The tablet may be the best thing to ever happen to the modern TV. A second screen can reduce the amount of time viewers spend skipping ads, according to a just-released study that Bravo Media conducted with Latitude Research on multiscreen viewers.
Nearly two-thirds of the study participants said that
having access to a laptop, mobile phone or tablet while watching TV made them less inclined to skip the ads. Specifically, Bravo said that if viewers had a phone, laptop and a TV on hand they fast
forwarded at the start of 40% of ad breaks. Dual-screeners with a smartphone and TV skipped ads 51% of the time.
But are the viewers paying attention to the ads, or are they
simply distracted by another screen?
“Tri-screeners were observed to have over 13 attention shifts away from the TV – mostly to other screens – while the
actual show was airing, and dual-screeners had over 7 attention shifts away from TV. Multi-screeners were found to be viewing mostly ad-friendly content on their companion screens, with participants
spending the greatest share of their time on websites and apps – often related to the program currently airing,” the media company said.
Those findings suggest that tablet and
smartphone screens may represent an untapped opportunity to “capture” the TV viewers when they’re looking away, because they’re often looking up info related to the show or the
ad. Along these lines, Nielsen found in an April study that among simultaneous TV and tablet
viewers, about 37% of tablet users looked up information related to the program they were watching, while 27% looked up information related to an ad.
Given that more than 15
percent of TV homes in the U.S. own a tablet, this mobile device may turn out to be a vital link in reconnecting ad-skipping viewers back to brands. Bravo said that about half of multiscreen viewers
were more likely to remember brands if they’d seen their ads on more than one screen. “Ad Awareness lift for brands embedded within the viewing session improved among viewers who had
cross-screen ad exposure, helping to almost entirely overcome any effectiveness shortfall resulting from DVR-enabled ad avoidance,” the study said.
Other recent studies corroborate that
tablets may be the best thing to happen to TV. Research firm TDG recently found that among those in the 18 to 49 demo who use
tablets to watch online TV, 39% said their tablet viewing has led to a rise in their regular TV viewing, while another 46% said they’ve experienced no change. Also, GfK Media has found that
nearly half of minutes spent on a tablet are simultaneous with TV viewing.
So viewers may still be avoiding ads on TV, but that avoidance could become a tablet ad
opportunity.