*By Madison Alworth* Media company Philo recently closed a new $40 million funding round, part of which will be used to increase the OTT platform's visability. "It will enable us to do a bigger marketing push than we have for the service in the past, " CEO Andrew McCollum said in an interview on Cheddar Tuesday. The goal, he went on to explain, is to "get the word out a little bit more broadly." Philo also increased accessibility to the service by launching on applications on Apple TV and Amazon Fire TV. "That helps a lot because it means more people can get Philo and watch it on their connected TV of choice," said McCollum. Philo, which is also using part of its latest investment to grow its engineering and product teams, has raised over $90 million to date and is hungry for ways to stand out in the increasingly crowded OTT space. Currently, the basic package from the skinny bundle provider costs $16 a month for 40 entertainment and lifestyle channels, and $20 a month for 49 channels. And despite a trend of increasing prices in the market, McCollum assured Philo's rate would remain the same. "I don't know if I would call it a bait and switch, but some of these other services seemed to have launched with prices that they are having trouble maintaining," said McCollum. "We've always tried to take a very different approach, where we want to give customers a very low price and a really good value. And we also want to be able to stand behind that and have it be sustainable." Currently Philo is available on Roku, Apple TV, Fire TV, and any Internet-connected computer or phone. For the full segment, [click here.](https://cheddar.com/videos/philo-raises-additional-40-million-in-series-c)

Share:
More In Business
How Technology is Getting Banking Ready for the Future
From moving finances online to the new ways we'll be getting cash, Ray Hatch, the Vice President of Enterprise Solutions Vertical Markets at Comcast Business explains how the banking industry is getting ready for the future.
The Best Savings For Senior Citizens
Neil Wertheimer, deputy editor for the AARP Bulletin and The Magazine, talks about some of the highlights from this year's list of 99 Great Ways to Save.
Load More