DVR Viewers Push Ad Ratings Higher 177
An anonymous reader writes "It looks like DVRs and timeshifting has finally done what many people said it would do: increased overall viewership! USA Today reports: 'Among the things the report revealed is that many DVR viewers do not fast-forward through ads. The viewer total for broadcast network ads goes up 32% when DVR watchers within three days are included, according to Nielsen. For some prime-time shows, it means that DVR viewing, long seen as a threat to advertising, could even bring higher ad prices. NBC's The Office, for example, had a live-plus-three Nielsen commercial rating of 3.36 — higher than the 3.11 it got for the week of May 6 under the traditional Nielsen program rating system.' Makes me wonder where this will lead for my favorite genre shows which by their very nature have a higher DVR component and have seen declining viewership using the older methodology (BSG, SG-1, etc)."
perhaps they are recording the ads (Score:4, Insightful)
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Actually, ads don't really bother me, unless they're too redundant (same 2 ads every break, repeated once or twice during each break).
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Then you don't remember what part of the show you're FF or RW in. "Is it the beginning, middle, or ending of the show?"
In the early-mid nineties, I used to tape Eek the Cat and The Tick whilst I was at the local DZ [wikipedia.org] for a morning and afternoon of jumping. I remember the ads were the same every break but the station bumpers were on a rotation. I could know where I was on the tape by the bumper placement.
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Re:perhaps they are recording the ads (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:perhaps they are recording the ads (Score:5, Interesting)
What will instantly prompt me to pick up the remote and "bloop" is obnoxious ads, such as Vonage woo hoo (fuck you too) and car dealership ads. Why is it that all car dealerships have horrible obnoxious ads? Hell, they are even worse that inane ads for "hot pockets" [danwho.net] or tampons...
If we could thumb up or down ads as we watch, maybe we would get better quality ads.
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Well, I read it. I'm important, and witty, and honest, and industrious, and gentle, and self-deluded, and humble.
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I have a DVR, I skip a lot of the ads, but not all of them. Sometimes I *want* a break. Sometimes the commercials are entertaining.
I'm sure some people almost always skip the commercials.
I'm sure some people almost never skip the commercials.
But the bottom line is if you start looking at people with viewers, at least SOME of them will be watching the commercials. That's much 'better' than just assuming none of them ever do.
Define "better" (Score:4, Insightful)
"if you start looking at people with viewers, at least SOME of them will be watching the commercials. That's much 'better' than just assuming none of them ever do."
If you mean "better" in terms of scientific accuracy, you are right. But I'd like to suggest that "assuming none of them ever do" has a useful purpose too:
If you assume none of them ever do, you can convince Congress that the sky is falling and get technological control measures such as the DMCA or worse [wikipedia.org] in place.
Re:perhaps they are recording the ads (Score:4, Interesting)
And then people we know will say 'you know that ad where [insert ad description here]?' and we always say 'we don't watch ads...' they always stare at us like we have a second head or something (as if ad skipping DVR's weren't 5+ years old).
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Re:perhaps they are recording the ads (Score:5, Interesting)
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Until the Vonage commercials come on...
Re:perhaps they are recording the ads (Score:5, Funny)
And people used to say TV rots the mind. Well, you showed them.
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Heh. I was thinking the same thing! Now, if he had had something like this, it would have been an all-together different think: Ant pee pull yews twos hay tea vee wroughts dumb hind. Wail, ewe sloughed 'hem. :)
Re:perhaps they are recording the ads (Score:4, Insightful)
My life is much better since I started indiscrimnately blocking/skipping advertisements. Same thing with SPAM and email. Once I took the time to implement a really good spamassassin filter, my life got better.
Work and effort? I just download the shows from bittorrent where someone else has already cut out the commercials. And when I was using MythTV to record them myself, Myth automatically skipped the commercials for me. But then, I'm an anal liberal who just wants to block/skip commercials "just because they are there." Though I'm not sure what it is has to do with being "liberal." Do conservatives somehow enjoy selling bits and pieces of their mind/soul to advertisers? Is watching advertisements a "family value?"
Frankly, I'm baffled by anyone who willingly sits through advertisements when skipping them is so easy these days. Is the programming that ya'll watch just so empty and shallow that advertising is just as entertaining? WTF?
It isn't just about idealism, either. You can save a very significant amount of time by skipping ads. 1 hour shows become 40 minute shows. 30 minute shows become 20 minute shows. Not to mention the beneficial effect it has on attention span.
-matthew
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You seem to have spend days of work and completely realtered your life, just to avoid seeing adds, you are spending your relaxation time to avoid watching adds. You are on a major quest to save the world from something that is not a real threat.
Conservatives normally realize that TV Adds do help pay for the cost of the Show we watch. They are normally annoyed that they are paying money for say Cable TV and still having adds but in general they see adds as a way to keep costs down for
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No, I installed MythTV to get DVR capabilities which also happens to have commercial auto-skip as a feature. The time I have saved by skipping ads easily makes up for the time spent setting up the DVR. 10 minutes here, 20 minutes there really adds up quickly.
As for
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Here's a story: a few years ago I bought a PVR. Apart from the effort needed to get an EPG running (which is a result of the fscked-up legal system and hidebound TV networks here - not even MS could beat them!), it takes no effort at all - the machine records what I want to watch, and when I get a chance I sit down and watch it. About 5 times in an hour long program, I press a button a few times to skip
Re:perhaps they are recording the ads (Score:4, Informative)
Just a clarification... (Score:3, Informative)
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A man and a woman getting it on on the couch in front of the tv. The caption read "Current advertising research says these people are watching your ad. Who's really getting screwed?"
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It sounds like somebody is putting some serious spin on the numbers. Like they aren't looking at percentages. They're just talking about the raw numbers in their their samples. They take X number of non-DVR watching viewers (traditional Nielsen ratings), assume they're all watching the ads, add in the 1 third of DVR users who *aren't* skipping ads, and call that a net gain for advertisers. WT
I think most DVR users don't fast forward. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Most of the DVR users I know seem to "forget" that they can fast forward and its not an issue. What I can't wait for is when viewership is actually tracked instead of by some representative selection of people who never seem to like the shows I like.
I watch shows on DVD, and sometimes I wish that there was a commercial in there, so I can sit and digest the big shocking reveal that just occurred without being distracted with technicalities like finding the remote and the pause button.
Then again, I also watch regular broadcast TV, I wish I never had to switch channel to avoid an annoying ad for something I'll never ever even consider buying.
The lesson is: Choice is good, anti-skip is evil.
Re:I think most DVR users don't fast forward. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Some DVR users may want to watch the ads. (Score:5, Insightful)
Hell, with some of the tripe on TV nowadays sometimes the ads are the best part!
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Halfway there. They want you to the point where if you think "mortgage", you also in the same thought think "Ditech Mortgages". It turns out being "memorable" is pretty hard, and repetition
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My DVR does not have a "jump" button, though. It has a Fast-Forward. In fact, it has three fast-forward speeds which appear, from the time-stamps, to be 2x, 10x, and 30x. 30x is a little fast--I need to be on my toes. 2x is a little slow. 10x is just about right and I tend to use that one.
What's interesting is that occasionally an ad wi
Why ISNT it tracked? (Score:2)
Seriously - they could be providing ACTUAL USAGE NUMBERS FOR FREE, compared to Neilsen who pays families, and reaches a much smaller segment of the population.
Any digital cable company should be able to know at any given time exactly how many people are tuned into a given show. Hell they could even correlate it with account data to give stats by region - and could even take statistical corre
Re:I think most DVR users don't fast forward. (Score:4, Funny)
I do something similar, and it makes me wonder sometimes just how my brain works.
When I'm watching a recording on the DVR, I often forget to FF through the ads,
but,
when I'm watching something live, I almost always instantly reach for the remote to try to FF, only to be informed by the tv that I can't.
sheesh.
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I actually have found that if I see a really good commercial, I will save the program to show my wife. It still amazes me that every commercial ever made is not available for live streaming over the internet. Why oh why would a company not want people to go out of their way to watch their commercials?
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I got smacked the other day when a pastor at church was saying a very long prayer and I "click-click'ed" under my breath and my wife heard it.
As far as actual Tivo and ad's. I really like commercials I have not seen before and will often watch them on purpose, they rarely ever get a second viewing though.
And they know this...how? (Score:5, Interesting)
The commercials can usually be ignored when the show is finally watched or burned to DVD, right? The DVRs I see advertised all seem to offer this feature. I am looking to buy a combo DVD/VHS/DVR this year, so this feature sounds remotely useful to save DVD space. More shows per DVD!
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Nielsen has no idea what you are doing. They recruit viewers who install special monitoring equipment and/or keep diaries and extrapolate that to the overall population.
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Now now, what it actually decides is that viewers watch the same things that gay people do. That's not the same conclusion. Based on the conclusion it does come to, it makes poor assumptions about what you want to watch, probably because certain factors aren't weighted heavil
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Ads (Score:5, Insightful)
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Personal Experience (Score:5, Interesting)
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I'm curious as to how they find out this info. Do they just call people up and ask if they saw the commercial during such and such episode and if they were using a PVR or watchin
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Bias.... (Score:4, Interesting)
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I think they're talking about 7 days after the program is recorded, not 7 days after getting a DVR. I also think most DVR users have seen (and maybe even own) a VCR, so they're probably familiar with the 'fast forward' concept.
I'd say marketing folks might be interested in DVR-use trends and h
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It doesn't work this way. (Score:2)
And I still watch commercials.
There are a few reasons for this. One, commercials are actually informative. There are really new products and new TV shows and new other things out there that you get informed about watching commercials.
Some commercials are also entertaining.
And, I find that when I need to go to the kitchen or the bathroom or whatever, instead of just getting up and leaving during the commercials like I used to, I just pause the TV, and end up watching th
some dvrs dont skip adds? (Score:3, Insightful)
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I had no idea that some DVRs wouldn't FF thorough adds. I hope my cable company never "upgrades" to one.
Don't just hope, do something. The cable company wants you to watch as many ads as possible because it makes them money. Relying on them to provide you with a box to let you skip ads is a pretty poor strategy. Their plan is to make you watch absolutely as many ads as possible through disabling features that will let you skip them, without motivating you to move to another vendor for your DVR. Worse, the price they charge you for your DVR is usually subsidized by overcharging you for cable service, thus al
DVR (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Start of commercial - hit fast forward 2) Skip back if/when I see something I'm looking for, or a funny looking add 3) Miss the start of the show, curse comcast for not having "skip ahead 30seconds" (I miss my Dish DVR
In many ways, DVRs are doing to TV what the internet has done to "print" adds. In most papers there are sidebar adds that you can click on if interested, but ignorable otherwise.
I think that advertisers are going to have to go back to "selling" more and relying on obnoxious/flashy adds less. In the end, people want to know about truly good deals or truly interesting products and will listen to a sales pitch on something they care about, and ignore the stuff they aren't interested in.
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Commercials? What commercials? (Score:4, Insightful)
1. After a show completes recording, ShowAnalyzer auto-scans the recording for commercial breaks and flags them. This process completes within about 2-3 minutes of the completion of the recording.
2. We watch the show with SageTV's ComSkip plugin enabled, and when a commercial break begins, playback just jumps forward to the marked end of the commercial break, resuming the show content. It's slicker than snot.
3. Should we want to watch commercials, we either temporarily disable the ComSkip plugin, or we just FF or REW into the marked commercial section.
And the auto-marking is 's amazingly accurate--probably 98% accurate. The combination of SageTV + ShowStopper + ComSkip plugin gives us very successful commercial marking. No, it's not perfect, and sometimes shows get mis-marked, but it's very rare.
Other home-brew DVR's like MythTV and BeyondTV have similar capabilities.
And when we want to do something else (food, bathroom, phone, etc.) it's just a simple press of the Pause or Stop buttons
Commercials are not evil. Forcing us to watch them is.
SageTVTips.com [sagetvtips.com]
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Did you really like your Dish DVR that much? I have Comcast basic cable right now and I'll be getting Dish in a couple weeks. It'll be really nice to know that, while I'm getting more channels for less money, I'm also getting a better DVR experience. Especially since I've never owned a DVR.
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You know why? (Score:2)
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Unfortunately, I have the opposite problem. I need caffeine to stay awake when watching TV at night, so by the time the show is over, I'm so wired I can't sleep.
Then I watch the first 10 minutes of another show, get hooked... and the cycle repeats until it's time to get ready for work.
And then there's the weekends...
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For Shame! (Score:5, Funny)
Being entertained is a privilege, not a right.
I mean, sure, you paid to buy the TV. And you pay your cable or satellite bill. And you bought the PVR along with the embedded fees for the various artists' unions. But, other than that, it's like you commercial skippers are trying to get something for nothing.
It's time to ask yourself what Jesus would do.
It's time to take some responsibility: if you enjoy quality programming, the onus is on you to not only watch the adverts but also to act on them. That's right: those commercials are worthless unless you exercise your obligation as a consumer to actually buy something.
So, what's our tally? Buy your TV, buy your PVR, line the pockets of the artist unions, pay for content delivery, watch the ads, act on the suggestions made in the ads -- now you're entitled to some entertainment.
Sadly, there's nothing much good on.
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Re:What would Jesus do? (Score:2)
That's simple. Set the controls to block all violence, cursing, adult situations, etc and foreget it as there is nothing on except "BLOCKED CONTENT".
Really, you have to ask "What would Jesus do?". I think he would be too busy to waste time not talking to people in person. Somehow I just can't picture him kicking back in a recliner and flipping on The Simpsons.
I also strongly doubt he would have cable, satelite, a PVR, or even a TV.
You did bring up a beef I ha
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Scream "That magical box has tiny people inside!" in aramaic and run away?
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It's time to ask yourself what Jesus would do.
Jesus's remote has a SMITE button. When a particularly annoying ad appears on His TV (which is much bigger than yours, btw) He presses SMITE, and the ad is destroyed. If He is truly angered He holds the SMITE button down for three seconds, and the ad agency that created the ad is also destroyed, along with all memory of the ad in the minds of anyone who was watching. This is why you don't remember any of the truly annoying ads. Why He has chosen to not smite
DVRs can help commercials (Score:2)
Granted it hasn't happened often, but if the ads are something your actually interested it the DVR allows you to go back and check out.
So true about BSG, SG-1, other "geek" shows. (Score:2)
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I don't know much about nielson and tv ratiings but they simply must somehow take into account dvr viewing when making their ratings
Ads == (bathroom) or (beer) or (snack) + break (Score:3, Insightful)
Voting System (Score:5, Insightful)
That way, annoying ads would be voted down (companies would stop paying to show it) and fun/good ads would be voted up (companies would know what style works).
Maybe add a third option to let them know they're showing it too often. Sometimes I like some ads but they appear so often as to become annoying.
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How sustainable (Score:4, Informative)
However, we MythTV users don't FF over ads, the skip is instantaneous. The system makes judements, about 95% accurate
over where the ad bounds are. When an ad is coming up, it says "3 minute commercial break" in a pop up and you push
a key to skip it. If it has guessed wrong on the length that's usually obvious, and of course it's obvious on the
start. With technologies like this, which the studios have sued to keep out of PVRs, there will be few who don't
skip the breaks, or who even notice interesting ads and rewind to watch them.
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Dear Advertisers (Score:2, Funny)
My experience (Score:2)
Other times, I'll simply let the advert break run through but without actually watching, because I'm taking a
My DVR habits (Score:2)
If I "watch" the commercials then that me
I'll go a step further... (Score:2)
Before them, my mind was trained to tune out commercials because I was so sick of them. If I couldn't tune it out, I developed a very negative opinion of the companies advertised. Remember those Taco-Bell "drop the chulupa" commercials that aired twice every commercial break for every show for over a year? I haven't been to a Taco-Bell since. I'm actively not trying to boycott them, that was simply the result.
However, whenever I now see a commercial, it's n
VOLUME of commercials remind me (Score:3, Informative)
Stop displaying your channel logo (Score:2, Informative)
Mythtv eats commercials! (Score:2)
I've been saying this for years... (Score:3, Informative)
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If I want to go have dinner on Monday evening, I don't have to worry about missing Heroes. Its there waiting for me whenever I do have time. If I have another show I
Re:Why only 3 days? (Score:5, Informative)
Generally, adverstisers prefer to use "live" to determine rates (some commercials like movie releases can have less of an impact after time passes), broadcasters prefer "live-plus-seven", so I think "live-plus-three" became the compromise to include those people who do watch the show, but just aren't able to watch it live.
I'm not in that industry, but it seems like a pretty decent compromise (and I believe it's quickly becoming the new standard when negotiating ad rates) given the availability of recording devices and the significant amount of delayed viewing that occurs.
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Layne
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Well, that was not the case twenty years ago.
Didn't Donald Duck learn that when he went to Mathmagic Land?
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On the other hand, while I haven't given up totally on buying CDs, the number I've bought has certainly dropped since Napster et. al. It'd be hard to tell why if you were taking me as a single data point - the
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