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ANALYSIS: Nielsen Rival—Real Or Ruse?

Time Warner-Nielsen pact buoys those who think reported consortium just a negotiating ploy

By Claire Atkinson -- Broadcasting & Cable, 8/19/2009 8:30:00 PM

Time Warner's announcement that it has concluded a new seven-year contract with Nielsen Co. sheds a whole new light on last week's reported formation of a consortium aimed at opening up the measurement field as online viewing grows. One might infer from the timing that the newly formed Coalition for Innovative Media Measurement (or CIMM, as the group is known) is less about bringing in new competition and more about bringing the monopoly provider of TV ratings to the negotiating table.

"I think this [consortium] is more strategic thinking rather than an operating plan with reality attached to it," said one observer with a potential interest in the game.

Another insider suggested that Nielsen is eager to wrap up long term renewals with big media companies before set top box data becomes a reality and changes perceptions of the TV ratings business. This person said: "Nielsen has created a billion dollar business, with margins that are estimated at 40%. They have a monopoly and the bulk of their fees come from six programming networks." Of those family groupings, Time Warner is arguably one of Nielsen's largest client relationships. Other members of CIMM include Viacom, NBC Universal, News Corp., Discovery, CBS and Disney Co., all looking to challenge, if not overthrow, Nielsen's dominance.

TV industry players have spent the better part of this week scratching their heads over what a new challenger might mean, if that's what indeed proceeds. With upwards of a billion dollars wiped from this year's upfront, the industry is putting its klieg lights on measurement and big media companies are putting intense pressure on Nielsen's costs and the nature of its services.

Beyond the pure financial issues, the industry wants Nielsen to count viewers adequately and move faster to track non-TV viewing. Missteps such as Nielsen's July reissue of some regional ratings for NFL games have aggravated companies that could have lost out on millions of dollars in ad revenue as a result of such data tweaks which showed ratings upticks once recalibrated.

NBC Universal is leading the charge inside the CIMM consortium and has been working closely with News Corp. An article published in the Financial Times last week said other participants include Time Warner, Viacom, CBS, Discovery and Walt Disney Co. Also involved are big spending advertisers Procter & Gamble, AT&T and Unilever and media buying agencies Group M and Starcom MediaVest Group. Agencies' and big marketers' interest in a rival to Nielsen is in gaining better, quicker data about how viewers move between the TV and the P.C., how they watch video and what they watch.

At the forefront of the initiative is NBC Universal's President of Research and Media Development, Alan Wurtzel. While he has a good working relationship with Nielsen, he is also a vocal critic. With NBC's status as an Olympic broadcaster and the fourth placed broadcast network there is perhaps a greater imperative for parent company NBCU to recapture and charge for fragmented viewership. Many of NBC's comedies such as 30 Rock and The Office are among the most popular in the online and mobile arena.

Wurtzel, who also moved to build industry consensus around commercial ratings, has already created TAMI, or Total Audience Measurement Index, which helped the company measure viewership of the Olympics on multiple screens. Wurtzel promised to make data available next day, positive or negative. In one instance NBCU's TV networks drew some 107.4 million viewers, and when internet, mobile and video-on-demand viewing was added in exposures grew to 113 million. TAMI data comes from Nielsen Media Research, Omniture and Rentrak.

The industry is rife with rumor about which measurement firms might be in the catbird seat to either supplement or compete against Nielsen. One contender is TiVo, run by former NBC executive Tom Rogers. In June, TiVo announced a partnership with digital measurement firm Quantcast to create a cross platform measuring service for TV and the Internet. With a sample size of 35,000 households the venture is said to allow advertisers to analyze ad effectiveness of both TV and online. TiVo is expected to announce more news on that front in the coming weeks.

Beyond TiVo, there are really only a handful of players including the cable industry's Canoe Ventures, which might be viewed as a potential alternative though it is still working on its product. Dish Network is said to be one of the most advanced players in the world of monetizing set-top-box data. Dish had sold inventory and its set top box data to Google to help it establish a new automated ad buying service, called Google TV Ads. According to sources, that contract is in the midst of a renegotiation and if unresolved would leave a dent in Google's nascent service.  DirecTV also works with TNS Media Research to provide advertisers with second by second ratings data.

The debate will no doubt take greater shape next week at the Advertising Research Foundation's Video Council get together on August 25. According to the ARF Website, companies including TNS/DirecTV, TRA, Nielsen/Charter and TiVo will be asked to discuss such things as "What is the single most promising development your company may announce by year's end?"

With every line item under scrutiny inside big media companies, Nielsen's pricey C3 ratings - which even some Wall Street research departments can't afford - are an obvious target. Perhaps not incidentally, Nielsen's CEO is David Calhoun, a former vice chairman of NBC parent General Electric who was tipped to take over from Jack Welch but lost out to Jeffrey Immelt.

This week, Nielsen vice chairman and executive vice president Susan Whiting reminded the industry that the company had invested a billion dollars into measuring three screens, an initiative first begun in 2007.  In a memo to employees sent out Monday, Whiting said: "While our company policy is not to respond to speculation or future announcements, we have been in direct contact with many of our clients, including some cited in the original article. Much of what was reported by the Financial Times remains unclear, and many of our clients are themselves looking for answers to questions raised by the story," Whiting continued. "What is clear, however, is that three screen measurement is at the center of our strategy."

Others suggest the TV industry address other, more critical, problems such as the need to update archaic TV station measurement. Beyond the top 23 markets, Nielsen panelists are still filling in paper diaries in 15 minute increments, a system that has been in place since the fifties and is woefully out of step with the digital present. "It is laughable that this is the state of measurement against what the internet is capable of. Clients don't even know this. We get into the question of here we have an incumbent industry dealing with the status quo when they know change has to come. People lend themselves to the easy consensus while ignoring the real under the hood issues of what's at stake."

"We all want this," said one agency research executive. "The path to getting there will be hugely expensive. This might just be trying to drive learning. Content providers have a lot to gain."

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