Free Newsletter Subscription
        BNC All Access

Charter Communications Teams Up with Nielsen on Set-Top Data

Cable Operator to Provide Ratings-Measurement Firm with Anonymous Viewing Data from Almost 330,000 Households in Los Angeles Area

By Glen Dickson -- Broadcasting & Cable, 3/12/2008 5:12:00 AM

Ratings giant Nielsen officially launched a service that uses digital set-tops to measure television viewing and announced that cable operator Charter Communications will be the first to participate in the service.

As advertisers have placed increasing pressure on broadcast and cable networks to deliver the same type of accountability that Internet advertising can deliver, the addressability of two-way digital set-tops has been touted by the TV industry as a powerful solution for measuring TV consumption.

Nielsen has been promising a service based on set-top data for several years, and competing measurement firm TNS Media Intelligence already started such a tracking service for cable programmers like Discovery Communications and ESPN. Rentrak also uses set-top data in a video-on-demand-measurement service it sells to major cable operators.

"Charter is committed to improving the precision of local-market measurement,” senior vice president of advertising sales Jim Heneghan said in a statement. “By working with Nielsen, we are ensuring that our advertiser and agency clients get the most reliable data possible to evaluate their media buys.”

Charter is providing Nielsen with anonymous STB viewing data from almost 330,000 households in the Los Angeles area, which Nielsen will develop into commercially available analyses and reports of digital-television viewership.

Privacy concerns have been a major stumbling block to commercializing set-top-tracking services and, as such, the companies emphasized that they will take adequate measures to protect customers’ privacy. Charter will only provide data in anonymous form, and all Nielsen reports will contain only anonymous and aggregated data.

Nielsen said the research it conducts with Charter will represent the first time census-level tuning data and panel-based People Meter viewing data will be combined to produce expanded household and demographic reporting from a local television market. The Charter STB analyses will be available to Nielsen’s clientele in the second quarter of 2008.

“At a time of rapid technological change in the television industry, Nielsen is inventing new ways to measure how people watch television,” said Jed Meyer, senior VP of Nielsen DigitalPlus, in a statement. “Through these studies, we will provide Charter with new insights on the consumption of all digital video. At the same time, we will be investigating the potential of digital set-top boxes and the data they generate to enhance our existing audience-measurement services.”

Talkback
Related Content

No related content found.

Also by Glen Dickson

Most Popular Pages
    No Top Articles
Newbay Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Most Recent Resources

Advertisement
More Content
  • Blogs
  • Photos
  • Podcasts

Paige Albiniak

Fates & Fortunes

Paige Albiniak
February 15, 2010
Fates & Fortunes Round-Up: Feb. 8 – Feb. 15, 2010
In my house right now, it’s Olympics 24/7. Who cares if NBC is losing $250...
More

John Eggerton

BC/DC: Eggerton on Washington

John Eggerton
February 14, 2010
Color Bronze Missing From Peacock's Olympic Tale
Come on NBC.  Bryon Wilson was Skiing USA and got hardly a mention...
More

Free Streaming panel_Grossman_Graboff_Rosenblum_Tellem_Wells_vertical

Free Streaming: Killing or Saving the Television Business

Photos from the B&C/Multichannel News panel discussion and networking breakfast held Nov. 17, 2009, at the Academy Television Arts & Sciences. (Photos by credit: Craig T. Mathew/Mathew Imaging)



Advertisement
About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Submissions   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   Affiliate Links   |   RSS
© 2011 NewBay Media, LLC. 28 East 28th Street, 12th floor, New York, NY 10016 T (212) 378-0400 F (212) 378-0470
Use of this website is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy