More than one of three Americans 18-64 watched a digital video on some kind of device in the last week, but 95% of us watched TV, too, according to a new study from the Media Behavior
Institute’s USA TouchPoints research.
I think the fact that I I know several people who only watch TV, and several other people who only watch videos online is one of the momentary
features of this world.
Because my list of friends, relatives and acquaintances is probably a lot like yours, that means we all know people who are leaning back most of the time except just
sometimes when some of them are leaning forward. It’s an evolutionary time.
In fact, the change is significant, though we might not feel it. Just last year, according
to the Media Behavior Institute, 25% watched a video in the last week. Now, that’s 34%. That’s a pretty big change, though I get the idea the public “feels” it less than the
people who are marketing to them because so much television still gets consumed.
People who watch video online are invariably forced to preface conversations, even with friends, by
asking something like, “Do you ever go to Buzzfeed?” before they describe
something they saw there. No one has to say, “Do you ever watch NBC?”—though, maybe I should double check on that.
But you get the point.
The new stats might have
sounded amazing if in fact they weren’t in line with what our eyes and guts tell us. Video is everywhere from our hip pocket to the computer at work, but those 500 channels on your television
set, or movies from Netflix or Amazon or other Roku provider are too.
Indeed, the report says in a given week 99.65% of us watch something somewhere somehow, be it on a big TV or an iPhone. In
the average day, 11% watch something online, compared to 7% a year ago. What we don’t do any more or less of this year than last is use our DVR. Weekly use is at 43% this year, as it was last
year (remarkable since Hulu and other sites provide much of what a viewer could largely get for themselves from a DVR).
Growing up, I was always amazed how the TV sets at my
friends’ homes were so often located in the geographic center of their homes. Mine too. You could have plotted it with a compass.
This report says that’s still true in theory if
not physically. “The home still remains the center of all video consumption,” the report says. “This is even true of mobile phones and tablets suggesting that while people
can watch video anywhere, they prefer to do so in a familiar, relaxed environment. Video viewing is a predominantly family affair, with a larger percent of viewers using devices while
they’re alone or with immediate family than with any groups of people combined (including extended family, friends, co-workers etc.)”
For example, 52% of those studied watched
“any digital video” with their families, while 82% watched TV with the nuclear gang. VOD was a little different—70% watch with the family.
Nielsen and GfK MRI hold minority
equity stakes in the independently-held Media Behavior Institute that focuses on how consumers use media and react to marketing. USA TouchPoints is the company’s syndicated research
service.
pj@mediapost.com