Shemaroo last month tied up with direct-to-home operators (DTH) Airtel and Tata Sky to launch Miniplex and the company said it will also look at tying up with other DTH players.
"DTH has now emerged as a large subscription platform. So we started initially with Airtel and then with Tata Sky, and over a period, we will make this service available to many platforms as possible, where the paid subscriber base has some scale," Shemaroo Entertainment Director Hiren Gada told PTI.
"By next December we should be present on many more platforms. There are four other (DTH) players. There are cable operators, particularly in the phase I, phase II markets where the digitisation has already taken place or the cities where the process is taking place, so that is another set of people that we are looking to work with," he said.
The company would be focusing on multi-system operators (MSOs) first as they have scale in terms of numbers and have technology back-end to support a paid platform.
Miniplex is an ad-free movie service, where the company will premiere one movie every Friday, besides showing curated movies through the week.
Miniplex will predominantly showcase Hindi movies but the company will look at some cherry-picked regional content as well, going forward.
On the rationale for launching Miniplex, Gada said, "About
150-200 Hindi films release in a year. We have seen that the top 40 movies of the year, they are well discovered and people see them in theatres. Apart from the top few movies of the year, audiences end up missing most movies in theatres. Very often TV channels too don't carry many such movies and so consumers don't have access to them."
The company's digital business has been growing at a brisk pace and contributes around 16 per cent of the revenues, compared to 3 per cent, four or five years ago.
Last year the digital business clocked in a revenue of Rs 37 crore and this year in the first half, it has generated over Rs 29 crore.
The company's digital business includes the Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) services of mobile operators, transaction models like iTunes, subscription model with over the top player HOOQ and free to consumer ad-supported model like Youtube.
Gada said there are no plans at present for the company to launch its own digital platform.
"We are technology and platform agnostic. Our focus is to have our content on as many platforms as possible," he said.
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