Friday, April 01, 2005

Nielsen lays out plan for local TV measurement, says DVRs are Madison Avenue's problem

Convenience and control mean everything to today's consumer and unless advertisers, agencies and broadcasters make that ethos part of everything they do to reach viewers, they'll be lost amid a growing sea of digital video recorders, and Nielsen will be there to count the diminishing eyeballs with greater accuracy, executives from the reporting company said Thursday. The remarks were made separately in a presentation entitled, "TV Research at the Crossroads," at the Television Bureau of Advertising's 2005 Marketing Conference, which was held at the Jacob Javits Center in New York.

While it took years for technologies such as television, cable and satellite to gradually take hold, DVRs and DVD players have achieved enormous market penetration in the U.S. thanks to aggressive electronics manufacturers in China and South Korea, said Scott Brown, senior vice president-strategic relations, marketing and technology at Nielsen.

"DVR penetration is currently at 5 percent of U.S. households, but it will be at 25 percent by the end of 2006," Brown said. "In particular, there are 21 million video-on-demand households right now in the US, and they will number 30 million by the end of next year. Control and convenience are the watchwords of today. But those words mean nothing without content. And you are the ones who largely determine what the content is. So the future of this business is up to you to a certain extent and the decisions you make now about how to deal with consumers' demand for control and convenience."

Read the article: www.mediapost.com

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