http://www.adweek.com/tvspy/nielsen-will-begin-measuring-tv-watching-in-bars-gyms-hotels/180588
Yes the ppm's will be measured from these places too.
Yes the ppm's will be measured from these places too.
How can you be sure they're really paying attention?
I would think that all these locations, except hotel rooms, would have captive audiences which defeats the purpose of PPM.
I would think that all these locations, except hotel rooms, would have captive audiences which defeats the purpose of PPM.
From the advertiser perspective, the objective is to get "impressions". Whether the source of the impression was selected intentionally or accidentally is not material.
We have the PPM because advertisers pushed radio to get an electronic system that delivered more granular data on a much faster timeline. Radio did not have a great interest in the PPM, even less so as the cost was very significantly higher. But the agencies wanted a system comparable to TV and its overnights. And they wanted a measure of impressions, not a popularity contest among stations.
The more I learn about the radio biz from you the more I feel it is not in charge of its own destiny.
They can't. They can't be sure the people are paying attention at home either.
But how can they determine who's watching what? In most cases, people will be watching more than one game at the same time, especially college and pro football.
And exactly how are they measuring? A meter on each TV screen? All that says is that there are, for example during non-game hours, X number of screens tuned to The Golf Channel, Y number tuned to ESPN, Z number tuned to ESPNNews, etc.
How would Nielsen rate that bar-- one point per screen in that bar, and divide the stated capacity of the bar by those points? That still wouldn't be accurate, since how often does a bar fill up to capacity other than during certain times (happy hour, Friday nights, football Saturdays and Sundays, the NCAA Tournament, etc.)? My local bar isn't normally packed before happy hour, other than during football weekends and soccer tournaments. It's a fairly average neighborhood sports bar in metro Phoenix -- probably not worth hanging Purple People Meters on.
There is no real change between today and the Golden Age of Radio in the 30's. Then, agencies and their advertisers actually produced many network radio shows, and placed them on the networks.
Radio is an advertising medium. We are between the advertiser and their customers, and our business model is dependent on keeping both groups happy. It´s been that way for about 90 years.
All it means is that members of the PPM panel, who wear the little pager-size devices, will have their viewing counted no matter if they are at home or away. The PPM goes with the panelist, not with the TV.
Nielsen announced earlier this month that they will move to employ the PPM for both Audio and Video measurement of encoded signals.
In the days long ago when sponsors actually owned the air time I remember performers like Jack Benny having as his show's main subject the renewal of his show - and it was the sponsor who apparently signed his check and not the radio station(s). Then those old shows died and the stations put music on the air and the relationship between radio, performer and sponsor (now called an advertiser) changed.
But what has changed in the measurement of listeners other than the introduction of demographics? In the old Benny days the sponsor must have had a good idea of how they rated against the competition.
I know that I've been in restaurants that could have every sports network on because of the number of screens they have set up, probably showing every event that is going on at the time. If a PPM panelist moves from one area of the restaurant or bar to another does what channel they're seeing change according to the device?
Also, if hearing ads are counted, how does that work in places where the audio is muted, possibly with closed captioning on? Even if the audio is on, it usually can't be heard over the noise of the customers.
To get credit for a radio quarter hour, the meter must detect tags in at least 5 different discreet minutes in the 15 minute period. I do not know if they will have a different standard for TV and whether it will be more or less granular.
The PPM detects a digital tag/burst inserted in program content and masked by it. If the PPM a person is carrying can hear the audio, the device stores the identification code and time stamp. As a person moves about, the meter is trying to detect listening or, now, viewing, up to 13 times a minute.
To get credit for a radio quarter hour, the meter must detect tags in at least 5 different discreet minutes in the 15 minute period. I do not know if they will have a different standard for TV and whether it will be more or less granular.