Television
Advertising
Television
Advertising Basics
The purpose of television (in the US, at least) is audience
delivery
TV is an audience delivery system: its value to advertisers
is in the manufacture, collection, and delivery of an audience
to an advertiser.
The first TV commercial was aired in 1941.
Advantages of Television
Television reaches 99% of American homes and is particularly
popular with consumers who are often targeted by
advertisers.
TV is great for advertising "common consumables:" cars,
household necessities, snack food, etc. "Stuff you get Walmart
and Target."
TV's combination of color, sound, and motion offers
tremendous flexibility in delivering an advertiser's
message.
Despite some declines in viewership due to the Internet, TV
still delivers a large audience: Americans watch TV twice as
much as they listen to radio and 10 times as much as they read
newspapers...
...and since the advent of cable, it also delivers a more
targeted audience. Advertisers reach fewer people, but they are
more like to reach the people they want to reach most. Their
advertising dollars are spent more efficiently.
It's also easier to localize and regionalize advertising on
cable, making TV advertising more possible to businesses who
couldn't have afforded it in the past.
TV is still the choice of an overwhelming number of people
for news (70 percent for TV, 10 for newspaper) and
entertainment.
Disadvantages of TV
Viewers often tune out ads. Heavy (and expensive) repetition
is often needed before the advertising message "sinks in."
As a mass medium, it doesn't work as well for upper income
individuals (with lots of discretionary income) who would
otherwise be desirable targets for advertisers. Historically,
daily viewing times tend to decline as income rises.
Viewers often "evacuate" when commercials come on.
Channel surfing has become an ingrained habit for most
viewers.
Viewer attention spans tend to be short.
Viewers tend to think of commercials as "clutter." Anything
that ISN'T the program they want to be watching is considered
clutter.
Clutter used to take up about 15 minutes per hour, but that
number has been rising in recent years. Additionally, more
commercials have become shorter, contributing to the perception
that there's more clutter.
TV Ratings and Related Advertising Factors
DMA
Designated Market Area: basically, the metropolitan area
covered by a TV signal. Markets are ranked according to the
number of people reached by TV signals in that area.
Example:
#1: New York,
#2: Los Angeles,
#3: Chicago,
#22 Pittsburgh,
#36 San Antonio
"The Nielsens"
The rating service used by TV stations and networks to
determine how many people are watching. Stations pay a LOT of
money to this company to get this information, and they use
Nielsen statistics to sell advertising.
Measurement has traditionally been done through diaries that
are filled out by the "Nielsen family."
Electronic measurement "boxes" called People Meters are
becoming more common.
About 9000 households participate in this service during any
particular "sweep."
"Sweeps"
Time periods during which audience research is
conducted.
Most important: February, May, and November (when you see a
lot of "series" shown on news programs).
In some DMAs, sweeps of some kind are done constantly.
Overnights are measurements that are available the morning
after a program airs.
Ratings
Broken into "Rating" and "Shares"
A program's rating is expressed as a
percentage, usually referred to as rating points.
Formula: Program audience divided by total TV
households. The TVs DO NOT have to be turned on.
Example: There are 1,000,000 TV households in a TV
market. If 300,000 are watching Desperate
Housewives, then the rating for the
program is 30
The share is the percentage of
households watching a program compared to other programs which
are on at the same time. In this case the TVs MUST be turned
on.
Example: There are 1,000,000 TVs in a TV market, but
only 600,000 are turned on and actually have someone
watching. 300,000 of those TVs are tuned into Desperate
Housewives. The program's share is 50.
HUT Levels
HUT=Homes Using Television. Tells you how many TVs are
turned on at any given time. Used to determine share but not
ratings.
Dayparts
Each TV viewing day is broken down into segments called
dayparts.
Morning: 7-9 AM Monday thru Friday (called "morning
drive" in radio)
Daytime: 9 AM-4:30 PM Monday thru Friday
Early Fringe: 4:40-7:30 PM Monday thru Friday (afternoon or
evening drive in radio)
Prime Time: 8-11 PM (7-10 PM in Central Time Zone)
Late News: 11-11:30 PM
Late Fringe: 11:30 PM-1 AM
Overnight or "Graveyard" 1-5 AM
Avails
Advertising slang for time slots that are "available" and
can be sold to advertisers.
Pre-emption and rate scales
Avails are sold to advertisers according to three
classifications (may vary by station or market).
- Nonpremptible (most expensive)
- Immediately Preemptible
- Preemptible with Notice
Make goods
When a commercial doesn't air for some reason (could be
technical difficulties, preemption for breaking news, etc), the
station must do a make good at some other time.
Syndication
Most TV stations buy programming from some source. They pay
for it by
- Cash: the station can sell all the avails inside
the program when it airs.
- Barter: the program provider gets a certain number
of avails in the program as part of the deal.
Off-Network Syndication: reruns of network shows, usually on
cable channels or networks.
Television Advertising Today
It's not just the "idiot box" in the living room anymore.
Boxes are all over the house, and video is available on
computers and other mobile devices. This poses new challenges,
but also new opportunities for advertisers.
Major networks have generally sustained their audiences
despite fragmentation.
"Lowest common denominator?"
Network revenues have increased lately, but it's probably
because there's more "clutter."
More advertisers are buying sponsorships of entire programs:
ABC News.
- Advertisers get less competition during the
program
- Viewers get less clutter
Brand Placement or Product Placement
An advertiser pays to have a product shown prominently
during the content of a program. Some people refer to this as
"subliminal" advertising, but technically it's not.
Block Programming
Few network shows stand on their own. Each is connected to
programs around it.
- Lead in: the program before
- Lead out: the program after
- Block: a combination of programs in a given time
period
- Hammock position: a new show placed between two older,
successful shows.
Pricing of a new show often depends on where it's placed in
the schedule.
A new show is judged by how well it "holds the audience"
that has been built by the shows around it.
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