
A qualified chartered accountant, Manchanda’s association with the media started in the mid-1980s when he joined NDTV, serving on the board of directors. In 2005, he along with Rajdeep Sardesai, Raghav Bahl and Harish Chawla set up IBN18. He continues to serve as joint managing director of IBN18.
What helped push growth was Den’s 50:50 joint venture with Star India, set up in January 2008, called Star Den Media. This is a content aggregator that leverages Den’s distribution network and distributes leading channels of the Star TV Group and other broadcasting houses. This tie-up, and the commission that comes with distributing Star’s channels, has helped Den improve financials. Revenues rose from Rs 719 crore in FY2008-09 to Rs 926 crore in FY2009-10, and net profit doubled to Rs 30 crore. Den Networks’s IPO in November 2009 mopped up Rs 350 crore.
Manchanda has interesting plans. “In the next two years, we want to digitise our 11 million analogue subscriber base, and increase those numbers to 20 million,” he says. The shift to digital is being pushed by competition from direct-to-home (DTH) players, which have been gaining ground on the basis of better quality broadcasts and competitive pricing. Manchanda acknowledges the threat, but is firm in his belief that cable TV will prosper. “I am a strong believer in cable,” he says. “It has lots more to offer, lots of services yet to come in.”
Even on the cable front, Den Networks is up against more established companies such as Wire and Wireless, Hathway, Incablenet and Sumangali Cable, which continue to draw in subscribers. Manchanda, 49, will have his hands full in keeping the growth engine going.