Asia-Pacific Broadcasting (APB) December 2016 Volume 33, Issue 11 | Page 17

MANAGEMENT December 2016 17 All about the count Nielsen offers Total Audience Measurement, a multi-platform tool that acts as a single source platform. ❝Often, what is suitable for in-home TV measurement cannot be replicated for digital screens due to fragmented audiences.❞ — Craig Johnson, Head of Reach Solutions, South-east Asia, North Asia and Pacific, Nielsen important to make sure each platform can be compared and duplication removed. “Comparable metrics across factors such as how long, how often and how much needs to be collected allows an average audience for any piece of advertising or content to be quantified and reported.” In Asia-Pacific, Johnson paints Singapore pay-TV operator StarHub as a leading example of how companies are beginning to grasp a “great understanding” of what is needed from audience measurement, and from there, to push on to make sure all their audiences are captured. Last year, StarHub launched its SmarTAM system, which was developed together with Nielsen. Presented as Singapore’s first Television Audience Measurement (TAM) system using Return Path Data (RPD) technology, SmarTAM ‘harvests’ RPD from StarHub’s two-way digital set-top boxes (STBs) and applies Nielsen’s proprietary research for TV viewership measurement. Each Asia-Pacific country has its own set of challenges around measurement technology, says Johnson, as he reveals that pilots are under way in various countries in the region to cover measurement from the single TV household to mobile streaming. Because Asia-Pacific remains one of the most fragmented and diversified regions in the world, operators will continue to deploy different approaches for audience measurement across linear and non-linear platforms, remarks Stéphane Le Dreau, general man- ager, South-east Asia, Nagra. Whether such an approach is sustainable in the long term, however, is debatable, suggests Le Dreau. “2016 saw many new developments in the pay-TV space with a myriad of online TV services such as Netflix and iflix being rolled out in more countries across South-east Asia. To understand what viewers want, it is essential to know where and how viewers are consuming content.” He urges operators to consider adopting a unified measurement strategy that applies across different platforms and provides a holistic view of customers’ viewing habits. The transition to IP can also be advantageous; in any event, OTT delivery is already the norm for many TV operators. Le Dreau continues: “Distributing video over IP can provide access to a vast amount of data that can be utilised to derive valuable and actionable customer insights, without compromising the viewer’s privacy. “For instance, tracking and measuring viewer data can allow advertisers to measure the effectiveness of an ad campaign or help service providers to shape their channel line-up and subscription tiering.” Armed with insights based on With the emergence of new viewing possibilities and actors, the TV market is constantly moving and changing. To meet the challenge of continuing to track content wherever they are consumed, audience measurement tools need to be “as exhaustive and precise as possible”, Julien Rosanvallon, director of Médiamétrie’s Television Department, told APB. As early as 2011, the French audience measurement company, in recognition of evolving TV viewing habits, decided to integrate time-shifted audiences in Mediamat, the company’s TV audience measurement tool. In 2014, catch-up TV was added into the mix and since the beginning of this year, catch-up TV results were also available programme-by-programme. Rosanvallon added: “We’ve also been working on four-screen TV audience measurement; that is, the performance of programmes, whether broadcast on TV, computer, mobile phone or tablet screens. “Since April 2016, we have been delivering fourscreen rating on a daily basis. By the end of this year, we’ll be able to add demographics analysis at a channel level.” Whether on linear or non-linear platforms, it is equally important to create common indicators to support deep and precise analysis of any content, wherever and whenever it is broadcasted. In essence, this should reflect the total TV usage of the population, said Rosanvallon, adding: “On the other hand, we also need to report usage in conjunction with advertising models. For that reason, it was very important for the French market to distinguish time-shift viewing from video-ondemand (VoD), simply because these formats do not support the same ad model — the first has the same ads as broadcast TV, the latter supports online-based targeted ads.” Looking into the future, Médiamétrie believes that TV audience measurement will adopt a hybrid guise, and will increasingly rely on Return Path Data — an area where Médiamétrie is actively working on with the likes of French pay-TV operator Canalsat. “The inclusion of larger samples will allow us to better address media fragmentation and the need for more granularity,” explaine