Q&A: Ashley Highfield, head of BBC's Future Media and Technology unit

On 'BBC 3.0' and why iPlayer criticism is unfair...

By Andy McCue, 30 October 2007 11:08

COMMENT

How will the recent BBC cuts affect the BBC's Future Media and Technology department?
We are meeting three per cent annual efficiency targets, which will mean over the next five-year period a reduction in headcount of, gross numbers, around 180 staff reduction. With redeployment and natural churn we imagine that's going to be somewhere between 120 to 130 net redundancies. A large amount of that - around 65 plus of those are effectively as a result of the implementation of a tapeless BBC - the digital media initiative - so the impact is going to fall on areas which currently deal a lot with tape, which we'll have far less of in the BBC by 2012.

We are going to be creating jobs as well though. Actually what is going to happen in Future Media and Technology in the short term is a rise in headcount to fulfil all the ambitious plans for Creative Futures.

And what about new funding for BBC Future Media and Technology?
Future Media and Technology is going to be receiving in the next financial year [2008/09] about £50m of new funding to help deliver all of its ambitious plans like my news now, web 2.0, the next release of iPlayer and so on and so on. Not all of that money is going on the audience-facing stuff. A fair proportion is going on internal deployment of technology. A lot of the new investment is going into creating a digital BBC - the advantage being that anyone would be able to access any content the BBC is making anywhere inside the BBC. The cost of actually making new programming and the costs of getting our programming out to our audience, particularly on IP and on-demand platforms, will fall. So I'm spending a disproportionate amount of money on the infrastructure and behind the scenes re-engineering of the BBC.

With web 2.0 hype still at its peak you recently talked about 'web 3.0'. What exactly do you mean by 'web 3.0'?
The 1.0 is the basic, the digitisation of your business and the BBC, like many media companies, has not even done that yet. I think that the internal digital media initiative is our web 1.0 or BBC 1.0. Web 2.0 is the BBC's move into having a much more personalised website where people can freely and easily post and exchange their views with each other. It's a BBC that has very rich media right across its web offerings - embedded video everywhere you look. That's our 2.0.

The world of 3.0 I think is when the BBC maybe really comes to the fore again. The semantic web, the intelligent web, is one where the technology only takes you so far and Google's search engine still provides you with 100,000 answers pretty much irrespective of who you are or where you are. The web 3.0 world puts a layer on top of that you could call editorial. It says this is probably what you were actually looking at. It says we the BBC know who you are. We've built up a good relationship with you through CRM. We know you were looking for a cop show from the '60s well here's a really good one that we know you - because we know something about you - will enjoy.

It's the next evolution of the internet and I think it's one where the BBC, by combining technology and editorialising, packaging, aggregating, scheduling, selecting - all of those skills that we've had over the last 80 years - can actually come to the fore again to help people through what has been described as the cacophony of choice or the paradox of choice.

What are the future challenges for the BBC as it moves towards a digital future?
I think we have a range of challenges. I think that the world is moving incredibly quickly, our audiences are expecting things to be on their terms, they are increasingly fickle and therefore the speed of change has got to increase. My concern is either we can't adapt as quickly as we need to or the regulatory environment makes it hard for us to innovate and implement as quickly as we need to. I think the increasingly global landscape and the fact we are predominantly a UK player is affecting all UK players. The BBC website is number three in the UK. The two companies above us - Google and MSN - and the two companies below us, Yahoo! and eBay, are all the American giants. How we can adapt to that and operate on a global scale while still being predominantly funded through the UK licence, that's an issue for us. But I think that we have a world-class team within Future Media and Technology so I hope we will be able to stay ahead of the curve.

  • 1
  • 2

Comments

There are 5 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Karen Challinor

    intelligent metadata that inserts adverts depending on which country you are in

    so much for the world wide web being a force for global unification then

    but then if that were the case we could purchase software over the web and be charged the same for it regardless of which country we were in

    and I'm still looking forward to the first attempts to install any kind of DRM on a *nix machine, I have £5 that says it will be cracked and bypassed in under a week

    I'm just not sure who to pay it to

  2. 2. anonymous

    Highfield: "I'm a deep lover of Mac"
    This is a 'kissing babies in public' moment for Mr. Highfield who want to deflect any attention away from his relationship with the Microsoft mob.

    This statement is also consistent with a recent Podcast on the BBC's Backstage website - he starts an interview talking about Linux and Macs, but by the end he's only talking about Macs. He just can't bring himself to mention the 'L' word!

  3. 3. anonymous

    Why did the BBC not put iPlayer out to tender with cross platform support a contractual requirement? There are several companies that can provide this.

    The iPlayer project has been badly mis-managed.

  4. 4. anonymous

    An organisation as large as the BBC and they cannot get a decent offering out there for non-Microsoft users? Pardon me if I remain sceptical and deeply cynical.

    As I license payer I demand parity of esteem with any other computer user. Mr Highfield: you are not doing your job in my interests and I help pay your wages. Shape up or ship out.

  5. 5. Rory Choudhuri

    The most worrying thing about the entire interview?

    This is one of your agenda setters. This is a guy who's running the Beeb's IT strategy and its Future Media and Technology unit.

    And he admits, publicly, to owning a Zune?

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ