Audience Measurement: Listenership Viewership
Audience Measurement: Listenership Viewership
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Proposed since September 2010.
Audience measurement measures how many people are in an audience, usually in relation to radio listenership and television viewership, but also in relation to newspaper and magazine readership and, increasingly, web traffic on websites. Sometimes, the term is used as pertaining to practices which help broadcasters and advertisers determine who is listening rather than just how many people are listening. In some parts of the world, the resulting relative numbers are referred to as audience share, while in other places the broader term market share is used. This broader meaning is also called audience research. Measurements are broken down by media market, which for the most part corresponds to metropolitan areas, both large and small.
Contents
4.1 GRPs/TRPs
Methods
Diaries
The diary was one of the first methods of recording information. However, this is prone to mistakes and forgetfulness, as well as subjectivity. Data is also collected down to the level of listener opinion of individual songs, cross referenced against their age, race, and economic status in listening sessions sponsored by oldies and mix formatted stations. IBOPE was the first realtime service for audience measurement of the world, it started in So Paulo in 1942.
Electronic
See also: Nielsen ratings The audience measurement of U.S. television has relied on sampling to obtain estimated audience sizes in which advertisers determine the value of such acquisitions. According to The Television Will Be Revolutionized, Amanda D. Lotz states that during the 1960s and 1970s, Nielsen introduced the Storage Instantaneous Audimeter, a device that daily sent viewing information to the company's computers using phone lines and made national daily ratings available by 1973. Although the audimeters did not supply sufficient information regarding demographics of the audience, it did however allow Nielsen to establish diary reports that presented some insight on the audience. According to Lotz, the Nielsen sample included approximately 1,700 audimeter homes and a rotating panel of approximately 850 diary respondents. Nielsen was the controlling factor of audience measurement for national network television.[1] More recently, technology has been used to track listening and viewing habits. In the mid-2000s, networks cried foul, blaming Nielsen for inaccurate rating measurements. This public attention was just the beginning, as Nielsen implemented its automated Local People Meter (LPM) technology. The LPM marked the shift from active, diary based local measurement to more passive, meter-monitored measurement of local markets. Technologically, the LPM is very similar to the original Nielsen People Meter. The key advancement was that the LPM provided accurate measurements of particular local markets. The LPM system has also allowed the industry to measure year-round, rather than the quarterly "sweeps" periods. Researchers believed that the LPM more accurately reported the full range of programming viewers watched, including that while channel-surfing. Arbitron's Portable People Meter uses a microphone to pick up and record subaudible tones embedded in broadcasts by an encoder at each station or network. It has even been used to track in-store radio. Because of the internet, many businesses are no longer constrained to establishing sales to just their local markets, but alternatively can serve customers across much larger territories. The arising development of markets boosts the likelihood of offering low-occurrence niche items that would go through challenges in order to encounter the ideal customers in a specific area of markets. In his Journal of Advertising Research, author Chris Anderson remarks: "for some
internet-based businesses, locality no longer regulates the market." When consumers obtain access to a greater range of choices, they gravitate toward exercising those choices, awarding fewer of their "votes" to the big hits and more of their "votes" to specialized niche choices. Anderson argues that people always wanted more choices, but their desires previously were obscured by distributional bottlenecks imposed by cost or locality.
Software
New digital technologies have complicated in-home measurement systems, such as the DVR and are incompatible with a Nielsen box. Traditionally the Nielsen box was designed to register the frequency of the television signal in order to measure the channel being viewed, furthermore a DVR always produces the same frequency, and therefore an A/P or active/passive meter was developed to read audio tracks of a particular program rather than the frequency of the television. Adapting to these new innovations has brought about concern within the industry, new ways of measurement are becoming readily available as more and more consumers are turning to digital cable, the internet and other devices that can easily be tracked and monitored for content and use, thus making traditional sampling techniques obsolete.
New media
Nielsen//NetRatings measures Internet and digital media audiences through a telephone and Internet survey. Nielsen BuzzMetrics measures consumer-generated media. Other companies collecting information on internet usage include comScore, Wakoopa, and Hitwise, who measure hits on internet pages. Companies like Visible Measures focus on measuring specific types of media; in the case of Visible Measures, they measure online video consumption and distribution across all video advertising and content. TruMedia, Quividi, stickyPiXEL, and CognoVision provide real-time audience data including size, attention span and demographics by using video analytics technology to automatically detect, track and classify viewers watching digital displays. Networked Insights measures online audiences, and released a report ranking television shows, based on people's interactions within social media. The study showed that half of the shows on Networked Insights' top 10 list did not appear on the Nielsen Media Research (NMR) list. According to "The Television Will Be Revolutionized" by Amanda D. Lotz, one of the most challenging aspects of audience measurement during the multi-channel transition resulted from the intermediary nature of new technologies and distribution systems. The sampling techniques that most audience research relied upon were based on a fairly uniform nationwide availability of technologies and programming, and thus reflected a network-era experience with television. The arrival of varied programming tiers of cable channels challenged the system as US television homes began having highly descriptive access to technology and programming and consequently began using television in significantly different ways. Although the A/P meter solved the problem of DVR use, programming on video on demand systems did not include the "audio watermark" used by the device. The nation's many cable providers also limited access to the proprietary data recorded by their set top boxes, which reduced the informational gain offered by this technology. Video on demand desperately needed to establish measurement matrices to
prove its economic viability, but the lack of shared and consistent information further confounded knowledge about use. Likewise, the erosion of the thirty- second advertisement's dominance and the new advertising strategies that became increasingly common required the creation of new methods and matrices to determine value and pricing. The goal of these leading providers in automated audience measurement solutions is to deliver results to inquiries such as: The nature of the audience, the number of viewers, the content viewed, the amount of time spent on viewing, the type of display utilized and the audience interest in those displays. In "The Television Will be Revolutionized", Amanda Lotz clearly indicates how technological development in the audience measurement practice provides a multitude of technological advancements such as the DVR, Video-On-Demand portable devices such as the iPod and even a boost in mobile phone proficiencies. These improvements comply with television viewing not to be restrained to be "home-watched". Internet measurement is taken to the next level through its sophistication and high tech distribution. This allows several audiences measurement companies to refer to the Internet as the most measurable media.
Demographics
This section requires expansion. (April 2011) The demographic of a particular show's audience is also measured. This is often notated in an abbreviated form,[2] e.g.:
P2+ = Persons aged 2 or more P1234 = Persons aged 12 to 34 P1849 = Persons aged 18 to 49 A1834 = Adults aged 18 to 34 Men 1834 Women 1834
Ratings point
Main article: Ratings (broadcast) Ratings point is a measure of viewership of a particular television programme. One single television ratings point (Rtg or TVR) represents 1% of viewers in the surveyed area in a given minute. As of 2004, there are an estimated 109.6 million television households in the United States. Thus, a single national household ratings point represents 1%, or 1,096,000 households for the 200405 season. When used for the broadcast of a program, the average rating across the duration of the show is typically given. Ratings points are often used for
specific demographics rather than just households. For example a ratings point among the key 1849 year olds demographic is equivalent to 1% of all 1849 year olds in the country. A Rtg/TVR is different from a share point in that it is the percentage of all possible viewers, while a share point is 1% of all viewers watching television at the time. Hence the share of a broadcast is often significantly higher than the rating, especially at times when overall TV viewing is low. A low TRP can have an adverse effect on a TV program eventually leading to its closure.[3]
GRPs/TRPs
Gross rating points (GRPs) or target rating points (TRPs) are chiefly used to measure the performance of TV-based advertising campaigns, and are the sum of the TVRs of each commercial spot within the campaign. An ad campaign might require a certain number of GRPs among a particular demographic across the duration of the campaign. The GRP of a campaign is equal to the percentage of people who saw, multiplied by the average number of spots that these viewers saw. Targeted Rating Points are a refinement of GRPs to express the reach time frequency of only the most likely prospects. For example, if a campaign buys 150 GRPs for a television spot, but only half of that audience is actually in the market for the campaign's product, then the TRP would be stated as 75 to calculate the net effective buy [1]. Gross rating point, a standard measure in advertising, it measures advertising impact. It is a percent of the target market reached multiplied by the exposure frequency. Thus, a program which advertises to 30% of the target market and gives them 4 exposures, will have 120 GRP. GRPs as a measure has some limitations. People like to think of it as a measure of impact, but that is really overstated. Impact should measure sales; this measures exposures, which is in fact assumed not actual exposures.
Universe: Universe is the total or actual number of people in a defined target audience. Reach: Reach is the number of individuals from the universe who are exposed to the medium or vehicle. Reach is normally expressed in terms of % (percentages)
Calculation of reach:
If universe is: 1,000,000 individuals (it's approx. data, it's usually defined through sampling through people-meter): For a single episode of a program (30 minutes or 1 hour) If out of above 1,000,000 of individuals 600,000 saw at least 1 minute of programme then:
Reach = (600,000/1,000,000) x 100 Reach = 60% Variations of the reach concept: Gross reach Gross reach is the summation of all audiences who have been exposed to the vehicle.
Week 1: 1,000 Week 2: 2,000 Week 3: 1,500 Week 4: 1,200 Hence, gross reach = week 1 + Week 2 + Week 3 + Week 4 Gross reach = 5,700
Cumulative reach Cumulative reach: The audiences accumulate over the time
The number of individuals within the TG who are exposed to the medium or vehicle over a certain period of time Total time = Total average minutes (universe) x Universe Total time/reach = Avg minutes viewers Net reach Net reach: Net reach is the summation of all audiences who have been exposed to the vehicle and excludes the duplication of the viewership. Gross reach Total reach Duplication Total duplication Net reach 1,000 1,000 --1,000 2,000 3,000 (300) (300) 2,700 1,500 4,500 (900) (1,200) 3,300 1,200 5,700 (1,000) (2,200) 3,500 What is a TVR (television rating point):
TVR = Reach x Time spent TVR = (minutes viewed/minutes available) + (minutes viewed / minutes available)/N X100
N = Number of individuals
The sum of all ratings achieved in a campaign GRP levels are generally measured and reported on a 4 week basis It is a measure of the media plan's trust
CPRP
Measurement used in planning a television media buy based on the cost of a commercial time slot and the rating of the program where the time slot is positioned. If, for example, the cost of a commercial time slot during prime time was $1000 and the program rating for that time was 10 (which means that 10% of the total potential audience was tuned to that program), then the cost per GRP would be $1000 divided by 10%, or $100. The CPGRP measurement is a way of measuring the efficiency of media cost, as compared to measuring the cost per thousand (CPT) and is generally used when making comparisons of the various broadcast vehicles. When the actual buy is made, the advertiser will still want to know the cost of reaching people on a costper-thousand basis. Programme name Time Secondages Effective rate Total amt TVR GRP A 10:00 am - 11:00 am 150 6,000 90,000 5.4 81 B 21:00 - 22:00 200 30,000 600,000 9.8 196 Total 350 69,0000 277 CPRP = 2,491 (i.e., Total amt/Total GRPs)
Criticisms
Diary-based radio ratings in the US may inflate listenership, because they are only measured in 15-minute increments. Listening at any time during a quarter-hour counts as listening for the entire duration, even if the actual time was just for a song or two. The process of surveying listeners for their preferences has also been criticised for its lack of flexibility. Listeners complain that modern radio lacks variety and depth but the measurement methods only facilitate further refinement of already minutely programmed formats rather than the overhaul that many listeners are asking for. Radio in the USA, is where listeners hear their old favorites rather than are exposed to new music. Data obtained by some audience measurement methods is detailed to individual songs and how they are reacted to by each age, racial, and economic group the station is seeking to attract. This statistical approach leads to highly recognizable songs (such as those from the Beatles) which score well with a cross-section of listeners.[4][5]
Measurement conferences
The world's largest audience measurement conference, AM X.0, is presented annually by the Advertising Research Foundation. Each year, hundreds of attendees from around the world gather to hear a collection of experts speak on Social Media, Mobile and Cross-Platform issues.
Measurement companies
This section requires expansion. (December 2007) The Kantar Media network (including TNS) currently measures TV, radio, and internet audiences in over 40 countries. AGB Nielsen Media Research currently measures TV audiences in 27 countries globally using people meter technology in more than 58,000 homes.
In Australia, television ratings are collected by three main organizations. OzTAM serves metropolitan areas, Regional TAM serves regional areas serviced by three commercial networks, and Nielsen Media Research Australia handles for regional areas serviced by two commercial networks. Ratings are collected over 40 weeks of the year, with a twoweek break over Easter and 10 weeks over summer. In Argentina, radio and television measurement is done by Ibope and Infortecnica. In Belgium the measurement is done by GfK Audimetrie and MediaXim at the request of Centrum voor Informatie over de Media (CIM). In Bosnia and Herzegovina, Mareco Index Bosnia is the provider of TAM ratings (TV Meters). This company also provides Radio & Print Measurement data (Diary). In Brazil, IBOPE provides measurement services for TV. The provider of Bulgarian TAM ratings is Taylor Nelson Sofres TV PLAN; this company uses TV meters. In Canada, BBM Canada measures both TV and radio while its subsidiary BBM Analytics is one of several companies that provide software for analyzing the data. In Colombia, television measurement is done by IBOPE and Nielsen. In Radio, measurements are handled by ECAR Finnpanel measures both radio and TV in Finland. In Czech Republic, television ratings are collected by Mediaresearch. In Denmark, radio measurement is handled by TNS Gallup. In France, radio and television measurement is handled by Mdiamtrie. In Germany TV audience measurement is done by Gesellschaft fr Konsumforschung (known as GfK).
In India, television ratings are collected by two main organizations - TAM Media Research and Audience Measurement Analytics Limited (aMap). Audience Measurement and Analytics Ltd. (aMap) entered the market in 2005, with more coverage and latest technology from Telecontrol-Switzerland. Audience Measurement and Analytics Ltd. (aMap) polls the meters (6000 households) using GSM network and provides ratings overnight. TAM India collects data manually (physical visits) and releases data weekly. Audience Measurement and Analytics Ltd. (aMap) also has a stand-alone digital panel (aMapDigital) to measure TV viewing and Interactive engagement in direct-broadcast satellite (DBS) homes. In Japan Video Research Ltd. handles radio and television measurement. In Kazakhstan, TV measurement is handled by TNS. In Lithuania, TV and radio measurements are handled by TNS Gallup. In the Netherlands the measurement is done by Intomart GfK and MediaXim at the request of Stichting KijkOnderzoek (SKO). In the Philippines, TV measurement is handled by Kantar Media Philippines and AGB Nielsen Media Research Philippines. Kantar Media uses a nationwide panel size of 2,609 urban and rural homes that represent 100% of the total Philippine TV viewing population, while AGB Nielsen reportedly has only 1,980 homes based solely in urban areas that represent only 57% of the Philippine TV viewing population. Kantar Media covers 15.135 million households or 75 million individuals while AGB only covers 7.260 million households or 34.4 million individuals. Radio measurement is handled also by AGB Nielsen, while its competitors are the Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng Pilipinas Radio Research Council (KBP-RRC) and the Philippine Survey and Research Center (PSRC). In Pakistan TV audience measurement is done by Gallup BRB & Medialogic Pakistan. In Portugal TV, Radio, Press and Internet audience measurement are done by Marktest. In Poland TV audience measurement is done by Nielsen Audience Measurement. In Russia TV, Radio, Press and Internet measurements are handled by TNS Gallup, OOH is measured by ESPAR Analytics in cooperation with TNS Gallup. In Slovakia TV audience measurement is done by TNS. In Spain, digital signage audience measurement is done by aiTech. radio and television measurement is done by Infortecnica. In Sweden TV audience measurement is done by MMS Mediamtning i Skandinavien. In Turkey, TV measurement is done by AGB Nielsen, radio by IPSOS-KMG.
In the UK, television measurement is handled by the Broadcasters' Audience Research Board via a metered panel and radio by RAJAR, using a diary system. The NRS (National Readership Survey) measures newspaper and magazine readership. In the United States, TV measurement is done by Nielsen Media Research, radio by Arbitron, and digital signage by TruMedia and CognoVision. In the US, Stratacache uses audience measurement technology to build reports for digital signage. In Vietnam, TV measurement is done by Kantar Media in 6 main cities.