TV advertisers still cling to long-held “myths” about prime time, live programming and top networks, says Comcast Spotlight, the local-cable TV based advertising sales
unit.
Pushing its effort for small to mid-size cable networks, Comcast notes the average household watches 17 different cable networks a month. The top five ad-supported cable TV networks only
make up 14% of total viewing.
Looking at 150 campaigns Comcast has handled across 25 markets, the top five in terms of reach on 37 networks earned a 81% U.S. reach average.
Campaigns
with the lowest reach -- covering 16 networks -- only had an average reach of 30%. Also, TV advertisers should consider other dayparts, as well as other cable networks, since two-thirds of all
viewing occurs outside prime time. In addition, Comcast says 87% of all TV viewing is viewed live -- not just for highly touted sports and news programming. It says adding a premium digital video
schedule -- such as a video on demand platform -- can increased reach by 17%.
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Another reason to move towards small to mid-size cable networks and non-primetime dayparts: Cord-cutting.
Brad Adgate, veteran media agency/media sales research executive, and former executive at Comcast, says: “Comcast along with other MVPD's continue to lose subscribers who have cancelled their
subscriptions. Many of these cord cutters are younger adults that marketers covet. Those remaining subscribers tend to be older, are heavier viewers of television and watch linear television.
“
“[Traditional pay TV services] cannot get the reach with fragmentation, declining audiences, and cord cutting… They have difficulty selling second and third tier cable
networks in non prime dayparts. So it replaces reach with targeting. Something digital media does well.”
Comcast Spotlight's set-top box data comes from 17 million TV households.