New Buy Online module
I'm Dan Taylor, Executive Editor for TV and iPlayer and part of my job is ensuring the TV programmes the 91Èȱ¬ commissions and produces are as discoverable as possible online.
As well as giving information about when our programmes are broadcast on 91Èȱ¬ TV and Radio and when they are available in 91Èȱ¬ iPlayer we also want to let users know when they are available to buy or access on a commercial basis.
We therefore provide a module on our programme pages which shows the commercial availability of that programme and links through to product pages which list the various formats and suppliers.
Last October Roly Keating wrote about improvements to 91Èȱ¬ Online's Buyer's Guide/Commercial Availability feature on the About the 91Èȱ¬ blog.
Today I'm updating on further improvements we've recently made to the feature.
The motivation remains the same: help licence fee payers to find the programmes their licence fee helped create, even when they are no longer on television, radio or 91Èȱ¬ iPlayer.
So, what's changed and why?
Firstly, a more common sense label: 'Buy Online' replaces the rather stuffy 'Commercial Availability'.
Secondly, a new design where the product page that lists the availability of a programme in different formats inherits the styling of the original programme page (e.g. Doctor Who).
Thirdly, the addition of links to digital download and on demand streaming services such as and alongside links to physical formats (CD, DVD and Blu-ray).
We carried out extensive user testing during the development cycle to make sure that the new presentation made sense to users and tweaked the designs and labelling accordingly.
Future plans include the integration with the Episode Guide on 91Èȱ¬ programme pages so you can see at a glance which series and episodes are available to buy online.
We'll also be continuing to add new products and suppliers to make the most comprehensive possible view of 91Èȱ¬ programme availability.
Dan Taylor is Executive Editor, 91Èȱ¬ TV & iPlayer.
Comment number 1.
At 5th Dec 2012, Stuart Ian Burns wrote:Will you also be pro-actively adding scheduling/programming information for items which are available commercially? Plus, will you be adding all of the schedule information gathered in the 91Èȱ¬ Genome project. It really would be excellent to look at a random date in the 70s and see what was on through the programme infrastructure. How about additional links to non-91Èȱ¬ products like films on Buy Online so we can see if they're streamable on Lovefilm after they've dropped from the iPlayer.
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Comment number 2.
At 5th Dec 2012, Briantist wrote:Does it work with Invisible Hand?
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Comment number 3.
At 5th Dec 2012, Dan Taylor-Watt wrote:@Stuart. Thanks for your questions. Yes, we're in the process of adding programme pages for archive programmes with commercial availability (e.g. Pennies from Heaven). Re: the schedule information gathered in the 91Èȱ¬ Genome project, unfortunately it doesn't yet have the brand/series/episode structure needed to integrate with the programmes infrastructure although that's something I hope we'll be able to achieve in the future. Linking to non-91Èȱ¬ products came out of the user testing as something users didn't expect the 91Èȱ¬ to do, although that's something we could revisit if they start telling us they would expect it / find it useful.
@Briantist. I believe InvisibleHand is designed to work with retail sites so wouldn't work on 91Èȱ¬ Online, although it looks like it works with some of the supplier sites we link to.
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Comment number 4.
At 5th Dec 2012, Sue_Aitch wrote:Thank you for this: I am boycotting Amazon at the moment so it's good to have the choices.
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Comment number 5.
At 5th Dec 2012, alaninbelfast wrote:From a transparency point of view, how do you select the suppliers? or how do suppliers register to be included? Is there guidance on how large or established they have to be, or how wide a range they need to carry to qualify?
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Comment number 6.
At 5th Dec 2012, DBOne wrote:@5 alaninbelfast Try following the link on the word 'suppliers' from the arcticle: /programmes/products/suppliers
It describes how to apply and what criteria are used.
There is a link providing this information from the product page on the top far right, see: /programmes/products/16325
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Comment number 7.
At 5th Dec 2012, Stuart Ian Burns wrote:@Dan_Taylor Thanks for you thorough reply. I had wondered about channels which aren't listed already on the programme system now, especially in the radio area. I expect that will cause a few issues.
Not sure if this is the right place, but while I'm on the topic, some of the Doctor Who pages have the wrong logo on them due to season slippage. Season 11, despite being Pertwee should have the Diamond logo:
/programmes/p00pn9fq
Season 18 should have the neon logo:
/programmes/p00s64fm
Thanks however for fixing the TV Movie:
/programmes/p00t8qnw
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Comment number 8.
At 12th Dec 2012, James Aslett wrote:@Stuart Ian Burns: I asked someone about the Doctor Who logo issue and I hope the response received helps understand why this decision was made.
'It’s an interesting one. For the older seasons of Doctor Who (1963 – 1989 and the TVM in the 1990s) we assigned each Doctor a logo. We chose the logo which our audience most identified with that Doctor. So, for Jon Pertwee’s era we gave him the logo that was ‘his’ throughout all but his final 5 stories – i.e. season 11.
Similarly, for Tom Baker’s era we assigned him the ‘diamond logo’ which had been ‘his’ for all but one of his seven seasons.
It took a lot of work with our colleagues to ensure we could use ‘old’ branding but we hope it helps immerse our audience in the years which these extensive pages cover. We’ll be adding a huge amount of content to these sections and we may review the branding. Our current approach is designed in part to ‘take people back’ and give them a flavour of that Doctor’s era, but I know it’s not a precise science and some fans who are aware of the branding intricacies may want a different approach. As I say, we’ve not finished with these pages – lots more content to go – so this issue may be revisited at some point in the future.'
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Comment number 9.
At 12th Dec 2012, Marie wrote:I'd love to be able to access 91Èȱ¬ programs iplayerbeven for a fee. Is there any way to do so in the US?
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