More Viewers Interested in Watching TV on Mobile Devices

The “TV Everywhere” push by cable networks is matched by increased demand by consumers to watch programming on smartphones and tablets.

Interest in viewing television on mobile devices among adults climbed to 31% in 2012 from 22% in 2011, according to a new survey by Beta Research.

Among younger adults, ages 18 to 34, 50% said they were interested in viewing TV on mobile devices, up from 39% a year ago. And among teens 12 to 17, 47% said they were interested in using tablets and mobile phones to watch TV, up from 43%.

Beta said that 19% of adults said they actually viewed TV on a smartphone or tablet in the past 30 days.

Beta also asked about what digital basic and mid-sized networks viewers were interested in watching. Most getting the highest marks were: National Geographic Channel, ID Investigation Discovery, Nat Geo Wild, Cooking Channel and Science.

 

2012 Olympics Go Social

Shazam has inked a deal with the NBC Sports Group to provide NBC Olympics with interactive, social TV experience for viewers of the 2012 Olympics in London.

Per the deal, US viewers watching Olympic coverage across all NBCUniversal television properties will be able to use the Shazam mobile app to tag whatever they’re watching in order to unlock an assortment of extra content, such as athlete bios and photos, the latest information on results, and the medal count.

Other features include the ability to participate in polls and interact with others on Facebook and Twitter, as well as download the NBC Olympics app for access to more content.

The Shazam for TV service will be incorporated into NBC’s coverage from the Opening Ceremony on July 27 all the way to the Closing Ceremony on August 12.

New Study Reveals Key Tablet Usage Patterns

A new tablet study by the Online Publishers Association reveals that tablet adoption continues to skyrocket, now up to 31% of respondents — and a surprising 74% use the device daily. The study (.pdf), conducted with Magid, drills down on usage patterns and other handy facts. It’s a great nuts-and-bolts study to have, and we’ve highlighted TV-oriented data points below:

Tablet users spend an average of 13.9 hours a week on the device, and 5-11 p.m. is primetime. Last week, ABC noted it “parallels broadcast consumption patterns,” so the network tailored its new iPad app to showcase video during the primetime hours.

Of all the activities on the app, watching video comes in first at 54%. Weather and news follow.

Taking a deeper look at video, shorter-form content still rules, spanning news, sports, TV show clips and weather forecasts. Full-length content, however, will probably climb up the list as more compelling content increasingly becomes available for iPad viewing.

And as we all know, second-screen multitasking (85% of the time) — and even third-screen multitasking (66% of the time) — is a natural phenomenon with the tablet. Heavy multitaskers spend as much as 3 hours a day while actively consuming content on several devices.

On the advertising front, such multitasking doesn’t dilute the tablet ad experience. Around one-third of heavy multitaskers in the study said tablet ads motivated them to research and purchase products. Lots more good stuff in the study, which is available here (.pdf.), and here’s the study overview.

TV is changing, but is the industry ready?

How TV will change the game for digital marketers

TV is going through the biggest radical rethink in decades as it becomes connected to the Internet.

TV still commands 50 percent of the half-a-trillion dollar global media budget because it still engages consumers unlike any other media.

But over the last few years, the rise of smart mobile devices combined with the rapid growth of social media has changed the way we interact with television. When something piques our interests we want to share and dig deeper.

It is estimated that 25 percent of consumers go online after seeing a TV ad. That’s a huge spike right there. Not to mention that half of all TV watchers have a second electronic device in their hands, such as a smart phone or tablet, while on the couch. But whether you are checking your email or talking on Facebook, the habit is now truly synced for TV watchers. So much so, the biggest topic of discussion on social media by far is TV content. We just love it and we can’t get enough, because with every wave of consumer technology — from video recorders to X-Box and Hulu — technology drives TV viewing up and up, and with it the potential for advertising dollars and media measurement.

The next organic wave of “dual screening” — watching linear content on the main TV screen — while interacting on a second screen in your hand, is going to change everything we know about media.

In addition, the ability to place-shift content and carry TV with you in your pocket is going to grow exponentially, especially as the promise of 4G becomes a reality — but the forecast of $254 million by 2015 isn’t something the TV producers are too worried about. The big shift is in the delivery of video — not through traditional broadcast methods– but increasingly via the internet infrastructure.

Already 30 percent of U.S. homes find their TV sets are connected to the internet, whether directly or via an over-the-top service like cable or BluRay live. Best Buy saw 30 percent of all new TVs sold last year were “connected” and this number is continuing to grow.

The distinction between TV and online is quickly becoming blurred — and this is clearly shown in the impending explosion of online video. But sitting in front of your laptop isn’t the future for online video, it’s going to be video distributed over the internet to the very best screen in your home, your television. So what does this mean for the digital marketer?

But for all the talk of smart TVs and the rumor mills around a 50″ Apple iTV, consumers don’t replace their TV sets the way they do their mobiles. We typically replace our mobile every 12 to 18 months compared to every 7 to 10 years for TV sets, though that figure is now beginning to drop. This means for TV to shift we need to think of things connecting to the TV, as opposed to an actual smart TV in the near future. And that, my friends, is the race between OTT boxes from cable companies to Roku, Apple TV, etc. and wireless companion devices of the smart phone and tablet era.

When you look into what tablet and smart phone users are doing when watching TV, we discover that about 19 percent are searching for content related to TV advertising, a huge percentage of which are looking for coupons and discounts. This means that if we can simplify the process of finding related information or even sharing with friends whilst in front of the TV using a companion device, we can find a hybrid lean-back experience with lean-forward engagement.

Whether it is snapping a QR code on the screen, or letting high-frequency audio be picked up by a listening app on your smart phone or tablet, you can trigger a related response on the second screen. This doesn’t just have to act as a single redirect mimicking a click-thru, oh no. Multiple audio signals can be picked up within TV content or ad content to create multiple trigger points such as to collect characters by swiping your phone at the TV as shown by Wieden and Kennedy in its Honda Jazz TV ad, whereby the more interactive characters collected on the phone, the more hidden features one could discover.

But that is only TV ads. What about content itself? Adding meta data to all TV and film content means that potentially the trigger points of Daniel Craig sporting the latest Omega Seamaster in a Bond film becomes a trigger for the companion device to show an ad. Ever wondered what shoes Sarah Jessica Parker was wearing? Well now you can know without even doing a search.

Rolling a phone in front of a TV that triggers a response is just the next iteration of rich-media. It combines picture-in-picture across devices, whilst allowing a mass-reached broadcast medium to be overlaid with highly targeted personal ads that are user-initiated. It’s the 21 century expandable ad! It’s an in-stream plus a companion ad. It is HTML5 at its finest, set within an organically tactile device your toddler or grandmother will just intuitively “get.”

No more explaining to my mother what I actually do. No more convincing your CEO about online banners working, and them never actually seeing your work. Finally we are going to converge TV and online, and out-of-home content with interactive advertising, search and social media sharing within the most personal of devices. Not only that, but the chance for discount coupons and offers (or even payments) will happen right on a phone in your hand. Before you can even type “What is that hand bag she has?” your phone tells you and lets you look at it in 360 degrees, review it, buy it and show off to all your friends on Facebook that you are awaiting delivery of that very beautiful designer bag, all before the ad break even comes on the TV. Bingo! Winner, winner, chicken dinner (which, incidentally, you just ordered for home delivery via your mobile after seeing the latest Kentucky Fried Chicken ad.)

And the best part? Not only is this highly targeted advertising, being able to deliver individual ads to every single person in any given living room, or theatre or high-street, It offers measurability, accountability, consumer engagement, stunning creativity, and all with consumer-initiated opt-in. Did you hear me privacy advocates? I said “consumer opt-in!”

The bottom line is TV is changing. The notion of online video is permeating all media channels, and modes of measurement are going to be a hybrid from evaluating the value of an emotional connection through exposure as well as a tangible engagement through interaction. TV is just a large high-quality monitor that displays video content, irrespective of how it is transmitted to it. But everyone knows this will be increasingly via internet. It isn’t going to die. It’s just going to become a lot more dynamic, targeted, and measurable — complemented with “huge” production budgets. And that my friends, is the future of digital.

Apple wants to own every screen in your home

Apple wants every screen in your home to be an Apple screen. The company will be taking a giant leap toward accomplishing its goal at this year’s WWDC.

In just a decade, Apple has become a dominant force in computers, tablets, and mobile. It has yet to make major inroads into the biggest screen of them all: the television.

Sure, there’s Apple TV, but it has been a “hobby” for the company. Last year, 2.8 million units of the device were sold, and 2.7 million units have been sold so far this year. Though that’s impressive, it’s a far cry from the company’s iPhone, iPad, Mac, and iPod sales.

“It’s not a fifth leg of the stool,” CEO Tim Cook said recently at the D Conference. “It’s not the same size as the phone or Mac or tablet business.”

That’s all about to change, though. The Apple TV App Store is on its way, opening up the floodgates for developers to create killer apps for people’s living rooms. The new TV app store will be part of iOS 6, I’m told, which already powers the operating systems of the iPhone, the iPad, and the iPod Touch.

With a TV app store, the technology titan is laying the groundwork for the Apple television set (the iTV, iPanel, or whatever it will be called).

Releasing the Apple TV SDK is just the first step in Apple’s long-term plan to control every screen in your home. The big vision is to make all of the screens in your home interoperable via AirPlay and iOS.

Once that happens, it’ll be impossible to buy anything but Apple devices, because they will be the only products that work with the rest of screens in your home. Why buy a TV that can’t pull up your favorite apps, shows, and games instantly?

Network TV Draws Substantial Social Media Chatter

Social media activity for all broadcast networks increased substantially in May, the last month of the TV season, versus that of a year ago. ABC earned the greatest gain for any broadcast network.

Overall, broadcast TV shows garnered the most social media activity, with 71 million social media interactions in May; cable TV shows were at 40 million. Broadcast TV shows’ activity was up 32% from the month before.

Fox’s “American Idol” was the easy winner when it came to social media messages of a regularly scheduled TV show — some 1.4 million for its finale, per social media researcher Trendrr.TV. This was more than three times the previous season, when there was some 450,000.

The next-biggest social media TV show finale was “Glee,” with around 400,000 versus around 275,000 the year before. “Grey’s Anatomy” followed at just over 300,000; CW’s “Vampire Diaires” had just under 300,000.

But when it came to all reality TV, cable network shows shone during May with VH1’s “Basketball Wives” getting some 425,000 messages, MTV’s “America’s Best Dance Crew” was next at just under 350,000; and Oxygen’s “Bad Girls Club” followed, pulling in just under “Dance Crew.”

When it comes to social media platforms for TV, Twitter commanded the biggest share at 59% in May for broadcast TV shows. This was followed by Viggle, a growing social media site that caters to TV viewers through incentive programs, at 18% share. GetGlue was next at 14%, followed by Facebook at 9%. When it came to cable TV shows, Twitter’s results were even better in May, at a 74% share. Viggle and Facebook each at 10%; and GetGlue had 6%.

As it did with Nielsen viewing metrics, Fox scored the best of any network for the month — some 6.5 million social media messages; ABC was at around 5.7 million; NBC, 3.9 million; CW, 2.1 million; and CBS, 1.8 million. ABC made the greatest gains year-to-year. In the May sweep period of a year ago, it pulled in 1.1 million, which grew fivefold in May 2012. Every network grew exponentially, as TV and social media continue to grow rapidly.

Social media as it relates to sports on TV continues to be a big draw. The NBA Playoffs pulled the biggest individual results. With games such as the Los Angeles Lakers-Denver Nuggets; Los Angeles Lakers-Oklahoma City Thunder, and Boston Celtics-Miami Heat each drawing close to 1.8 million messages apiece on specific nights in May.

For all its games in May, the Lakers-Nuggets series pulled in the most social media activity — nearly 4.5 million interactions. The Lakers-Thunder series was next at 3.0 million.

MTV Movie Awards Adds Real-Time Social Voting

Having viewers vote on social media is nothing new, but MTV is taking the idea a step further in its digital efforts for the upcoming MTV Music Awards by showing the votes as they come in for the “Best Hero” category. The programmer is calling the move “a first-of-its kind social voting Twitter experience.”

“Other shows have used social media for voting but what is new here is that we are displaying the results in real time,” explains Michael Scogin, VP of mobile for MTV. “They won’t just be voting and having it go off into the ether until the results are announced. They’ll be able to see how their nominee is doing, which really taps into social media” and will encourage fans to use social media to boost the votes of their favorite actor.

The live results will be shown for the Best Hero category, which is being sponsored by Sprint.

Colin Helms, senior VP of digital for MTV adds that the new live voting results is one of a number of new features that are being added to their digital platforms to encourage viewers’ involvement with the award show.

“For any of our big live events or even the scripted reality program the goal is always to find ways to engage the audience with the show before, during and after its airing,” he noted. “We are always looking for new ways to do that and the social voting is one example of how we are looking to build fan excitement and the two screen experience.”

For the awards, MTV will also introduce a new Facebook tracker, created with Offerpop. The new version of the Facebook tracker will highlight and visualize fan likes and shares of key show moments from the MTV Facebook page.

During the show, MTV will also offer an extensive second screen co-viewing experience, All Access Live. This will allow users to access to content from different cameras and offer them a variety of additional content and tools for discussing and sharing highlights of the show.

American Idol Sets A New Social TV Record

The Season 11 Finale episode of American Idol set an all-time record in social TV with 1.2M social media comments.

In fact, this wasn’t just the most social finale episode, it was the most social TV series episode ever. (TV series, meaning that sporting events and special events are not counted here.)

Details in the infographic below.

Apple leads tablet and smartphone web usage

Smartphones and tablets are now responsible for slightly more than 20% of web traffic in the US and Canada, according to new findings from online ad network Chitika. Specifically, smartphones account for 14.6% of web traffic and tablets take up 5.6%.

Looking further into the tablet category, the report finds that the iPad has a dominant share of web traffic among tablet devices (95%). The report also finds that Apples share of web traffic in the smartphone category is 72%.

Microsoft still has a sizeable lead when it comes to desktop computers, as Windows accounts for more than 85% of web traffic (the Mac is responsible for 13%).

Original Programming, The New Internet Video Land Grab

This week, Hulu announced a slate of 10 exclusive shows coming to its platform this summer—one of the most aggressive moves yet in a land grab that is taking place among the pioneers of Internet video. Netflix has now green-lighted five premium series, and earlier this month, Amazon unveiled Amazon Studios, its first foray into original video. At YouTube, Google is plowing $100 million into launching 100 channels, with the goal of creating more content than there are hours in the day to watch.

In the hypercompetitive community of TV creation, where fortunes are made and programs are killed without mercy, online is where the action is. “The phrase that I keep hearing a lot is that it’s the Wild West,” says J.D. Walsh, the showrunner behind the original Hulu series, Battleground. “And I think that it is the Wild West. What that connotes to me is that nobody really knows what the rules are, what’s going to be stable, or who is going to [emerge as] the leaders. But even within the Wild West, you did have some major cities—and that’s what you’re seeing with these platforms.”

Hulu, Netflix, Amazon, and YouTube are all taking a unique approach to original programming on the Web. Their differing bets—on such questions as quantity, polish, advertising versus subscriptions, nudity, and more—provide a hint of what the future of “television” will resemble.

Hulu, which is jointly owned by the legacy television networks, is coming to resemble a broad-interest network with catholic tastes. Of the 10 series announced this week, three are wholly original to Hulu, and they run the gamut: there’s Spoilers, a kind of movie club hosted by Kevin Smith (Clerks); Up to Speed, a travelogue by Richard Linklater (Dazed and Confused); and We Got Next, a “bro-mantic comedy” about a pickup basketball clique. The other seven titles, for which Hulu bought exclusive streaming rights, involve everything from teen pregnancy to the British clergy to a faux-gritty mockumentary set on an elementary-school playground.

Andy Forssell, the executive in charge of content—and a $500 million annual budget—says he has no idea how many titles Hulu will come to produce in the coming years. “We’re quality-gated,” he said in a recent interview. “There’s no quota that I want to go hit. We don’t have a set number of hours to fill, like a lot of traditional networks do—that’s actually an advantage I want to jealously guard.”

“A year ago, it was difficult to have people audition for our show because they just thought, ‘Oh, it’s just going to be on the Internet.’ Now we don’t have that problem anymore.”

Jason Kilar, the chief executive officer of U.S. online video content provider Hulu. (Kyodo / Landov)

One thing Hulu’s original titles will never depict, though, is nudity. That’s in part because a significant portion of the company’s revenue comes from advertising.

That provides an easy point of comparison with Netflix, which has sought to reposition itself as the HBO of the Internet, home to premium dramas and comedies that viewers are used to finding on pay-tier cable channels. That includes the promise of gore—horror auteur Eli Roth is developing a werewolf series titled Hemlock Grove—and, when appropriate, boobs. In April, at an event in Las Vegas that offered a first look at Netflix’s original programs, much was made of the shower scenes to come in Orange Is the New Black, a comedy set in a women’s prison.

The first Netflix series, Lilyhammer, premiered in the United States in February, and four more will come in 2013, including the $100 million drama House of Cards, with a pilot directed by David Fincher (The Social Network) and Kevin Spacey in the lead role. While Hulu plans to release episodes of its programs week by week, as the broadcast and cable networks do, Netflix will make whole seasons available to stream at once, a competitive advantage in courting the most artistically demanding writers and directors.

Amazon is far behind Hulu and Netflix’s leads, having only just unveiled its Amazon Studios division in early May. But its model is intriguingly disruptive, and of a piece with the company’s dotcom and retail roots. While Hulu and Netflix are hobnobbing with Morgan Spurlock and Jenji Kohan, Amazon is crowd-sourcing its production process, soliciting pilot scripts from the general public.

After a 45-day option period, Amazon will offer chosen artists $10,000; if the series makes it to the Amazon Instant Video service, creators get $55,000 and up to 5 percent of the proceeds from toy and T-shirt sales. And for now, Amazon is taking the opposite of Hulu’s kitchen-sink approach to genre, asking for pitches specifically in comedy and children’s programming.

Then there’s YouTube, with the deep pockets of Google and a deeper commitment to the messy, anything-goes world of user-generated Web video. Its 100 subsidized channels will feature sports talk, family fare, self-help, and virtually everything else users expect of the YouTube jungle. These episodes will be Web-sized—a couple of minutes each, instead of the familiar 22-minute blocks that will be found on Amazon—and creators will get a cut of Google’s advertising.

Why are these online video giants all rushing into original content? A number of factors play a role. With more homes gaining access to broadband Internet—and higher quality feeds—the audience for streaming is reaching a critical mass. Viewers have more choices about where to watch video, too—Friday Night Lights is available on Amazon Instant, Netflix, Hulu, Apple’s iTunes, and other services. As these libraries get more similar, the streaming companies have only two options for differentiating themselves: either pay through the nose for exclusive deals, or put that money toward great original programming.

The talent is ready. “A year ago, it was difficult to have people audition for our show because they just thought, ‘Oh, it’s just going to be on the Internet,’” says Battleground’s Walsh. “Now we don’t have that problem anymore.”