Ligue 1+ will now have to prove that it can last. The former M6 boss is aiming for "1 million subscribers" by the end of the season. The coming weeks will be decisive. "It's now or never. After November, we hardly sell any more subscriptions ," says François Godard, an analyst for Enders Analysis. It's also important to retain viewers who haven't signed up for the year. Content broadcast outside of matches will influence the continuation of subscriptions. "The League should be cautious, because by presenting L1+ as a streaming content channel, it risks disappointing ," warns the analyst. However, he believes that the offer remains "better perceived" than DAZN's last year. "There's a patriotic element. The offer seems more legitimate. This could turn fans away from piracy ," he believes.
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Enders Analysis was mentioned in Business Insider on "Spotify is soaring, but its ad business is struggling. Here's why."
18 August 2025Spotify's ad-supported tier serves as an important on-ramp for its Premium business — plus the $1.9 billion in ad sales it brought in last year helps toward paying its substantial royalties to music labels and other content creators. However, Premium is the sacred cash cow: Enders Analysis estimates that gross profits for Premium are around 15 to 20 times those of the advertising tier.
François Godard was quoted in Les Echos on "Ligue 1+: why doesn't Canal distribute the football channel, like DAZN and Prime?"
18 August 2025"Canal+ could even seek to obtain more than just distribution," says François Godard, an analyst at Enders Analysis. If the group comes to the aid of the LFP this season, it may be by drawing down the rights for next season, this time exclusively, as it initially wanted to do.
François Godard was quoted in Investors' Chronicle on "TV stocks take five on new content as costs mount"
18 August 2025The history between Canal+ and Ligue 1 is complicated. But the decision to drop pricey Disney rights and instead do a deal with Warner for its Max streaming bundles is a clear sign that the company is paying much more attention to content costs than it did five years ago, said François Godard, an analyst at Enders Analysis.
At the same time, spending is being concentrated on the biggest sports properties, such as the English Premier League. “Secondary rights [such as Bundesliga and Serie A in France or La Liga in Spain] are attracting far less interest,” said Godard. “They think that people subscribe for the top product and that the rest is only nice to have.”
“Long-term, I do think streamers will take a bigger role in sport. Disney already has deep roots with ESPN and needs to expand reach in Europe,” said Godard. “Sports, especially league-based, are great for reducing churn – people keep coming back. It’s also a way to cross-promote other content.”
Enders Analysis was mentioned in the Financial Times on "Monzo plans UK mobile service as competition intensifies for big phone groups"
18 August 2025In 2024 the UK’s MVNOs, such as Tesco Mobile and Lebara, added 1.6mn customers to their networks, while the four largest traditional operators collectively lost 180,000 subscribers, according to research by Enders Analysis. That was the first year in history they had seen a decline.
François Godard was quoted in The Observer on "How wrestling got into the ring with networks and streamers"
18 August 2025Rogan’s interpretation is not quite right: viewers will have to pay to watch UFC fights, but as part of a monthly subscription, rather than through pay-per-view. It is a change of approach that has been coming for some time, according to François Godard, a media and telecoms specialist at Enders Analysis, a UK research house.
“Pay-per-view is perhaps not in terminal decline, but it is vanishing,” he said. “It emerged at a time when consumers were familiar with the idea of renting a tape or a disc of a movie. The public is less open to that now. The concept of renting a piece of content has all but disappeared.”
“There is nothing new here,” said Godard. “This was true of subscription TV, too. If you had to choose one piece of content, you’d choose sports. But the larger story is still one of fragmentation: most of those people who want to watch UFC on Paramount will probably want to watch other sports, and for that they still need other subscriptions.”
François Godard was quoted in The Telegraph on "Has the Premier League bubble burst?"
13 August 2025For the Premier League, this climate increasingly appears to be the new normal. “Eventually streamers will buy more football rights,” says Francois Godard from Enders Analysis. “But I see no reason why prices of football rights in the UK would increase now.”
“Youth viewing of sports has declined only at the margin – in sharp contrast with youth viewing of other TV,” notes Godard. “We see sports audie
For young fans, there are more alternative ways to follow matches than ever before. On the Sky Sports YouTube channel, fans can watch three-minute highlight packages of all matches – including 3pm kick-offs – within minutes of the games finishing. Such clips widen the Premier League’s reach and increase exposure for sponsors, Godard says.
Tech trends Q2 2025: Terminal velocity
12 August 2025Tech companies are approaching terminal velocity on capex, which will surpass a $500 billion annual run-rate in early 2026. Apple is out of position on AI; CEO Tim Cook has signalled a willingness to consider M&A yet also faces acute political strain in the US
Despite revenues surpassing $2 trillion in 2025, tech is in a fragile transition as most cloud growth is still not driven by gen AI—tariffs, uneven compute build-out and US economic impacts may deliver a bumpy landing in quarters ahead
European tech sovereignty is a mounting political issue, as the continent fights the White House on its regulatory red lines. The financial and cultural impacts of Europe’s lack of tech champions remain intractable