
Although TV set usage was way up following the
onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, actual viewer "attention" and "viewability" didn’t follow the same path.
During the peak stay-at-home period -- from mid-March through the
end of April, for daytime hours of 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. -- viewer “attention” decreased by 3.7%, while the total tuning time that TV sets were on grew 77%. These results come from TVision, a
TV research company that uses eye-tracking technology.
The study also notes that viewer engagement -- “viewability” -- decreased 1.5%. TV commercial
wear-out occurred during this period.
Viewer attention to COVID-19-related brand advertising over the first two-and-a-half months of the crisis decreased by 13% from
March 1 through May 17. At the same time, “attention” to OTT programming increased 20%.
TVision defined "ad viewability" as the metric measuring how
effectively viewers are kept in the room while ads are onscreen --the percentage of all ad impressions in which a viewer was in the room for two or more seconds.
"Ad
attention" is a metric that measures how effectively ads held viewers’ attention while they aired -- the percentage of all ad impressions in which the viewer was looking at the TV screen for two
or more seconds.
Research for the total report came from 5,000 U.S. homes from January 1, 2020 to June
30, 2020. TVision’s technology detects viewers in a room and what their eyes are looking at without personally identifying individual users.