[opendtv] At Last, Television Ratings Go to College
- From: Tom Barry <trbarry@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: opendtv <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 29 Jan 2007 07:53:08 -0500
A NY Times articlel [free subscription req] though I saw it on AVS.
Maybe college towns like here in Gainesville FL may become a bit more
important to broadcasters now. Though it would be better if Nielsen
also measured the digital channels.
- Tom
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January 29, 2007
Advertising
At Last, Television Ratings Go to College
By LOUISE STORY
For decades, Nielsen Media Research has affixed the same value to every
college student watching television while away at school: zero. As a
result, industry executives have complained for years that shows
appealing to a younger audience have been underrated.
But, starting today, college students count.
Shows like “America’s Next Top Model” and “Family Guy” are expected to
see their ratings surge this week as Nielsen Media Research, a unit of
the Nielsen Company, includes the viewing of students living away from
home in its count for the first time.
In the TV world, a boost in Nielsen ratings often means a boost in
advertiser dollars, so the adjusted ratings are good news for networks
with high college viewership, like ESPN, Fox and CW.
Adult Swim, a block of adult programming on the Cartoon Network that
expects its 18- to 24-year-old audience to jump by 35 percent with the
new ratings, is so excited about the change that it ran an ad telling
viewers about it in mid-October.
“It’s going to validate what advertisers have always assumed, which is
that college students are watching our programming,” said Jeff Lucas, a
senior vice president at Comedy Central. Mr. Lucas said that the
network’s own research shows that “South Park,” “The Daily Show With Jon
Stewart,” and “The Colbert Report” have a large college audience.
It’s too early to know how much more advertisers will pay for shows with
larger audiences because of the college ratings. Network executives, of
course, said they expect to be paid for the higher ratings. If
advertisers decide to spend more on shows that demonstrate high college
viewership, TV networks may decide to dedicate more of their schedule
programming to college tastes.
The college ratings are the first of two major changes in the way
viewing habits are rated. In May, Nielsen will start releasing figures
on the number of people who actually watch commercials, separating them
from viewers who walk away or switch channels when the ads come on. The
potential impact of ad ratings on network revenue has not been calculated.
Nielsen’s move into colleges is its first step in an ambitious plan to
track TV viewing wherever and whenever it takes place. Long focused only
on viewing of home television sets, Nielsen is building portable meters
to track when people see TV in bars, restaurants, gyms, stores and other
places outside the home. And, within two to three years, Nielsen plans
to merge data from its online unit with its TV unit to calculate total
viewing on all media.
“The holy grail here is how to measure consumers as they go from TV to
iPod to cellphone and back,” said Alan Wurtzel, president of research
for NBC Universal.
But the first step — measuring students’ viewing of television — comes
with its own pitfalls. College students still watch a significant amount
of television, spending three and a half hours a day tuned in on
average, about an hour less than all people on average, according to
Nielsen.
But college students are not watching only TV. They are also among the
most likely consumers to be browsing the Internet, watching streaming
video, text messaging on their cellphones and playing video games —
sometimes all at once.
“College students have the television on in the background at the same
time they undoubtedly have their computers on,” said Matt Britton, chief
of brand development for Mr. Youth, a marketing firm based in New York.
“They’re online — searching Facebook, doing research, shopping.”
Their media habits make them targets of marketers, but just how
attentive college students are while they are watching TV may give
advertisers pause about how much they can trust their viewing.
“The people meter just measures if the set is on and what they’re
watching. But are they doing their homework, are they talking to
friends; what else are they doing while the ad is showing?” said Brad
Adgate, senior vice president of research at Horizon Media, an ad-buying
agency.
Still, Mr. Adgate said, advertisers may increase their payments to
networks with large college audiences because of the perceived lifetime
value of the college market. “If you can get them using your product at
age 20, they could be using it for the next 60 years,” he said.
Until now, the 18- to 24-year-olds counted by Nielsen were mainly those
who did not attend college, attended part-time or still lived at home.
During holiday and summer breaks, of course, many college students are
home and were counted by Nielsen at those times on their parents’
set-top boxes. (There are 10,000 households with Nielsen boxes tracking
their viewing, and from those households, Nielsen extrapolates national
viewing estimates.)
Over the last decade, several TV networks with shows aimed at young
people grew increasingly frustrated that college students were not
counted. About five years ago, Turner Broadcasting, which owns Cartoon
Network and TBS, approached Nielsen about the issue.
Over the next year, Nielsen held discussions with its clients who pay
for the ratings — the networks and the advertising agencies. As with
most tests of new offerings, Nielsen wanted a group of clients to pay
the costs of evaluating the college market. By 2003, Turner, WB, CBS,
MTV Networks, Fox and ESPN agreed to pay, and Nielsen started pilot tests.
To add college students to the ratings, Nielsen contacted the roughly
450 families in its sample who had children in college. About 30 percent
of those families agreed to let Nielsen put a meter in the college
student’s dorm room or off-campus apartment. Some families did not agree
simply because their child did not have a TV set at school.
The change will affect the perception of viewing behavior, particularly
for viewers 18 to 24. College students, for example, watch more
television during the day, when young people not in college are more
likely to be at work.
The prime-time shows the college and noncollege population picks to
watch are also not always the same. While “Grey’s Anatomy” and “The
Simpsons” were popular in November on and off campus among 18- to
24-year-olds, shows like “Ugly Betty” and “America’s Next Top Model”
were far more popular among college students than among other people
that age.
In fact, the No. 1 one show for college males in November was Comedy
Central’s cartoon show, “Drawn Together.” According to a Nielsen
analysis, “Drawn Together” would have had an average audience of about
435,000 18-to 24-year-olds in November. But, since college students were
not counted, the Nielsen rating in that age group totaled only 272,000
people that month.
Some TV networks are planning to spend more money marketing their shows
on college campuses this spring since they will now see results in the
ratings. Mr. Britton of Mr. Youth said two broadcast networks had
contacted his firm about increased marketing on college campuses.
MTV already operates a network, called mtvU, that is seen exclusively on
college campuses. MTV has found advertisers like Ford interested in
specifically focusing on college students on the 750 campuses where mtvU
is seen in places like dormitories, fitness centers and dining halls.
Now that Nielsen is tracking college viewing, more college-focused
networks or programming could be developed and sold to advertisers.Amy
Adams, a freshman at Muskingum College in Ohio, said she and her
roommate watch movies together on ABC Family and TNT on weekends. Other
people in her dorm watch far more TV than she does, Ms. Adams said.
“As I walk down the halls, I always hear the TV on in someone’s
bedroom,” she said. “Even in the mornings, too.”
Aviva Halperin, a senior at the University of Pennsylvania in
Philadelphia, said watching TV is a social event for her and her
housemates. They watch “24” every week, and they like to watch it when
broadcast, using commercial breaks as a time to chat.
“I know this sound really silly, but ‘24’ feels real because it’s close
to our own fears, and it feels more real when I watch it in real time,”
Ms. Halperin said. “When I watch it on TiVo, it’s not as gripping.”
The lack of TiVo and other digital video recorders is another advantage
of student viewers. Young people are more likely to channel surf and
fast-forward to skip commercials, Nielsen’s research shows. But perhaps
because of their cost, DVRs are owned by only about 3 to 4 percent of
college students, according to Student Monitor, a college student
research firm based in Ridgewood, N.J. (About 13 percent of American
households have DVRs.)
On the downside for broadcasters, college students, like many people
their age, also spend a fair share of their day playing video games —
nearly two hours a day, not including online games, according to Nielsen.
Still, college students last week said they thought it was about time
they were counted by Nielsen.
“It’s kind of silly that we weren’t,” said Beth Lovisa, a senior at the
University of Pennsylvania. “It’s so not true that we don’t watch any.”
--
Tom Barry trbarry@xxxxxxxxxxx
Find my resume and video filters at www.trbarry.com
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