Looking to
better sell its entire reach for local media advertisers, CBS has begun a trial with Nielsen to measure cross-media campaigns on local television and radio.
The test looks at local CBS TV
and radio audience data -- all to build measurement, revealing unduplicated reach and time spent across both media. In addition, it will measure reach and frequency for campaigns that run on both
local TV and radio.
In analyzing local TV and radio in a given month, CBS seeks cross-media strategies that address day-to-day and week-to-week reach, with distribution as well as the
concept of “recency,"which delivers messaging to customers near their purchasing actions/decisions.
Nielsen’s LPM [Local People Meter] data -- and newly acquired Nielsen
Audio’s PPM [Portable People Meter] data -- will provide local cross-platform measurement. Results will be released in the later part of first-quarter 2014. Recently, CBS and Nielsen
completed a two-week trial to measure viewing of television content on mobile devices using Syncbak technology.
David F. Poltrack, chief research officer of CBS Corp, stated: “The
advertiser must distribute the exposure to their message over time -- and in a manner that assures that each potential purchaser is exposed to that message in a consistent manner before each purchase
occasion.”
He added: “Armed with this new cross-platform, local market custom analysis, each advertiser will be able to use these powerful media to their full potential and both
TV and radio stations nationwide will benefit.”
While starting with CBS in this area, Nielsen will seek similar efforts for a wider group of clients
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I was delighted to read the MediaPost article about CBS' new investigation into television + radio reach and duplication patterns. This is good stuff!
Although my career in the last couple of decades has been dominated by work in television research, my first love was radio. So, it was a delight and pleasure to take part in research that Roberta McConochie was doing at Arbitron inthe test phase of PPM development. That work led to this paper by her, Beth Uyenco and myself presented at an ESOMAR conference in 2004.
http://shsmedia.com/ppm/Paper_McConochieUyencoKillion.pdf
I loved working on respondent-level data from real, single-source TV+radio measurement!!! It was particularly intriguing to investigate the patterns of how radio and TV duplicated, and to compare those patterns with a plain ol' random duplication.
To do this, I used our TView television analysis software with the RLD data from the PPM tests. You might enjoy this:
http://shsmedia.com/ppm/Killion_PPM_TV_radio_duplication.pdf
Greetings,
Kevin