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How Do We Receive TV in 2022?
Big question #1: How do Americans receive television?
Share of U.S. TV households by source according to Nielsen:
1) Traditional pay-TV – 57%
2) Broadband-only – 27%
3) Antenna (OTA) – 15%
Big question #2: Does this split impact data collection for measurement?
Quick answer: Yes. These same trends are fragmenting sources available for video ad measurement.
Share of U.S. TV households by device technology according to CIMM:
1) Set-top box w/ Smart TV ACR – 42%
2) Set-top box wo/ Smart TV ACR – 34%
3) Smart TV ACR only – 13%
4) Neither set-top box or Smart TV ACR – 11%
Big question #3: Does the amount of daily time spent with TV change by source?
Quick answer: Yes. Traditional pay-TV households watch 2X the amount of TV as broadband only households.
Daily time spent with TV by source:
1) Traditional pay-TV – 5h 7m
2) Antenna (OTA) – 3h 50m
3) Broadband-only – 2h 53m
Big question #4: How many different services do people use to watch TV?
Average number of TV sources (YoY growth) according to HUB Entertainment Research:
1) 2018 – 3.0
2) 2019 – 3.7 (↑ 23%)
3) 2020 – 4.8 (↑ 30%)
4) 2021 – 5.7 (↑ 19%)
5) 2022 – 7.4 (↑ 30%)
Big question #5: Do antenna (OTA) homes also use streaming?
Quick answer: Yes. 73% of antenna (OTA) homes have some form of streaming.
Big question #6: Do OTA households differ by age/income?
Quick answer: Yes. OTA households without streaming are 12+ years older with a 54% lower average income.
Big question #7: Does the share of over OTA homes differ by market?
Quick answer: Yes. A household in Albuquerque (31%) is 4X more likely to be OTA than in Boston (8%).
Why this matters: Local is complicated/fragmented. The same target consumes video content differently by the market, which requires a unique media plan for each.
The post How Do We Receive TV in 2022? appeared first on Cross Screen Media.
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