Neanderpaul said:
Absolutely untrue. If you're in any environment for over 5 minutes, and within range of the signal, PPM records it as having been "heard."
If you are driving a car and focusing on the road, you do not see all the billboards... you may not see any of them in peak transit times. There are no impressions if you do not actually see the board, whether you read the board or not.
The PPM registers true impressions. Whether we are listening is immaterial since what advertisers want are impressions and the PPM gives that.
And this is a good thing? You're in a city of millions, and relying on one, or two F meter holders between 25-29 to represent *all* listening in that demo for the market? Did you even re-read that when you typed it?
In a diary or a PPM survey, looking at a very tight demo is dangerous. If you look at a tight demo (25-29 is a custom demo, not a standard demo, anyway) in a single daypart you are getting a tiny sample of the universe, anyway... diary or PPM.
That's funny. I have 13 monthly "books" delivered every year.
Yeah, but they are books, not "monthlies."
The PPM has 13 28-day, 4 week survey periods, named after the months and the "holiday" period (which was unmeasured in the diary as it was the "hiatus" between Fall and Winter).
"Monthlies" are what we got with the diary method via a breakout of one unweighted 28-day period of the three month sample.
Somehow there's an unaccounted for period known as "Holiday" which allows for certain stations to artificially inflate their ratings based upon an ever-increasing overflow period into January, and ramping up period in December, based upon Xmas music airplay and exposure in retail outlets to create a holiday atmosphere.
Actually, in most markets it's just one station or at most two that get the Christmas music "kiss" and the listening is real. Why wouldn't advertisers, such as many retailers who derive more than half their profits from Holiday sales, want to know where the best ad environment for that season is to be found?
And since the panel only turns about 8% a month, the data from even a few weeklies is more reliable for format and program decisions than several diary books combined.
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No. It is not. Because the panel is too small to be representative of the listening habit of millions. Plain & simple. We should not be relying on the *same* group of people to represent that size audience.
A panel is uniquely able to mirror, hour by hour, day by day, week by week, the precise composition of the universe under study. If 12% of a market is Hispanic, then 12% of the panel is Hispanic.
In the diary, the weekly sample is less than 1/5 of the weekly sample in the PPM, and totally unweighted and totally wobbly. So the diary lets you look at, somewhat reliably, 12 weeks. The PPM is equally reliable down to the one-day quarter hour level, allowing even morning show bits or sporting events or celebrity interviews to be viewed with the same accuracy as an entire book.
One meter skews the weekly sample enough to knock someone out of the top ten.
Maybe in a tight discreet demo... but in the broad ones like 18-49, 18-34 and 25-54, we are talking about large percentages of all meters and one or two will not make the difference you speak of for major "top 10" stations. And, as often or not... or maybe
more often than not, the changes you see are real...
We're talking about (in some markets) AQH compression of less than 1000 people.
I have never heard the term "compression" used for "sample size" but I guess that is what you mean. The sample, as I have said, is what radio is willing to pay for. Arbitron would gladly add sample, but radio would not gladly pay for it. So what we have is what we, as an industry, are willing to pay for.
When a meter represents over 3000 people, and it's normally a listener, and out the market for several weeks per year, it can ruin a station's performance.
Ratings are supposed to mirror the market. If a percentage of the market is out of market for vacation or work each year, then the survey should reflect this.
I see certain companies given concierge service by Arbitron, based upon their having executives sitting on the advisory board.
I've never seen this, and the Arbitron Advisory Council has existed for decades. The council members are representatives, each, of their class... by format and market and measurement type.
I see Arbitron posting nice profits off of radio, while delivering data that it won't stand behind as true.
All surveys have disclaimers. No survey based on a statistical sample, can guarantee 100% accuracy. Even the U.S. Census, which is a census and not a survey, has a margin of error. So a disclaimer, in today's "I'll sue you" society, is essential.
I'm not even going to get in to the mother who has her daughter carry two meters. Or, the meter on the ceiling fan/dog collar.
Or granny who fills in everyone's diary and pockets the dollar bills. Every survey of any kind has some extraneous data in it. Arbitron, by the way, looks at "matching" PPM performance including motion time and matching listening habits and they call the users to determine if there is something odd... the PPM is so costly precisely due to the amount of personal attention each metered family or household requires week after week.
Or, the disparity in financial remuneration given to certain demographics that cause the skewing of listening.
Incentives are used to insure parity representation in the survey of groups that do not cooperate at rates as high as others. The incentives are for participation, not for using radio more. So if Spanish dominant Hispanics are, let's say, 14% of a market but normal techniques and incentives only gets 7% of the panel, but paying more gets the full 14%, then DST achieves the purpose of making the survey proportional, which is the goal of a survey, of Arbitron and of MRC. I don't get why you would object to techniques that improve proportionality... I don't get it at all.
The chances that 900 people represent the actual listening patterns of a city of 3 million are equally as ludicrous.
900 meters in-tab is about what you get in Austin. And a replication study would likely show that going to 1800 or 2700 or whatever would not change the overall performance of any but the very bottom tier of stations.
Wait one minute! Arbitron actually preaches that the *average* listener listens between 8-12 minutes per exposure. That means the *average* listener listens *more* that the short-span listener. We're told there's "nothing we can do to increase that ATE beyond 12 minutes. It is what it is." We're being conditioned to strive for *more exposures.*
Each exposure or incident is finite because
people do other stuff. They may listen to a certain station all day at work; in the diary they would write "9 AM to 5 PM" or whatever. But in the PPM, every coffee break, phone call, trip to the shop floor, lunch break, visit to the next cubicle, potty break and whatever else occurs in the office, shop, loading dock or delivery truck cuts the listening into very thin slices.
What you are being told by the studies that have been done is to make sure people want to come back to you after lunch, after going on a sales call, after going for coffee. That is what an "incident" means.
If they don't actually represent the audience we're attempting to reach, why are we using the service?
If you want to get rid of the disclaimer, do a daily census of radio listening. Measure every single person, every moment. Get back to me on the cost.