As of now, only LPM (25 largest) markets are accredited by the Media Rating Council, MRC for NSI Local Monthly reports. The entire multiple measurement approaches to spot’s measurement of the
balance of 210 markets, including the new so called “viewer assignment model,” which uses a probability-of-viewing model based on look-alike homes within the area, is currently under MRC
review.
The latest move by Nielsen affects the next tranche of 31 medium-large TV markets, which used a combination of set meters for calculating household ratings and diaries for
estimating audience demographics.
Nielsen will continue to use set meters, but demographic data will now be collected using their “Viewer Assignment Model.”
Diary-only measured TV markets, the balance of 154 spot markets, had MRC accreditation officially withdrawn in 2010, which in the opinion of many was far too late.
(Accreditation was
withdrawn after the MRC found the company had not mailed enough of the diaries to households to generate what it considered a sufficient sample
size.)
A new metering technology called the Code Reader, which passively and continually collects tuning data (not viewing data) via
watermark detection, will be introduced in 14 of the 154 “diary markets” to replace diaries in those 14 markets. That leaves a balance of 140!
Radio audience
measurement: Average quarter-hour ratings in today’s media environment? You have to be kidding right? Worse!
After its introduction over 10 years ago, PPM developed by
Arbitron, and now part Nielsen Audio as a result of the ignorant decision of the FTC, still has only 25 markets MRC accredited of 45 submitted.
For all its faults, PPM is far superior to
diary measurement and can provide average minute and average commercial minute audiences ,which should be today’s currency for this terrific medium to harmonize its performance metrics against
TV.
In terms of critical local market multimedia ratings, notably for newspaper audiences and including online reading, Scarborough is no longer MRC-accredited.
Its
readership data and reach/frequency basis was always marginal for some at media agencies.
The Internet digital media measurement arena in the U.S. and abroad has been wrestling with
three key issues: viewability, bot fraud along with ad blocking.
Led by IAB in full co-operation with MRC, joint communiques have been provided regarding measurement guidelines to move
to more meaningful measurement and reporting.
Your “MRC Accredited” digital ratings measurement provider will help interpret these industry advisories including: what is
measured at what level of rigour; whether different viewability levels can be selected; and/or whether bot traffic is removed?
Of special note is that White Ops, a bot fraud detection
company, has submitted their technologies and techniques to MRC for accreditation. They should be applauded!
In the U.S.. media audience ratings are generally delivered by
unregulated monopolies. They typically hide behind anti-trust regulations to protect their sole media currency provider positions.
This structure is essentially due to the lack of JICs -
Joint Industry Committee’s in the U.S. Contrary to completely misguided industry belief and as can be confirmed by any experienced anti-trust lawyer, JICs are quite legal in here.
In serving the entire industry user base in most other developed countries, JICs fund, direct and manage the various media currency ratings research on behalf of the entire industry, typically at
high levels of technology and quality cost effectively.
There is actually one JIC that operates in the U.S. The TAB, Traffic Audit Bureau measures most major OOH and DOOH formats
across major markets at the Eyes-On or exposure ratings level with acceptable quality and at extraordinary cost efficiency when compared other media ratings services in the US.
Without JICs in the U.S., the MRC, Media Rating Council, plays a very special role and its critical importance to every part of the programming, editorial and advertising business cannot be
underestimated.
“The objectives or purpose to be promoted or carried on by Media Rating Council are:
To secure for the media industry and related users audience
measurement services that are valid, reliable and effective.
To evolve and determine minimum disclosure and ethical criteria for media audience measurement services.
To
provide and administer an audit system designed to inform users as to whether such audience measurements are conducted in conformance with the criteria and procedures developed.”
We believe the entire industry should be pushing MRC members and board to dramatically increase MRC’s scope and capabilities.
They also need to demand that media currency
ratings accreditation can only be awarded based on including measurement at the ad or program exposure, Eyes-on, viewed or heard level per the ARF model outlined in “Making Better Media
Decisions.”
Media measurement across all media, whether digital or traditional, has moved toward various integrated approaches, sometimes called hybrid media research rather than single
source measurement.
These new techniques typically use a combination of passive electronic or traditional survey techniques, census type data, digital behavior data
streams, etc.
Such integrations help maximize the value of a wide array of multiple surveys together with big data (digital behavior) to drive more rigorous granular reports - especially
for cross-platform ratings, increasing the scope and value of the research.
Certain of these new hybrid approaches are referred to as pseudo-single source databases. Whatever the
surveys/integration techniques, the entire process requires independent industry accreditation via MRC.
A brilliant example of such a hybrid approach involving the creation of a pseudo
single source database is Project Blueprint.
It provides cross-platform measurement of TV; personal computers; smartphones; tablets; and radio. It originated under the auspices of
CIMM, The Coalition for Innovative Media Measurement, founded in 2009 by TV content providers, media agencies and advertisers to promote innovation in audience measurement.
It was subsequently
embraced and developed by ESPN with the support of comScore and the use of PPM data.
As Andrew Green, Global Head of Audience Solutions, Ipsos Connect, suggested recently:
“Old–style people-meters are no longer sufficient to measure television audiences in all their forms. Surveys can no longer capture total readership behaviour. The future is
hybrid.”
In summary, media measurement in the US is a mess and has been so for too long.
The two take aways from this POV are simple - two Web sites:
MRC http://mediaratingcouncil.org/
CIMM http://cimm-us.org/
Should these US organizations merge to form a U.S. Super JIC? Our industry’s global corporations have long reaped the benefits of media ratings currencies from JICs based
on superior media research at the most competitive cost effectiveness levels.
Many of these companies operate in the U.S. So what are they waiting for?