In 2006 I was part of the Nielsen team that developed a cross-platform strategy called Anytime Anywhere Media Measurement (A2/M2), which set out to integrate measurement of video viewing across
various screens.
Some of what Nielsen planned to do now seems quaint. Anticipating that the main platform for mobile viewing would be the iPod and other MP3 players, Nielsen developed
a "Go Meter" to measure video playback of video podcasts. Of course this strategy had to be abandoned when consumers started buying smartphones in bulk. And now that tablets are gaining
market share, Nielsen's strategy for measuring smartphones is changing before the original approach even came fully to life.
Although media technology has advanced faster than the industry's
ability to develop profitable business models, Nielsen's A2/M2 strategy did correctly identify one measurement challenge that remains with us today: how to integrate ratings for television and online
viewing.
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Perhaps the most important and farsighted A2/M2 initiative was the decision to measure Internet viewing within Nielsen's National People Meter panel. This is the same
panel used to measure national television viewing and, once implemented, Nielsen would be able to tell who was watching what on both televisions and the computers.
A lot of work went into
this effort; Nielsen had to develop a meter to install on panelists' computers, it needed to test recruitment methodology to make sure response rates remained high, and it had to create back-end
systems to capture, integrate and report the online viewing into the regular ratings reports. And all of this had to be continually reviewed and blessed by various industry committees.
In April 2011, nearly five years after announcing its intention to integrate online and television ratings, Nielsen began to do just that through its Extended Screen program. Media
companies that stream their TV shows over the Internet can now have their online computer and laptop viewing counted in the TV ratings. Online viewing over mobile devices, including tablets, is
not yet included in the ratings.
Yet this step, which would have once been considered a huge leap forward, was greeted almost with indifference by both the industry and the media. (Note:
these Internet TV ratings are completely separate from Nielsen's more highly-publicized Online Campaign Ratings, which measure online display advertising across all publishers.)
Part of the
reason for the low-key reaction to Internet TV ratings is that Nielsen currently measures only online programming that contains the same ads that were shown on television. As a result, online
viewing of "The Closer," which TBS streams with the same commercials as part of its TV Everywhere initiative, is included in Nielsen ratings, but online viewing of "The Office," which is streamed on
Hulu or NBC.com with different commercials, is not.
Nielsen's policy is based on the fact that the key Nielsen number for prime-time TV is the so-called "C3" rating, which measures how
many people watched the commercials, either live or times-shifted, up to three days later. After all, advertisers want to know who saw the commercials, not who saw the show. So by that
logic, all commercials need to be included in the online streaming to be included in C3 ratings if advertisers are to be treated fairly.
Yet most media companies do not include the
commercials when they stream shows online. Either they haven't figured out technically how to get Nielsen-coded versions of their programs online, or they are pursuing a different business model
altogether, such as the Hulu approach, where different commercials are shown.
Of the major media companies, only Time Warner's Turner Broadcasting is currently benefiting from Nielsen's
Extended Screen program, although others are testing or in discussions to test. The added viewing from streaming is not large -- in the thousands and sometimes in the tens of thousands
---but that should grow now that TBS has launched a major advertising campaign to promote TV Everywhere viewing.
Nielsen has said it will also measure streaming that does not include
the same commercials ,so that viewing on Hulu and the networks' own websites can be included in companion "program-only" ratings. Nielsen has not provided a firm deadline for doing this, and
it's not clear what will be gained by this feature (other than bragging rights) if advertising continues to be sold on the basis of C3 ratings.
What the limited response to Nielsen's
online TV ratings tells me is that technology moves faster than business models. I don't think anyone expected five years ago that media companies would still be trying to figure out how to
monetize online viewing. Nielsen is essentially still waiting for advertisers and programmers to reach a consensus on how online commercials should be counted.
Or perhaps this
issue isn't as urgent as it seemed five years ago. Even now, after all the attention paid to online television, 98% of all TV viewing is done the traditional way: via a television set.
Intuitively it seems likely that this will change eventually, but perhaps the industry won't be able to reach a consensus until there is a real, rather than anticipated, crisis of unmeasured viewing
-- which, of course, the iPad could portend. Maybe. We'll see.