The Hidden Cost of IPTV Reseller Panel Session Concurrency Limits for Shared Houses
A student house has 6 people. They share one British IPTV subscription. Your panel allows 3 concurrent streams. Three people watch. Three people can't. Arguments start. The subscription gets cancelled.
Here's the thing: shared houses are a massive market for British IPTV . Students, young professionals, and house-shares all want one subscription for multiple people. An IPTV Reseller Panel with rigid concurrency limits loses this market entirely. I've watched a reseller lose a 6-person student house because his IPTV Reseller Panel had a hard 3-stream limit with no upgrade path.
What actually works is an IPTV Reseller Panel with tiered concurrency limits and the ability to purchase additional streams. A good British IPTV panel lets you offer "Shared House" plans with 6 or 8 concurrent streams at a higher price point.
Real scenario: A British IPTV reseller configured his IPTV Reseller Panel with four concurrency tiers: Solo (1 stream), Couple (2 streams), Family (4 streams), Shared House (6 streams). The Shared House tier was his highest-margin product within 3 months.
The pattern that keeps showing up is this: resellers who offer high-concurrency plans capture the shared accommodation market. Resellers who don't lose entire houses to competitors who do.
That said, don't set concurrency so high that multiple households share one subscription. 6 streams is reasonable for a house of 6. 20 streams is a commercial abuse.
Honestly, ask your provider: "What's your maximum concurrent streams per account?" If the answer is less than 6, you're leaving the student market untapped.