IBC2018: Broadcasters must partner with digital platforms like YouTube, WhatsApp, Twitter and Facebook to launch shows that attract young audiences, says Endemol Shine’s Peter Salmon.

Endemol Shine Group Chief Creative Officer Peter Salmon has recommended that the way forward for linear broadcasters is to come up with fresh alliances, working with both rivals and new platforms to create big entertainment shows.

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An “amazing time” for alliances: Peter Salmon

“Co-operation with a range of partnerships and the idea of sharing the totality of revenues is the way forward for media,” he said.

Salmon described the current market conditions as ‘liberating’, with more routes to market and different pipelines to fill. “What we are seeing is rival broadcasters working together using new sources of investment that never existed before – it’s an amazing time.”

Speaking at a Global Gamechangers conference session, Creating Content for the Connected Generation, Salmon said that one of the biggest scraps going on in media is the fight for the attention of young audiences. Forming partnerships with platforms that are popular with young viewers is the way forward for building successful new programme brands, said Salmon.

Operacion Triunfo

Operacion Triunfo

Source: RTVE.es

By way of example, Salmon pointed to the recent successful rebooting of a youth talent format Operacion Triunfo for Spanish public service broadcaster RTVE.

“The channel was concerned about losing young audiences so we rebooted this Fame Academy-style idea with alliances with platforms such as YouTube, WhatsApp, Twitter and Facebook. You have to go where the potential audiences wants to go in order to build successful entertainment,” said Salmon, who said this strategy was particularly important for young audiences.

“We successfully remade Operacion Triunfo in Spain for RTVE after a six-year gap with a 24/7 live stream on YouTube, and the help of Twitter, Facebook and Instagram promoting a series of live events.

“The result was that the audience in the channel’s key youth demographic grew by 300%. That’s the way forward for bigger brands – you have to go where those audiences want to go and work with a range of partners.”

Salmon also announced a new constructed reality series The Heist – to be launched at programme market MIPCOM next month. The series for pay TV broadcaster Sky is about a village community in the North of the UK which is tipped off that valuable treasure has been abandoned. If they can find it and hide the money – £250,000 – for two weeks from a team of detectives determined to track them down, they get to keep it.

Salmon said: “It’s a brilliant series from the makers of The Island and Hunted – and it has already been presold as a format on the international market.”

Salmon said that shows like this, with elements of narrative jeopardy, play well into the box set world.