NBC says money is being left on the table for one of its biggest shows.
While “The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon” continues to dominate viewership numbers in
traditional TV late-night programming, a majority of the show’s overall viewing -- including digital – is not being paid for by advertisers (or perhaps subscribers).
In a Comcast earnings call, NBCUniversal CEO Steve Burke
said about “Tonight”: “We think about 70 percent of the views of [“The Tonight Show”] occur online, and the majority of those views are completely unmonetized."
This continues to drive senior TV executives crazy: That there isn’t good enough measurement of premium digital video consumption for monetization.
Media
spillage will continue until everyone come to terms about where the monetary value lies -- especially as more premium TV programming is consumed digitally.
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We can imagine a lot
of “Tonight” viewing is of short-form pieces -- five minutes or less -- especially for the highly touted musical segments that Fallon, most times along with special guests, is famous
for.
TV Everywhere proponents says increased viewing on authenticated platforms will help monetization. But that's only a small piece of the puzzle.
A
growing segment of advertisers want to target audiences, not TV programs -- a measurement yielding specific ROI they’ll pay for. So TV networks look to at least work within a framework where
advertisers have a mindset to alter some measurement changes. Last June during the upfront market, TV networks pushed many to extend their rating-guaranteed upfront deals from C3 to C7 viewing
guarantees.
C7 is the average commercial ratings plus seven days of time shifting; C3 (commercial ratings plus three days of time shifting) still represents the vast majority of
national TV deals. Estimates are that shifting to C7 could raise advertising revenue to TV networks anywhere from 2% to 4%.
Until then, there will be many other popular programs
whose lack of full monetization will bother senior TV executives, perhaps for years to come.