Tuesday, 25 June 2013

TV study says half of viewers will be over 50 by 2015

This study brings forward some interesting ideas about what programming will be on television, on the web and for devices.  Will what is shown on television be different than what the same network will stream online? Can older adults really adapt the new ways to consume entertainment?  Will they buy new products? Can the declining number of younger people sustain the economy or should older adults be the next target?
 
 
Andy Griffith as southern lawyer Benjamin Matlock. The report "Bring Back Matlock?" says more than half of TV viewing will be done by people over 50 by 2015.
Andy Griffith as southern lawyer Benjamin Matlock. The report "Bring Back Matlock?" says more than half of TV viewing will be done by people over 50 by 2015.
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LOS ANGELES—By 2015, almost half of all television viewing will be done by folks over the age of 50, says media analyst Todd Juenger of Sanford C. Bernstein Co. in a new report titled “Bring Back Matlock?”
That is a mixed blessing for the TV industry. On one hand, the tendency of older viewers to consume more television means that the overall audience is growing. On the other hand, advertisers prefer to reach younger viewers and those numbers are in decline.
The reason advertisers target younger viewers is because of the belief that they are easier to persuade to try new products as opposed to older viewers who tend to be set in their ways.
The TV networks also want to reach younger viewers because they can charge advertisers more. Because older viewers typically consume greater levels of TV, commercials targeting them are cheaper.
Many younger viewers are watching more of their entertainment online. This creates a dilemma for the TV industry, which wants to put more content online but at the same time needs to protect the television screen.
Writes Juenger: “They can choose to try to capture more online dollars for themselves, but the more they encourage their viewers to eschew traditional TV, the more they hasten the demise of their core business — especially if it ultimately enables cord-cutting.”
This is one of the key reasons that programmers and distributors are trying to bring the pay-TV model to the web through their TV Everywhere initiative. However, the industry has struggled in marketing TV Everywhere to viewers in a clear and uniform fashion, which is slowing progress.
TV networks have also been working hard to erase the perception that older Americans don’t embrace new things and have been working to try to persuade advertisers that they too use iPhones and tablets and change toothpaste brands.

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