CBS Eyes Ditching Nielsen As Streaming, Cord Cutting Change The Game
from the adapt-or-perish dept
For years, we've noted how popular TV ratings firm Nielsen has turned a bit of a blind eye to cord cutting and the Internet video revolution, on one hand declaring that the idea of cord cutting was "pure fiction," while on the other hand admitting it wasn't actually bothering to track TV viewing on mobile devices. It's not surprising; Nielsen's bread and butter is paid for by traditional cable executives, and really, who wants to take the time to pull all those collective heads of out of the sand to inform them that their precious pay TV cash cow is dying?
Eventually, the cord cutting trend became too big to ignore, forcing Nielsen to change its tune and start acknowledging the very real trend (though they called it "zero TV households" instead of cordcutters). Broadcasters (especially those hardest hit by cord cutting) didn't much like that, and began bullying the stat firm when it showed data that didn't jive with the view a foot below ground. While Nielsen slowly improved its methodologies, it would occassionally back off on certain data collection and reporting changes if the cable and broadcast industry complained loudly enough.
Ironically, this fealty to wishful thinking may not pay dividends for Nielsen. Nearly every broadcasters in your cable lineup is expected to launch their own streaming service by 2022. Many of these companies (like CBS) are now considering ditching Nielsen because, they claim, it's charging too much money for a user tracking system that hasn't adapted for the streaming era:
"At issue is a long-running complaint from TV networks that Nielsen isn’t measuring the many different audiences for their programming as well as it should. As smartphones, mobile tablets and broadband-connected TV’s gain more consumer acceptance, audiences are increasingly able to stream their TV favorites in on-demand fashion, making the task of counting them exponentially more difficult. TV networks have long based their advertising rates on Nielsen’s measure of linear TV audiences, which have slipped as consumers embraced Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime and other streaming and on-demand options.
In this environment, TV networks believe Nielsen’s overnight ratings are no longer as reliable a barometer of viewership as they once were.
Go figure. It's ironic that Nielsen often went out of its way to show cable and broadcast executives a narrative they desperately wanted to believe, only to find itself (potentially) booted by broadcasters who no longer see Nielsen's measurement systems as an accurate barometer of customer viewing habits in the cord cutting era.
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Filed Under: cord cutting, nielsen ratings, streaming, tv, tv ratings
Companies: cbs, nielsen
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More money for the rest of us!
Also, looking forward to the time when I can not purchase access to a large number of media outlets rather than not purchasing from just the one.
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Karma's a...
This is what happens when you forget who your actual customers are. Nielsen's customers have never really been Cable Operators. Their customers are content creators, not content deliverers. Forget who your customers are, and your business will inevitably suffer.
I don't really see any way for them to become relevant at this point. If they'd tried to work with streaming services when they were first starting up, they might have gotten a foot in the door and offered some service to them.
But now, streaming services already know how many views they get for every show, and how their audience watches (binging, mini-binges, individual). Why would they need Nielsen? And why would content creators need Nielsen? They can probably get a pretty good idea of what's popular using their subscribers on their streaming service. Especially since they'll have a good idea of the demographics already. You can get a decent extrapolation on the general viewer audience based on a sample set (this is how Nielsen works now), so if you've got your own sample set...
PS : Expect to see some Nielsen numbers folks getting job offers from various streaming service providers as they ramp up internal diagnostics.
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Re: Who would have predicted it?
In other words, anyone but cable executives, politicians, flat Earthers, climate deniers, religious extremists, and about half of all celebrities.
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Ha Ha Ha
As if I'm going to spend more money time and energy on a bunch of different services .
Be Smart and stay with the proven services like Netflix and Hulu cause we the people sure aren't going to pay for any extra streaming services for your exclusive crap .
All it will do is make me update my kodi box .
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Someone needs help with remedial counting
"audiences are increasingly able to stream their TV favorites in on-demand fashion, making the task of counting them exponentially more difficult."
Pardon? I can stream on your locked down, privacy invading, mini surveillance app and this makes counting more difficult as opposed to Neilson throwing a dart to guess which multiplier to use to extrapolate viewer numbers?
Not only can they count views more easily than ever before, they can count your views and know exactly what you watch, when and probably from where.
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Re: More money for the rest of us!
What will actually happen is, the ads will move to Facebook and Google, where all the viewers under 35 have gone anyway. That's the audience the advertisers want to chase by offering free TV or something that's like TV but probably more like cat videos. Oh well, it's free. If you want anything good, pay for it.
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Re: Karma's a...
Content creators do benefit from this system because it allows a process by which they will be paid for their efforts. I wouldn't say they've ever been a direct customer of Nielsens at all.
Nielsens never had a prayer with non-ad-supported services like Netflix, who have perfect views of who is watching what, when and how. Netflix doesn't need Nielsens to provide its independent third party function because there's nobody Netflix answers to, for specifics on who is viewing shows and how much. You might have noticed Netflix doesn't even reveal this info - they have no motive to.
It's possible that content creators might value Nielsens now, in a world where they are very much at a disadvantage vs Netflix or other ad-free streaming platforms. If somebody creates a successful show, Netflix might lead them to believe it's not at all successful. Just barely hanging in there, really. But we're nice guys, we'll do a season two if you knock down your price 20%.
And the content creator has no recourse because there's nobody to dispute Netflix's figures. And the number of successful streaming platforms will not be large because subscribers are getting fed up at their being too many and will stop at just 2 or 3 really big ones. And those few really big ones will be the only ones standing at the end of the day.
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Re:
No, they all think they will grab the brass ring. And they don't know that they can't yet. Some of them, like Disney, almost certainly can. Some, like Apple and AT&T, have a shot. Some, like CBS and Comcast, are screwed but corporations don't like to admit they are screwed because then the shareholders wonder why they are paying the big bucks to those idiots in the executive suite who let Netflix steal their business.
The losers can only be dragged out of this feet first. So we wait and see.
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Re: Ha Ha Ha
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This is odd because
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Re: Someone needs help with remedial counting
But Netflix isn't going to let Nielsens know any of this. Why should they? So it's a lot more difficult - for Nielsens. They're basically screwed now.
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Re: This is odd because
The fact that Nielsens has to rely on a friggen questionnaire (hahahahaha) reveals just how screwed they are.
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Re: Re: This is odd because
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Re: Re: More money for the rest of us!
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Re: Re: Re: More money for the rest of us!
Advertisers are responding by increasing other venues like events and outdoors. They'll find places that can't be blocked and stop bothering us online.
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Re: Re: Ha Ha Ha
It's summer of 2019 and the players are:
1) Comcast = NBC Universal, + others
2) Disney = ABC, ESPN, 20th Century Fox,+ big brands like Marvel ..
3) CBS, Paramount, Showtime
4) AT&T = HBO/Cinemax, Time/Warner + others
a) Netflix b) Amazon Prime c) Hulu d) broadcast networks own streams
I may have skipped some with catalogs but bummer.
No betting by me. I'll wait and see.
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