Commentary

We Are Officially In The Post-Traditional-TV Era

The new TV season has started on network TV. CBS, ABC, NBC, Fox, the CW and others are rolling out their fan favorites and newcomers. Sports is back, too. And yes, ratings are down -- and prices in the upfronts were up.

Meanwhile, the shows people are talking about are not on mainline TV. You know this, because you have a Baby Yoda sitting on your desk, and can’t stop talking about who murdered Tim Kono. None of these shows (Disney+’s “The Mandalorian” and Hulu’s “Only Murders in the Building” respectively) were aired as part of a start of any particular season. They just air. And none of them were sold or premiered at an upfront event.

We have officially entered the next stage of screen entertainment. Traditional TV is challenged and is morphing into something new and different. Traditional players are reinventing themselves faster than they can come up with acronyms for their viewing platforms. TV, movies and video content are all merging -- indeed, blurring into new distribution and monetization models.

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I believe that we are now at the other end of the development. We are no longer seeing the slow evolution of video content; we are living in the first phase of the post-evolution. This first phase is characterized by consumers watching lots (and I mean LOTS) of video content across a wide array of platforms and technologies. Most of that content is watched on-demand,  not on linear channels. It's hard to predict when something will be watched: Will it be binged in one or two sittings, or consumed in dribs at a convenient moment, whenever that is?

Most of it is accessed not through antennas or cable, but modems and WiFi. Nielsen has learned the hard way that this is damaging the way it measures viewership. You are better off adding up actual viewers across the various platforms of distribution -- but sadly, many of these are walled gardens where it is hard to track who is watching what and when, if that data is released by the proprietors at all.

All this means you obviously will have to rethink your video planning strategy.

Budgets should not be allocated by media type or sub-type, like budget for TV, cable and online video. Instead, allocate media impressions by audience. Whom do you need to reach -- and by how much -- to create impact?

Gross rating points and target rating points are a thing of the past. If your media mix includes a traditional and/or cable buy, use these metrics to optimize that part of your buy. But don’t attempt to take these metrics across all the various platforms of video you are advertising on.

If your video production budget splits between 30 seconds and 15 seconds, start over. Get the message right, get the content right and produce for each platform. Your mix will cover anywhere from five seconds to long-form. There are no rules, other than creating what the audience expects on the platform they are on.

And finally, don’t just create advertising. Create content, collaborate with other content creators, and be prepared to get it wrong. Not all Netflix or Disney+ content is a winner. But at the same time, sometimes a piece of content just hits the right spot at the right time and becomes an unexpected big hit that you did not see coming. Now, if you will excuse me, I need to find out if Ted Lasso and Rebecca are or are not going to be an item….

2 comments about "We Are Officially In The Post-Traditional-TV Era".
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  1. Maarten Albarda from Flock Associates (USA), September 17, 2021 at 2:34 p.m.

    To add some numbers to today's column, per the Marketing Brew: "A very big streaming company is telling us that people are spending more time streaming. OK. Sure. What did you expect them to say?

    It checks out. Recent data from eMarketer shows that linear and connected-TV ad spending will total about $79 billion this year and is expected to reach $93 billion by 2025. Notably, most of that growth is coming from connected-TV spending.
    About a third of millennials, which the Harris Poll defines as between ages 25 and 40 (and are the largest segment of the population), were found to be unreachable via traditional TV services.
    “What should really be a wake-up call for marketers—who are still spending, in some cases, 80 to 90% of their TV budgets on traditional pay TV—is that a third of their audience isn’t there,” Dallas Lawrence, head of communications for Roku’s platform business, told Marketing Brew."

  2. Ed Papazian from Media Dynamics Inc, September 17, 2021 at 5:56 p.m.

    Maarten, of course, traditional ways to watch TV are declining in frequency---or volume of time---while streaming is on the rise. That was inevitable as streaming capability rose to about 80% of the population and the amount of content available via streaming services multiplied --much of it being standard "linear TV" fare, by the way. However I seriously doubt that a third of "millennials" aged 25-40 can't be reached via traditional TV services---unless you mean on a given day or, perhaps a week, though I'm not so sure about a week. Most ad campaigns last three years before a new positioning strategy is formulated  so we have to be careful about our time frames when talking about reach. Also, the only way that a majority of the nation's viewing content is  now accessed "on-demand" would be if streaming's share of all viewing was over 50%. But it's no where near that figure yet.  As for GRPs being things of the past, that doesn't make sense as this is simply a way of quantifying  the number of opportunities to see an ad---assuming that you accept your audience source as a supplier of OTS data---in terms that a client brand manager can understand. What's the alternative---citing millions ---or billions of "impressions" as your goal---which are merely GRPs projaected into audience "exposures" but in a very confusing way---unless the size of the population is known so the GRP calculation can be made. The same goes for reach. Are we now going to define reach goals as millions of people, not as a percentage of a given target group. Is that ---like dumping GRPs---really a step forward?  .

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