Move your BVODy

BVOD is forcing an evolution in the Australian ad industry. Andy Gilroy explains what's going on.

Category

This was originally posted on the Peach website. Find out more about the rebrand from Peach to Cape.io.

Broadcast Video on Demand (BVOD) is an increasingly important platform for advertisers, providing a highly targeted and measurable way to reach audiences on their own terms. BVOD is catch-up TV or on-demand streaming of TV content. It allows viewers to watch their favourite TV shows, movies or sports events whenever they want, rather than being constrained by broadcast schedules. It is therefore unsurprising how much growth the channel has experienced. 

In 2022, BVOD revenue in Australia for the total financial year was $448 million, up 23.5 per cent year-on-year and is expected to grow in a similar fashion for 2023. 

BVOD is not to be confused with Subscription Video on Demand (SVOD) or Ad-based Video on Demand (AVOD). There are quite a few similarities between the three acronyms but the chart 

below is a breakdown of the Australian Platforms currently accepting video: 

BVOD: 

Broadcast Video on Demand

SVOD: 

Subscription Video on Demand

AVOD: 

Ad based Video on Demand

  • Free access

  • Live TV

  • Video on Demand

  • Ad funded

  • Web and App

  • Paid  access

  • Live TV

  • Video on Demand

  • Subscription & Ad funded

  • Web and App

  • Free / Paid access

  • Video on Demand

  • Subscription & Ad funded

  • Web and App

Measure, adapt and succeed

BVOD in particular can also be measured via VOZ, the Australian Television Measurement service, alongside  traditional Linear TV. Consequently, marketers can gain access to real-time data and analytics meaning campaigns can be optimised faster and quicker, allowing for greater control and maximum campaign effectiveness. 

This becomes even more important once the wider media landscape is also considered. The advertising industry is evolving fast, new channels are constantly being introduced and marketers need to make sure their media plans are making the most across all distribution options. An example of a new opportunity is the launch of AVOD streaming services. In November 2022, Netflix launched its international Ad supported service and in March 2023, Foxtel’s BINGE will also launch an ad-supported offering in Australia. 

Impact of the cost of living crisis

As the demands on consumers' disposable income increases, so too does the pressure to cut subscriptions to reduce costs. However, viewers have become accustomed to their various streaming services and may be resistant to cancel subscriptions completely. AVOD provides viewers a cheaper alternative to this, by moving to an ad-tiered subscription, viewing habits can stay relatively the same but at a cheaper price with the inclusion of ads. 

Tighter purse strings also means people will be going out less as a way to save and will rely more so on at home entertainment, further fueling the demand for BVOD and its contemporaries. Pay TV increased by 5.9% during Covid-19 according to Roy Morgan as people were contained inside during lockdown and the industry may expect a similar peak in the next year as recession hits. This is an opportunity advertisers should be ready to make the most of (budget permitting). 

What’s the BVOD challenge?

Part of the challenge stems from how BVOD is traded in Australia. The vast majority of BVOD is bought programmatically, whereas in markets such as the UK, content is sent directly to the platforms who manage their own inventory. So in essence, here in Australia BVOD has become a digital buy via multiple platforms and the content process has followed the buying process. That being the person setting up the media buy (normally a media agency) is the person responsible for getting the video file live.

Today, 68% of Australian homes have an internet-enabled TV*, which makes it even easier for viewers to watch on-demand via their large screen. Viewers have grown accustomed to seeing high quality ad content on TV, so BVOD playout is also expected to be at a similar level. However, so much of our industry is still not treating video ads on digital TV in the same vein as traditional TV.

Despite BVOD’s huge growth and inevitable passing of Linear TV in terms of volume, it is subjected to inconsistent and inefficient creative workflows — ignoring the best practice procedures developed with TV.

As Confucius said, "Study the past if you would define the future."

As an example, before a TV ad gets to air there are many many checks it must go through, from content clearance to audio and tech checks and finally the output to the exact specification for the specific broadcaster. All of this ensures appropriately placed ads which are substantiated in content and delivered in the highest quality playout specifications.

The solution

Well, if it isn’t your neighbourhood friendly ad delivery provider Peach. There’s less spiderwebs and multiverses with us but we do offer an easy answer to the BVOD problem. 

We have recognised the creative challenges and requirements introduced by an ever-increasing video ecosystem, which is why we have been helping creative and production agencies for over two years ensure that they can create all exact BVOD (SVOD and AVOD) files from a single TV or digital master to share directly with media agencies, ensuring broadcast-quality files reach the right device, including connected living room TVs, in perfect form.

*Source OZTAM & regional TAM Establishment Survey July 21- Dec 21/ Jan 2022 - June 2022

News

Stay ahead of the curve

Curious about the latest in marketing and advertising? Subscribe to our monthly Promarketers newsletter.

Jun 24, 2026

Why creative infrastructure is the real bottleneck in media orchestration

The disconnect between creative and media in programmatic advertising.

Jun 23, 2026

The creative-media singularity: Bridging open and closed ecosystems

We are entering the era of the Creative-Media Singularity, a state where creative intelligence and media execution fluidly combine across every single channel. Achieving it requires moving past the fragmented point solutions of yesterday.

Jun 12, 2026

Cape.io recognized among notable providers in creative advertising technologies overview around evolving market trends

New industry overview details the operational dynamics driving the creative-media singularity for B2C enterprise marketers

Jun 2, 2026

The new reality: Football marketing without FIFA rights

The 2026 World Cup is shaping up to be one of the biggest advertising moments of the decade. But for brands hoping to ride the wave of football fever, the line between “inspired by football” and “infringing on FIFA rights” has never been thinner. From unofficial sponsor campaigns to alcohol and gambling promotions, regulators and rights holders are watching closely. Here’s what marketers need to know before launching a football-themed campaign this summer.

May 26, 2026

How enterprises are actually adopting agentic AI

The shift to agentic AI isn't happening the way most vendors describe it. There's no cliff where enterprises suddenly ditch their AI wrappers and commit to full agent orchestration. Instead, they're moving through layers, testing frameworks with one team, keeping production systems stable on another.

May 26, 2026

Real-time ads in a regulated world

Understanding the real challenges of gambling & sports betting advertising in the US

May 8, 2026

Brazil votes. Cape.io already knows what that means.

Cape.io has powered Brazil's general elections for four editions, managing 500 channels and 155 million voters. Here's how we do it.

Apr 23, 2026

Agentic AI vs AI wrappers vs custom AI: How to choose your path

You're about to spend $500K on an AI initiative. You've got 3 options on the table, and they'll lead you to wildly different places. Pick wrong, and you're rebuilding in 18 months. Pick right, and you'll have a system that scales, costs less to maintain, and actually does what executives promised. The choice is between wrapping existing AI models, building custom AI solutions from scratch, or going agentic. Most teams don't understand the real trade-offs until they're locked into the wrong one.

Mar 30, 2026

Operationalizing AI in advertising: Why it must be embedded, not bolted on

Operationalizing AI in advertising isn’t about adding another tool to your stack. It’s about embedding intelligence into the systems that govern creative production, compliance, and delivery, so automation scales without creating more operational friction.

Mar 18, 2026

No more chocolate at breakfast? Navigating the new LHF ad rules this Easter

As ad compliance requirements evolve in 2026, UK confectionery brands face new restrictions on less healthy food (LHF) advertising. With the January 5 watershed now in effect, ad quality assurance systems must validate timing, placement, and product identifiability to avoid clearance failures this Easter season.

Get in touch

Let us show you what Cape.io can do.

Intelligent Campaign Automation

Cape.io connects up your team, DAM, ad servers, DSPs, tools, and more, so you don’t need to rip and replace.

Copyright © 2026 Cape.io all rights reserved

English

Get in touch

Let us show you what Cape.io can do.

Intelligent Campaign Automation

Cape.io connects up your team, DAM, ad servers, DSPs, tools, and more, so you don’t need to rip and replace.

Copyright © 2026 Cape.io all rights reserved

English

Get in touch

Let us show you what Cape.io can do.

Intelligent Campaign Automation

Cape.io connects up your team, DAM, ad servers, DSPs, tools, and more, so you don’t need to rip and replace.

Copyright © 2026 Cape.io all rights reserved

English