Nielsen's latest PPM ratings show an increase in radio listening. Not because people have thrown away digital devices and returned to broadcast radios. But apparently because of a change in the way Nielsen measures the audience. PPM now measures listening based on 3-minutes rather than 5 minutes:
www.westwoodone.com
There were hints of this back in March:
www.insideradio.com
I became aware of this when I read the Research Director analysis of the ratings in several markets. They all reported a large increase in PUMM (formerly people using radio). Someone asked why. I said I didn't know. Then I read Pierre's article linked above and it now makes sense. People have short attention spans when it comes to radio. They tune in and if a song comes on they don't like, they tune away. But they still use radio, so they should be measured. The three minute standard allows for this behavior.
The next question is if it would change the way spots are scheduled. Here's what Bouvard says in his latest article:
If changes are going to happen, they will require all stakeholders to agree. That means advertisers will need to agree with this, and push for it in ad scheduling.
Nielsen Spring 2025 Portable People Meter AM/FM Radio Audiences Up +19%; Format Shares Remarkably Stable As The Rising PPM Tide Raises All Format Boats | Westwood One
Nielsen has released all Spring 2025 (April-May-June) Portable People Meter markets. There are significant increases in listening across demographics and time periods versus Fall 2024.
There were hints of this back in March:
Nielsen’s Three-Minute Qualifier Increases Audience All Day In Key Demos.
There’s more good news from Nielsen’s January 2025 PPMs, the first to reflect the shift from a five- to a three-minute qualifier needed for quarter-hour credit, based on October 2024-to-January
I became aware of this when I read the Research Director analysis of the ratings in several markets. They all reported a large increase in PUMM (formerly people using radio). Someone asked why. I said I didn't know. Then I read Pierre's article linked above and it now makes sense. People have short attention spans when it comes to radio. They tune in and if a song comes on they don't like, they tune away. But they still use radio, so they should be measured. The three minute standard allows for this behavior.
The next question is if it would change the way spots are scheduled. Here's what Bouvard says in his latest article:
Two-minute ad breaks retain 99% of the lead-in audience. Six-minute ad breaks retain 85% of the lead in audience.
Creating more ad breaks of shorter duration generates larger commercial audiences. Advertisers stand out more in shorter breaks. Growing audience deliveries for AM/FM radio ads improve AM/FM radio’s performance in media mix modeling and marketing effectiveness studies.
If changes are going to happen, they will require all stakeholders to agree. That means advertisers will need to agree with this, and push for it in ad scheduling.
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