Some TV executives aren’t interested in ratings, while many others will tell you TV viewership shifts are very important.
Digital streaming video is on the rise, especially
from subscription video operators like Netflix, with just under 40 million U.S TV homes.
Now David Poltrack, chief research officer of CBS Corp., says Netflix has had a hand in why there has been 3% decline in TV ratings – an idea that
also jibes with other analyst’s theories.
“The ratings have just disappeared,” Todd Juenger, a media analyst with Bernstein Research, told the New York Times. “You have
audiences leaving ad-supported television for non-ad-supported television, and I don’t think that they are coming back.”
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But at the same time, you have Netflix,
which isn’t interested in that traditional TV data. Ted Sarandos, chief content officer at Netflix, has said a number of times that Netflix isn’t focused on TV ratings -- at least
how they’re traditionally presented. Why? One reason is that the platform doesn’t air commercials.
While network and programming execs might say they don’t
like Netflix’s no-ads or ratings reports policy, there’s still an upside to working with the company. For example, CBS sells older season shows to Netflix. “You have to look at the
big picture,” says Poltrack. “Yes, Netflix is a formidable competitor. But they’re a valuable partner as well.”
So what’s the net revenue-profit
outcome? Someone hopefully has a good trend-line in figuring that out.
While we wait, there is the continuing disparity of digital versus TV, with digital advertising revenue
overtaking TV advertising dollars in a few years. Again, it’s a two-sided equation for traditional media: CBS, and other networks, will be participating in that digital part of the media
equation.
For those companies, it isn’t only older library or recent off-network shows. There is speculation that the TV networks/media companies might also be producing
programming for for Netflix and similar platforms. License fees from the likes of Netflix may be growing -- and digital advertising for TV reruns may be growing as well.
But the
question might remain for those ever-dwindling TV ratings in the digital age: What do they reveal? What’s their ultimate point?