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| Gary Arlen |
NEW YORK:
Beyond NBC’s
spectacular ratings
for its broadcast
and cable coverage
of the Summer Olympics
is the equally awesome
data on how many
viewers tuned into the
Games via online and
wireless devices. That huge viewership is
prelude to the next plateau in the always
contentious topic of measuring viewers in the
cross-platform era.
For years, TiVo, Rentrak, BlueFin, comScore, Centris and other researchers have
been crowing about their abilities to identify
real—and real-time—viewership recently
across platforms. Nielsen’s acquisition in
July of Vizu, a San Francisco technology firm
specializing in real-time ratings for online
advertisers, escalates and expands the competitive
measurement landscape.
Underlying all these efforts—including
the recent assault on second-screen viewing
measurement—are the needs of programmers
and advertisers to use new “big data”
capabilities to tailor their delivery to the latest
whims of viewers who are watching on
any platform. In the process, researchers are
identifying emerging viewing patterns.
For example, Centris Marketing Services
Senior Vice President John High said his company is beginning to see the
migration to streaming in households that
have a pay-TV subscription. Centris’ initial research
finds that people are spending more
time with online streaming, but he admitted
that the industry still “needs a reliable process”
to analyze how viewers “spend time in
conjunction with other things they do.”
The Nielsen Co. is also trying to accelerate
its multiplatform measurement process.
“We’re encouraging content providers
and advertisers to add ‘tags’ to their video
[when it is streamed online] so that we can
measure it wherever viewers see it,” said
Scott Brown, senior vice president, engineering
and strategic relations at Nielsen. He said that the Vizu deal will let Nielsen integrate
real-time reporting capabilities into
its online ratings services
through its Nielsen Cross-
Platform Campaign Ratings
and Brand Effect service,
which includes TV ratings.
Brown also pointed out
the complexity of the new
on-demand environment,
noting that, for example,
commercials served during
a VOD viewing may be different
from the ones carried
during the original telecast.
Such changes go beyond the
current “C3” standard, which
tallies viewers who watch a
show on their digital video
recorders within three days after the original
showing.
Second-screen viewing—which can include
interactive ad responses on a tablet
or smartphone coordinated with a TV commercial—
further complicates the measurement
process. Real-time ordering via the
handheld device is itself a measure of success
for advertisers, but programmers will
want to know more about how the process
affects the flow of viewers while watching
the show.
“We assume that the second screen is
going to become a more important factor,”
Brown said.
HOW, NOT JUST WHAT, YOU WATCH
Cross-platform and multiplatform options
become more important to programmers
and advertisers when, as seen with the
Olympics, substantial viewing is done away
from the TV set.
For example, NBC says that its Olympics
videocasts served more than 150 million video
streams; of those, more than 65 million
were live streams. The network estimates
that NBCOlympics.com had more than 57
million visitors, who generated more than
1.9 billion page views across all platforms
(not all of them video streams)
during the games.
For the London games, usage averaged
111.4 live-streaming minutes per viewer on
the Web and 94.3 live-streaming minutes per
viewer on the mobile app, NBC says.
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| Nielsen People Meter |
Comcast Corp., majority owner of NBCUniversal,
separately reported that among its
subscribers, 1.5 million customers accessed
about 25 million video streams online and
via mobile devices during the Olympics.
Matt Strauss, Comcast senior vice president of digital
and emerging platforms, called it a
“watershed event.”
“Our focus is now taking the success
from the Olympics and taking it to fall TV
and other kinds of programming, primarily
sports, news and kids,” Strauss said an the interview
with TV Technology sister publication
Multichannel News.
Viewers’ embrace of nonlinear delivery
underscores the networks’ and advertisers’
demand for reliable measurement tools. The
data-based nature of on-demand viewing
and cross-platform services is pulling more
companies into the ratings mix.
In early August, a deal between Rentrak,
the media measurement firm, and iTVX, a
branded-entertainment analytics provider,
demonstrated the value of special-purpose
measurement. The companies teamed up
to create a service that will let brands and
programmers assess the impact when a TV
show uses a brand in a story line or in a demonstration.
Separately, Harris Interactive, which has
long focused on online behaviors, recently
developed systems to evaluate the impact of
interactive online video ads. It found, for example,
that 37 percent of Facebook app users
prefer pre-roll video ads compared to 63
percent who would rather initiate the video
ad or see it as mid-roll during a natural break
in the programming.
POSITIONING FOR THE
METRICS MIASMA
Like many researchers, Centris has come
up with its own lingo to describe audience
segmentation in the multiplatform era.
“Cord Non-Converter” is Centris’ term
for households that have never subscribed
to pay-TV service and use OTT and/or over-the-air TV to see video content. Among that
group (largely young/single viewers) Centris
found, a lower-than-average use of live
TV, which is falling fast.
This segment is rapidly
increasing its reliance on
streamed/downloaded
content. Centris found
that in late 2011, viewers
in this category spent 22
percent of their video time
watching streamed video;
by early 2012, they devoted
28 percent of their time
to such delivery, according
to the self-reported data in
the Centris study.
That share was less
than the “cord cutters,”
who without any cable/
satellite feed spent 41 percent of their viewing
time online in early 2012, compared to
the 6 percent online viewing time share in
all TV households with an Internet connection.
Centris has also identified a seasonality
factor in online viewing, similar to standard
TV tune-in patterns.
“We were surprised; we thought it was
more consistent,” said Centris’ High. “When
we started this, online viewing was growing
so fast. As it turns out, Internet viewing
is the same as HUT [Home Using Television]
levels.”
He acknowledged a “novelty effect” that
surfaced early in Centris’ research: People
who bought a Roku or similar Internet-TV
access device or started using game console
broadband connections to tune into
Internet videos spent more time with online
video for a while, until they found a way to
integrate viewing into their standard usage
patterns.
The challenge now is to integrate the various viewing access points, High says.
Centris, which tracks viewing largely for
multichannel video program distributors, has “had to bring in over-the-top
and VOD” to get a more accurate way
to measure the ways in which video is
consumed, he explains.
comScore, which has focused on
online analytics, represents another
crossover-data processer approach. For
example in comScore’s latest “top 10 online
video properties” roster, two of the
providers are offshoots of cable channels:
Viacom Digital (whose websites include
Comedy Central, MTV, Spike and TV Land)
and Turner Digital (CNN, HLN, TBS, tru-TV
and more).
comScore’s top 10 online video ad
sites include Hulu and ESPN, both of
which served “ads per viewer” (described
as “frequency”) at rates far exceeding
those of Google, the top provider by total
video ads.
From all these and other measurement
services, the competing avalanche of
data—and interpretations—will remain
both important and confusing for advertisers,
carriers and content providers.
But that won’t stop even more efforts to
figure out a reliable way to tally the eyeballs
and try to find out what viewers are
actually doing as they roam across digital
platforms.
Gary Arlen is president of Arlen
Communications LLC, a media/telcom
research firm. He can be reached at
GaryArlen@columnist.com.