Here's a little more research on TV media marketing that serves greater potential for consumer engagement and purchase experience according to Nielsen: Philip Jay LeNoble, Ph.D.
Commentary
Nielsen, We Need a Gauge With a True Ad-Supported View
- by Dave Morgan , Featured Contributor, 7 hours ago
First things first. Nielsen, thank you for creating a new view of The Gauge that breaks out the viewing of content that is ad-supported. Previously, the report didn’t differentiate the portions of U.S. TV viewing that were on ad-free streaming and whose audiences, therefore, weren’t available to advertisers.
It shows, for example, that “[i]n Q1 of 2025, 72.4% of TV viewing was on ad-supported platforms, compared to 27.6% for ad-free platforms. Traditional TV (cable and broadcast) are tied at about 29% to account for 58% of total ad-supported TV.”
The idea is to give advertisers an idea of where they can connect to their desired audiences.
While I laud the new release, I would like it to go further. Nielsen, how about making it a gauge of the number of ad exposures and multiple-time reach available across broadcast, cable and streaming channels?
Why is a true ad-exposure Gauge important? Because the vast majority of streaming services are “ad-light,” carrying far fewer ads and ad time than their linear brethren. Plus, streaming viewership tends to have a very strong skew toward heavy-streaming viewers. That's one of the reasons that we see the same ads over and over again when we’re watching popular streaming programming.
Is it hard to make a true ad-exposure Gauge? Of course not. Nielsen has all of the data to do it, as do many ad platform companies that work across both linear and streaming. In fact, in October of last year, comScore released a report with media analyst Evan Shapiro called “Setting the Score” that did exactly that. It showed that while streaming might command more than 45% of all content viewing time in the U.S., it commanded well under 14% of ad-viewing time.
But Nielsen can take this even further for us, and make the Gauge really valuable. How about including a simple graph to show the curve of the declination of reach with the increase of frequency? This is the biggest problem today for CTV advertisers, and it would be great for Nielsen to demonstrate leadership in presenting something that would be enormously beneficial for advertisers, agencies and publishers alike.
What do you think, folks? Should Nielsen lead the way with a true ad-exposure Gauge for TV?