represents "version 1.0 which is gravitating extremely well with customers." He envisions devices "tethered to your watch, we may get to a point where we're not having to rely on the smartphone."Pescatore's analysis reveals an industry where technological capabilities exceed adoption rates, and success depends on understanding both legacy constraints and emerging opportunities in an increasingly converged ecosystem.

No reviews yet