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What Do You Spend 34 Hours Per Week Doing?

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Apart from your job, name one thing you spend more than 34 hours a week doing? … No seriously, a real answer, more than 34 hours.

[queue Family Feud music]

“Let’s check the board, you say ‘watch broadcast TV’? Survey says …”

"No. 1 answer." (bell rings, family claps)

That’s right Compete cites that Americans watched 1% more TV last year than they did the previous year. So where is the internet-fed bloodbath of TV viewership we’ve been awaiting?

The fact is internet usage is the proving to be the pretzels that let you eat more ice cream. Lean-back TV programming combined with the lean-forward web surfing are the ying-and-yang of multi-tasked downtime.

“Simultaneous use of the Internet while watching TV reached 3.5 hours a month, up 35% from the previous year,” according to Nielsen’s 3-Screen Report. But dig a little deeper there and find the real jewel.

Of Nielsen's wired TV viewers, about 3% also were on the web. But look at Nielsen's wired internet users, and you'll see 34% of them had the tube on at the same time.

If I'm a TV news director or a promotions manager -- I'm looking long and hard at my website to integrate some cross-platform coverage to encourage those 34% to flip on my news product while they're surfing. They're sitting, laptop and iPad in hand [yes both], just waiting for an incentive to flip. It could be as simple as a tweet or a Facebook post that arrives just as the Celebrity Apprentice limo is rolling down Central Park West.

 

 

 

Filed under  //   Best Practice   TV   compete   media   nielsen  


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Maybe I Won't Hate Appointment TV ...

UPDATE: Shortly after this posting -- Fox announced "tweet-peat" episodes of "Fringe" and "Glee" which synchs with this concept. It makes the episode a social event due to the Twitter tie-in and gives viewers a reason to skip the DVR and watch live. (Disclaimer: I'm employed by News Corp. -- Fox Interactive Media) 

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Very cool concept here -- social media could make appointment TV worthwhile. It's the next-day work chat ... "Did you see 30 Rock last night ..." except you can do it during the show. There's value there -- and its for the user this time not the network/advertiser.

Rethinking Prime Time with Social Media
The idea of appointment-based TV may very well be saved by the very medium that is driving the changes in television across the board—the Web. Social media has shifted "time-shifting" back to real-time for select events, and advertisers should take note.
 
How it works: Social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter are becoming integral to our television experience. Now, during major events, viewers are texting, IMing and tweeting about the events as they happen—with their friends or "tweeps" – which means they have to be watching the same thing at the same time.
 
The significance: As TV becomes more social this collaborative aspect becomes one of the best arguments for event programming. Social media capabilities bring a segment of viewers together at a certain time, to discuss and debate the content they are watching. Think American Idol finale, think the Superbowl, think Lost, think Facebook/CNN's collaboration during the U.S. Presidential Inauguration—these events all represent spikes of activity surrounding a captive and, some would argue, more engaged audience than those in the past.

Filed under  //   TV   facebook   media   twitter  


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