Survey: 49% Of Registered Voters Don't Have Traditional TV, 80% Stream
- by Karlene Lukovitz @KLmarketdaily, 6 hours ago
About half (49%) of registered U.S. voters no longer have traditional linear TV subscriptions, while more than 80% of registered voters nationally and in key battleground states stream, according to a new survey from Samba TV and HarrisX.
In addition, on a national level, independents, the key swing voter block, are least likely to have traditional TV (42%). In key battleground states, just 39% report having it currently.
Among those who said they definitely plan to vote in the U.S. midterm elections, 55% nationally and 56% of those in key battleground states report having traditional TV subscriptions, and 80% report that they stream.
Nationally, millennial and Gen Z voters were found to be more than twice as likely to stream as to have traditional linear TV subscriptions, with a wider gap in battleground states.
The research also found one in four respondents who still have traditional TV subscriptions saying that they plan to cancel them within the next six months.
Samba TV, whose advertising division markets targeted omniscreen reach and insights from about 28 million smart TVs in the U.S. (46 million globally), is citing the results of the research as evidence that political campaigns should shift their focus toward connected TV (CTV) in the remaining time before the midterm elections.
“With so many elections now being determined by the slimmest of margins, campaigns need to dramatically rethink how they reach voters in the closing weeks to ensure they are not just saturating the same shrinking number of households with ads while leaving the vast majority of the electorate under-reached,” argues Samba TV co-founder and CEO Ashwin Navin.
The survey, conducted online Aug. 29-Sept. 1 among a nationally representative sample of 2,300 U.S. adults identified by HarrisX as registered voters, has a sampling margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points, according to HarrisX.
Battleground state Democrats are much more likely to stream video on their mobile phones (72% compared to 59% of Republicans).
On the social media front, Facebook remains the most-used platform by registered voters nationally but has less of an impact in the key battleground states, according to the survey.
Democratic voters are more likely to use TikTok: 37%, versus 27% of Republican voters.
Among younger Gen Zs, YouTube and TikTok are the top two social media platforms used weekly.
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