
In January 2001, Streaming Media Research released its groundbreaking report on the "Cost of Streaming Services." Before this report, the cost of such services as encoding, hosting, and network storage was a murky, unknown territory. According to our analysis, more than half the companies purchasing streaming services were paying too much! Thousands of IT managers, entreprenuers, webmasters and general businesspeople have used the deep and detailed data in this report to guide their purchase decisions.
Eight months is a long time in this business – especially when there’s a stock market implosion going on. Many providers covered in the First Edition have gone out of business. A number of new competitors have jumped into the fray, generally undercutting the prices of the established players. If you are looking to buy streaming services today, you can’t base your decision on January’s prices.
Streaming Media Research is proud to announce the availability of the Second Edition of our "Cost of Streaming Services" report, containing the very latest, up-to-date rate cards from established providers as well as the leading newcomers, along with Rich Seidner’s analysis of the cost and pricing structures underlying the rates and the drastic changes the industry has undergone since the date of the First Edition.
The Second Edition of the "Cost of Streaming Services" report is available now for $245.
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It's a terrifically valuable report because it provides insight and transparency into the pricing of streaming services.
Stan Woodward, former VP Business Services, Yahoo!
I wanted to thank you for the report; it was great. It reconfirmed the
numbers that I had received as "back of the envelope/rules of thumb" provided by colleagues. You can tell that a lot of hard work went into putting the report together.
Jeffrey S. Litvack, Executive Director, New Media, Museum of Television and Radio
I found the paper to be insightful and well researched, accounting for many of the industry ills that I had noticed but never written down. I thought that paper was 'on the money.'
Michael Fay, Director, Streaming Media Services, e-media
buy now