RATINGS
REPRESENTATION
What do these numbers
REPRESENT? (See also Measuring
the Masses )
Another key concept to understand is "how big is the TV watching
audience?"
Here again, students may search for the answer.
US TV Households Chart
|
2012-2013 |
2011-2012 |
2910-2011 |
|
114.2 million HH |
114.7 million HH |
115.9 million HH |
|
2009-2010 |
2008-2009 |
2007-2008 |
| 114.9 million HH |
114.5 million HH |
112.8 million HH |
|
2006-2007 |
2005-2006 |
2004-2005 |
|
111.4 million HH |
110.2 million HH |
109.6 million HH |

How are "ratings" and "shares" generated? Students should be
able to explain
how Nielsen obtains this information. ( See "What
TV Ratings Really Mean" for an
explanation) How is this information used?
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Nielsen Media Research's role is to measure both what is transmitted and
what is received. By doing this, we provide the programmers and advertisers with vital feedback
on their audience.
Nielsen
TV ratings are used like currency in the marketplace of
advertiser-supported TV. When advertisers want a commercial to
reach an audience, they need to place it in TV programs which deliver an
audience. The more audience a program
delivers, the more the commercial time is worth to advertisers. So the
amount charged for advertising is usually a
negotiated rate per thousand viewers multiplied by the Nielsen Media
Research audience estimate (in thousands).
Programs are expensive to produce, whether they attract large audiences
or not. In the long run, TV programmers can't pay more for a program than they can earn
from selling advertising in it.
(Source: "What
TV Ratings Really Mean")
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Looking at rating information tells us which programs are popular (most watched)
and which are not ( least watched). Sales people use detailed information
obtained from the ratings to attract business people who want to advertise their
products or services, where their commercial will get the most attention.
Example: A tire dealer might decide that in order to reach men, he will
buy
airtime to advertise his tires during a televised sporting event, since this
type of
program seems to attract more men than women.
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Question: I have a question
that has been killing me for a long time. Every time
the Nielsen ratings come
up, they always display ratings for a certain show by
age range. For instance,
on a recent TV show, they said that it received the
most viewers between the
ages of 18-24. How on earth do they know how old
the viewers are? How do they
know if adults or teens watch their shows? While
we are on the subject, how do
they calculate the viewer numbers? Is our
television some kinda tracking
device? Basically, how do they know who is watching? Johanna D.
Televisionary: Your TV isn't a tracking device,
Johanna, but the boxes the folks at Nielsen place in sample families' homes
certainly are. I've covered this before,
but it's been a while, so what the
heck? Others are probably wondering about
this kind of thing, too. Here are
the basics.
Nielsen uses a representative sample of U.S. TV
households to determine who's
watching what and when for obvious reasons,
tracking each of the country's
99 million households with TVs is out of the
question. The sample is made up of
more than 5,000 houses, containing more
than 13,000 viewers, that are randomly
picked in order to represent a wide
range of demographics and locales.
Extrapolating from that, in theory,
provides a picture of what the whole country
is watching at any given time,
within a certain range of error.
Exactly how do they measure? Using a few
methods. They know the age, gender,
etc. of each family member when they
choose which households to work with.
Meters are installed on every video
device in the home TV sets, cable boxes,
VCRs, satellite dishes to
record which shows each is tuned to. Also, the
company uses "people
meters" to keep track of which person in the house is
watching, and
diaries and other methods are used to gather numbers on a
market-by-market
basis.
Demographics Within the U.S. Television Homes
Demographic
2003-04 2004-05
2005-06
Households 108,400,000 109,600,000 110,200,000
Persons 2+ 275,580,000 277,930,000 280,500,000
Women 18+ 109,860,000 111,070,000 111,990,000
Men 18+ 101,540,000 102,660,000 103,840,000
Women 55+ 35,180,000 35,340,000 36,210,000
Men 55+ 28,290,000 28,850,000 29,720,000
Teens 12-17 24,700,000 24,560,000 24,710,000
Children 2-11 39,480,000 39,640,000 39,960,000
Source: Aug.25, 2005 PR Wire story
http://www.hispanicbusiness.com/news/newsbyid.
asp?id=25051&cat=PR+Newswire&more=/pr_newswire/ |
Persons Using Television
|
|
|
2003-04
|
2004-05
|
Chg.
|
|
Teens 12-17 |
27.4
|
28.3
|
+0.9
|
|
Persons 12-34 |
30.5
|
31.4
|
+0.9
|
|
Females 12-34 |
31.9
|
32.9
|
+1.0
|
|
Adults 18-34 |
31.7
|
32.6
|
+0.9
|
|
Women 18-34 |
33.7
|
34.8
|
+1.1
|
|
Adults 18-49 |
36.3
|
37.3
|
+1.0
|
|
Women 18-49 |
38.0
|
39.3
|
+1.3
|
|
Adults 25-54 |
40.7
|
41.4
|
+0.7
|
|
Women 25-54 |
42.3
|
43.3
|
+1.0
|
|
Adults 35+ |
46.9
|
47.5
|
+0.6
|
|
Adults 50+ |
51.4
|
51.6
|
+0.2
|
Source: Magna Global USA analysis
of copyrighted Nielsen Media Research data.
Seven-network
affiliates includes PAX and the six broadcast networks regardless
of whether they're airing network programming (e.g., 10-11pm on
Fox, WB, and
UPN affiliates)
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