New, redesigned Hooq interface designed for Pinoy mobile users

Hooq officials at the launch with brand ambassador Megan Young (3rd from right): marketing head Sheila Paul, content and programming head Jeff Remigio, country manager Jane Cruz-Walker, CEO Peter Bithos, content officer Krishna Rajagupalan, Ravi Vora
Hooq officials at the launch with brand ambassador Megan Young (3rd from right): marketing head Sheila Paul, content and programming head Jeff Remigio, country manager Jane Cruz-Walker, CEO Peter Bithos, content officer Krishna Rajagupalan, Ravi Vora
New interface has more close-ups of faces because people tend to click on those.

With more people viewing video content on their mobile devices, companies offering premium video-on-demand services are sitting up and taking notice. In fact, Hooq, Asia’s first and largest service, recently launched a new hybrid model in the country. It will initially be available on the Android platform.

The new app, with all its features, is the result of nearly nine months of development by Hooq’s in-house team, based on how viewers consume content.

“We noted how people rarely swipe left or right to view content on their mobile devices,” Peter Bithos, Hooq chief executive officer, told select members of the press.

“If they’re viewing on their phone, they use their thumbs to swipe up and down. That’s what the new interface allows them to do.”

Posters for TV shows and movies are bigger and feature more faces because viewers respond to faces. They click on them, he said. Thus the Hooq team had to come up with new posters, but before they could upload them on the app, they had to get the approval of the respective TV and movie studios.

Team of designers

“We actually have a team of designers in Indonesia tasked to redesign these posters. Studios don’t always agree with the first design, but they give suggestions on what to improve or feature, so thatís what we work on,” Bithos said.

He added that the new app is totally different from when it was first launched a year and a half ago: “The new hybrid model is a result of what we have learned over the past year after studying usage patterns and speaking to numerous customers and understanding what they want in a video-on-demand service.”

Still undecided? Watch the pilot episodes of over 200 local and foreign TV series like “Supergirl” before deciding to subscribe.

 

Unlike other similar services that allow non-subscribers to access their library for free but usually for just a month, Hooq has made the pilot episodes of over 200 TV shows free for unlimited viewing.

“If they like the pilot, they might be inclined to subscribe to Hooq. We realized that not everyone can shell out a monthly fee, so now we also offer a ‘sachet product’ where they have access to all our content for just P59, for seven days,” Bithos said. “We’re the first to offer this kind of service in Asia, and probably the world.”

The Singapore-based Bithos used to work at Globe Telecom and knows the buying habits of Filipinos. He is even familiar with the Filipino term ìtingi,î or our penchant for buying in small quantities.

“We believe this will be a win-win strategy for both our customers and our business, as it allows the customers to try the service and content before they decide to purchase. At the same time, we have the opportunity to reengage customers whenever we introduce our latest titles, outside of the free trial period,” he said.

Hooq is a start-up joint venture established in January 2015 by Singtel, Sony Pictures Television and Warner Bros. It currently operates in the Philippines, Thailand, India and Indonesia. Visit www.hooq.tv.

 

 

 

Hooq ambassador Megan Young
Hooq CEO Peter Bithos

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