Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

In The News

Study: Connected TV Viewers More Receptive To Advertising

More smart TV capability has been forecast for the future. But what does it really mean for TV marketers and interactive advertising?

Estimates are that around three-quarters of North American TV homes will have smart, Internet-connected TV sets and/or equipment -- around 87 million of them -- in four years, according to a report from media researcher Parks Associates. A significant number of those 87 million connected TV homes come from Blu-ray units, according to Parks.

The study was commissioned by Rovi Corp, the electronic TV program guide provider that has built an interactive advertising platform around connected TV sets and TV service providers.

Concerning interactive, connected TV advertising, the research says that over 50% of connected TV homes find that consumers "consider these ads as content, containing useful and valuable information."

Research also says that 55% of connected TV homes earn at least $75,000 annually and own 11 Internet-enabled devices on average. Some 72% of connected TV owners say the connected platform makes watching TV more convenient; and 49% of connected-TV viewers depend on connected TV platform when they are unsure what to watch.

“Consumers are more receptive to advertising that takes this brand-infused approach,” stated Jeff Siegel, senior vice president of worldwide advertising for Rovi. “Advertising on connected TVs provides more immersive brand experiences and has a positive impact on consumers."

Connected-TV homes for this study are defined as households that have smart TV or Blu-ray player connected to the Internet. Parks Associates forecasts over 70 million Blu-ray players, a majority of which can be connected to the Internet, will be sold worldwide in 2016.

From the article, "Study: Connected TV Viewers More Receptive To Advertising" by Wayne Friedman. 

Previously In The News

Digital Video Views On Rise

Digital TV-video viewing continues to climb -- but it's still way behind traditional TV consumption. Parks Associates says U.S. broadband households spend on average 1.3 hours per week watching...

Deep Thinking On Second Screens And TV Everywhere

As this litte blurbette points out, broadband households spend about 1.3 hours per week watching video on a tablet and 1.6 hours watching on a smartphone, but that’s compared to “almost 20 hours pe...

Over The Top: Big, Diverse Disruptive Force

But also, Parks Associates also reports this week that 46% of all broadband households also have a game console connected to the Internet and 28% use it as their primary connected device. And of th...

The YouTube Stars That 'Nobody' Knows

Really serious hiding-under-a-rock just kills me. So when I read an account of the CableFax Innovation Summit that happened a few weeks ago, I had the same surprised reaction. At this meeting of se...