Tag Archives: tv

The Shrinking Universe

Image representing Nielsen as depicted in Crun...

Image via CrunchBase

I know I sometimes get a bit “out there” with some of these posts.  Today might be one of those but hopefully you find the tidbit I’m about to discuss as interesting as I do.

Those of you who are outside of the media business might not be aware that Nielsen, the ratings company, updates what are called “universe estimates” every year.  This is to reflect the growth in households and of the numbers of people who live in them.  Those ratings you see reported are percentages of a universe – a 10 rating means 10% of what’s being measured – homes, Men, Women 18-34 – was watching.  Percentages are constant; universes aren’t, and this is where it gets interesting.  Let’s see what you think. Continue reading

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Filed under What's Going On

Digesting Super Sunday

The San Francisco 49ers' Super Bowl XXIX troph...

Image via Wikipedia

I don’t know about you, but I’m kind of glad that the Super Bowl now gets played in February. I mean, every month should have an outstanding food day. President’s Day? I don’t think so. Valentine’s Day? Maybe for some. But seriously – almost every other month has a holiday associated with a big food blow-out and now February does too. Yippee!
So what does this have to do with business? Continue reading

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Filed under food, Thinking Aloud, What's Going On

Careful with that fact, Eugene

I know it’s early in the week for an obscure Pink Floyd reference so let me explain.  The Olympics ended the other day and Nielsen is reporting some very large viewership numbers.  In fact, according to the Hollywood Reporter…

NBC Universal smashed yet another historic ratings benchmark: The Beijing Olympics is the most-watched U.S. television event of all time.  Through 16 days of coverage, 211 million viewers tuned in to the Olympics on NBC Universal’s broadcast and cable outlets, according to NBC citing Nielsen Media Research.  That’s 2 million more than watched the 1996 Atlanta Games, the previous all-time record-holder.

Lovely story, good for NBC, go USA.  But let’s spend a few seconds to look behind the numbers as an example of how one always needs to ask questions about any statistic.  There are roughly 115 million homes in the US and nearly 113 million of them have a TV (112,800,000 out of 114,890,000 to be precise). There are multiple viewers per home so there are around 285 million persons 2+ in the universe base.  I don’t have the 1996 people estimates but I think it’s fair to assume that ratio hasn’t changed very much.

In 1996, there were 97,540,000 homes and 95,900,000 TV homes.  So whilst TV homes grew nearly 17 million since 1996, and the number of people in those homes probably grew by 30+ million, Olympics viewing grew only by 2 million viewers.  Now, is that as impressive?  I’d say yes, given the fragmentation of media since 1996 but one could also argue that Olympics viewing has lagged, with 10% – 15% of universe growth actually reflected in viewing.  Heck, you’d expect a 15% pop in viewing just from the growth of homes.

The point is that in business, one can’t just hear a number and nod one’s head.  Ask questions, look for the numbers behind the number.  Challenge whomever is delivering the number to you.  Great executives will beat you to the punch and make sure every number they deliver is in perspective.

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Filed under Helpful Hints, Reality checks