This document appears to be notes about a trip to Honduras involving two people, Chabela and Jazmin, with brief notes for each of four days. Photos related to the trip may have also been included or referenced.
Year 2013 will go down in history as the year of the big risk in Indian television and media. Whether it was with big jump into cable TV digitisation or in the area of experimenting with new programming formats or working on changing the status quo in TV ratings or in battling the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India’s (TRAI's) ad cap, the year saw everyone playing a long hand. India’s economic growth slowed down; inflation went on the rampage as did the dollar when it appreciated drastically against the rupee, but the industry took things in its stride.
Year 2013 will go down in history as the year of the big risk in Indian television and media. Whether it was with big jump into cable TV digitisation or in the area of experimenting with new programming formats or working on changing the status quo in TV ratings or in battling the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India’s (TRAI's) ad cap, the year saw everyone playing a long hand. India’s economic growth slowed down; inflation went on the rampage as did the dollar when it appreciated drastically against the rupee, but the industry took things in its stride.
India entertainment-and-media-outlook-2013vaibhav Dalvi
India's entertainment and media industry is likely to touch a size of Rs 2.25 lakh crore by 2017, on the back of cable TV digitisation, growth in subscription payments and robust advertising revenues, according to a report.
In 2012, the size of the entertainment and media industry stood at Rs 96,500 crore, clocking a year-on-year growth of 20 per cent, according to the report jointly prepared by CII and consultancy firm PwC.
"This growth is driven by the introduction of cable TV digitisation, continued growth of regional media, continued strength of the filmed entertainment sector, fast increasing new media businesses and transparency," CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee said.
Overall, the Indian E&M industry is on the cusp of a strong phase of growth, backed by rising consumer payments and advertising revenues across all sectors, the report said.
The report emphasises on innovation as the key for companies in the sector to achieve consistent growth. Indian E&M businesses, like their peers abroad, will need to raise their game in operational agility and customer insight, it said.
"Innovation should be seen as an important enabler to get closer to consumers and profitably deliver relevant content and services," Leader Entertainment & Media Practice at PwC India Smita Jha said.
Echoing similar sentiments, Banerjee said: "We believe that innovation - faster, better, more efficient, thinking out of the box (and within the box) - would be one of the game changers in this space".
The report titled 'India Entertainment & Media Outlook 2013' pegs the industry growth at a CAGR of 18 per cent in 2012-2017 and estimates it to touch Rs 2,24,500 crore by 2017.
Driven by digitisation, the country's television market grew at 13 per cent with revenues of Rs 38,300 crore in 2012
Outcome Based-Innovation – Berlin Lean StartUp Meetup 17.10.2014Anton Skornyakov
Learn how to understand what customers value about your potential product. Introducing the Job-To-Be-Done concept and the deeper level of the outcomes for each job.
Important to understand concepts for product owners, CPO, anyone who has impact on which features a product or service are going to be implemented.
India entertainment-and-media-outlook-2013vaibhav Dalvi
India's entertainment and media industry is likely to touch a size of Rs 2.25 lakh crore by 2017, on the back of cable TV digitisation, growth in subscription payments and robust advertising revenues, according to a report.
In 2012, the size of the entertainment and media industry stood at Rs 96,500 crore, clocking a year-on-year growth of 20 per cent, according to the report jointly prepared by CII and consultancy firm PwC.
"This growth is driven by the introduction of cable TV digitisation, continued growth of regional media, continued strength of the filmed entertainment sector, fast increasing new media businesses and transparency," CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee said.
Overall, the Indian E&M industry is on the cusp of a strong phase of growth, backed by rising consumer payments and advertising revenues across all sectors, the report said.
The report emphasises on innovation as the key for companies in the sector to achieve consistent growth. Indian E&M businesses, like their peers abroad, will need to raise their game in operational agility and customer insight, it said.
"Innovation should be seen as an important enabler to get closer to consumers and profitably deliver relevant content and services," Leader Entertainment & Media Practice at PwC India Smita Jha said.
Echoing similar sentiments, Banerjee said: "We believe that innovation - faster, better, more efficient, thinking out of the box (and within the box) - would be one of the game changers in this space".
The report titled 'India Entertainment & Media Outlook 2013' pegs the industry growth at a CAGR of 18 per cent in 2012-2017 and estimates it to touch Rs 2,24,500 crore by 2017.
Driven by digitisation, the country's television market grew at 13 per cent with revenues of Rs 38,300 crore in 2012
Outcome Based-Innovation – Berlin Lean StartUp Meetup 17.10.2014Anton Skornyakov
Learn how to understand what customers value about your potential product. Introducing the Job-To-Be-Done concept and the deeper level of the outcomes for each job.
Important to understand concepts for product owners, CPO, anyone who has impact on which features a product or service are going to be implemented.