Findings could have an impact on ad spending patterns
By Claire Atkinson
A group of the biggest names in TV research are set to
explode some commonly held myths about how consumers watch
TV. Their findings about what’s really going on in the
world of video consumption will be unveiled next week.
The survey is expected to reveal such things as which age
groups do the most media multi-tasking; whether younger
viewers are really shifting away from traditional TV and
how much commercial time viewers are exposed to.
The Council for Research Excellence, a cross-industry think
tank of top executives from agencies and TV networks, has
spent the past year executing a $3.5 million project called
the “Video Consumer Mapping Study.” The initiative is described
as, “the largest and most significant observational study
of media activity ever undertaken.”
Shari Anne Brill, Senior-VP director of at Carat, who has
been intimately involved with the project said, “People
are in fact watching commercials and not running screaming
from the room and younger viewers haven’t abandoned television.”
The major findings are being kept for a presentation on
Thursday, March 26.
The study was funded, in part, by Nielsen Media Research,
and was created to investigate commonly held, but perhaps
mistaken beliefs about TV viewings. The Council for Research
Excellence put together their wish-list of questions to
help better inform marketers about their fears on such
issues as DVR penetration.
Data was gathered via Webcams that tracked consumer behavior
in and out of the home. Participants were also tracked
by researchers through their daily lives. If consumers
were using media during private times such as bathroom
visits or when they were getting ready for bed, they were
asked to track that in a diary. The research council recruited
350 people from six TV markets and conducted two phases
of the survey in Spring and Fall 2008. It also offered
new media devices at a discount to people to try to measure
how interested people would be in certain products if their
prices came down.
Steve Sternberg, executive VP, director of audience analysis
at Magna, has also been heavily involved in the study.
He says the project didn’t examine specific content but
broke out online video versus mobile and DVR usage patterns
and what media people choose to focus on without trying
to multi-task.
“Multi-tasking is not a young person’s phenomenon,” said
Sternberg, “Traditional TV still accounts for the bulk
of viewing to all three screens.” The findings will turn
some traditional notions on their head. “The idea has been
that TV is a lean back medium and online is lean forward,
in reality which has fewer activities going on? We look
at attentiveness.”
The results could have some impact on this year’s upfront
and will no doubt create a topical environment ahead of
the Advertising Research Foundation’s annual convention
on March 30. That event has often been a forum for changing
the parameters of the upfront debate and back in 2006 saw
the first movement towards an embrace of the commercial
ratings currency.
While ad agencies and industry associations have looked
at consumer’s TV habits previously, this data is creating
a buzz on Madison Avenue because it comes from a single
source and is so comprehensive. The study was conducted
by Ball State University’s Center for Media Design and
Sequent Partners.
While the video consumer mapping study primarily looks
at video media, it also holds some interesting news for
other media such as print and outdoor.
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