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Nielsen: Big Families, Hispanics, Not Good at Pushing Buttons

By Catharine P. Taylor | Apr 30, 2009

If you read this post the other day about the controversy over Nielsen’s attempts to measure online and TV consumption by its people meter families, you know I questioned whether individuals in people meter families really push those personal viewing buttons on their remotes so that Nielsen can sync up viewing data with the age and sex of the viewer.

Now, even Nielsen says many people meter families aren’t particularly good at pressing those buttons. Therefore, it says the ratings it’s been giving for national TV are 8 percent less than they would be if compliance was better. When you stop to consider that ad dollars for the broadcast networks are down — and due to drop even further, in what most expect will be a depressed upfront market — that’s not good news.

The worst offenders among the button non-pushers? Large families, and Hispanics, though Nielsen says that as it does more research into the results of its compliance research, it may find that those findings change. Of course, because everything Nielsen does is controversial, not everyone is happy with how the compliance research is being done either. The reason is the same one that is dogging Nielsen’s attempts to measure online and TV consumption: that it’s all being conducted among the same sample, and therefore might alter that sample’s TV viewing habits. Or something like that. My thinking is this: what good does it do to measure compliance of button-pushing among families who aren’t being relied on to push buttons in the first place? I’ll refrain here from any further statements about how these controversies push my buttons. Oops! I just did.

Catharine P. Taylor has been covering digital media and advertising for almost 15 years and is a frequent speaker at conferences about media and advertising. She posts daily to BNET Media, writes the weekly Social Media Insider column for Mediapost and also has her own advertising blog, Adverganza.com. Follow her on Twitter or subscribe to the BNET Media Twitter feed.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Nielsen To Begin Measuring Online TV Audiences

    WebProNews - 74 days 13 hours 17 minutes ago

    By Jordan McCollum - Thu, 09/10/2009 - 11:52 Nielsen has been measuring television audiences for decades. Now online TV is starting to take over—but do we have accurate measurement of the online TV audience? comScore and other online measurement companies are watching videos—I mean, online video audiences—grow and grow. Now Nielsen will...

  • Nielsen Probe Finds People Not Pushing Buttons Properly: The Bigger The Audience, The Bigger The Discrepancy

    MediaPost - 207 days 14 hours 24 minutes ago

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  • Nielsen Pauses LPM Rollout

    Adweek - 341 days 11 hours 30 minutes ago

    NEW YORK Nielsen has decided to hit the pause button on the rollout of its local people meters once it completes the installation of the local TV ratings service in the top 25 markets.In a letter to clients dated Tuesday, Nielsen cited the economy as the reason for slowing down its plans to replace its meter/diary methodology with LPMs in all 56...

  • Video: Execs say smart meters will take time to change behavior

    ZDNet - 62 days 8 hours 38 minutes ago

    OK, just because a utility company wants you to HAVE a smart meter doesn’t mean you WANT a smart meter. Heck, I know my husband has aesthetics issues, although he is way sick of people traipsing mud into our basement. (Yes, our meter is THAT old.) Anyway, a panel at the AlwaysOn GoingGreen conference in Sausalito, Calif., tackled this very...

  • Comment: Time shift is just the beginning

    B&T - 116 days 23 hours 7 minutes ago

    December 2009 will see the most significant change in TV measurement since the introduction of PeopleMeters in 1991: the inclusion of ‘time shifted viewing’ into the TV ratings currency

 

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