How do you construct a break-out segmentation study in a
world of custom segmentations? Ron Plante, Senior Vice President, UPtv,
launched a multi-wave, multi-year segmentation study that teases out
psychographic behavioral elements in viewers that can then be merged with
quantitative measurement services such as Nielsen
and MRI.
According to the study, the linear TV viewing audience can
be divided into three main segments: Family in Mind or “FIM” (which represents
40 million U.S. households), Thrill Seekers (26 million) and Escape Artists (42
million).
The latest wave has just been released and Plante shared his
insights with me in this interview.
Charlene Weisler: What
is the study about and why conduct it now?
Ron Plante: We started the study in 2014 because we wanted
to know more about our audience – the people that UPtv really resonated with.
The study serves two masters – to help us better understand our target audience
and also offered something that could be used for ad sales.
Right out of the gate we found a lot of interest from the ad
community. In fact our first wave was vetted by MediaVest who advised us as to
their point of view. We also engaged with a major retailer who took some of the
data and merged it into its own proprietary model.
Weisler: What type of
input did you get from MediaVest?
Plante: What MediaVest did in the first study was review the
questionnaire with us, offering us advice such as which were the most important
areas to explore. They gave us detailed questionnaire feedback and as well as some
general direction.
Weisler: What
methodology did you use?
Plante: A nationally representative sample, cable plus. In
the most recent study we focused on persons 25-54 and also expanded from cable
plus to a broader universe so we also included broadband only homes, which is
obviously an important target for a lot of people right now and for our UPtv
SVOD offering.
Weisler: In this most
recent wave, were there any surprises or reinforcements from previous waves?
Plante: There were definitely some surprises and also some
consistencies. The first surprise was that when we looked at the three
groupings, the edgiest group (Thrill Seekers) declined from 36% in our first
wave to 25% in the most recent wave. People seemed to have migrated, even
though this wasn’t a static sample, from that edgier group into Escape Artists
and FIMs. When you look at the television landscape in 2014 compared to 2018,
and look at the top shows, it is a bit of a gentler landscape. You have “This
is Us” and a lot of shows in the top tier in broadcast and cable that seem a
little gentler.
What also
surprised us was the broad demographic spectrum FIM occupies. FIMs are
from small towns and big cities, racially and economically diverse and
politically they are purple - just as likely to be Democrats or Republicans as
the total U.S. What they have in common is the importance they place on
TV as their main source of entertainment and they seek out shows they can watch
with the entire family.
Weisler: How are you
implementing the results?
Plante: We’ve done a couple of things. Internally, we
conduct research studies that recruit specifically for FIM. That is how we
screen our shows and our acquisitions. We have also fused the data definitions
with both MRI and Nielsen so we can actually look at FIM in both of those
platforms. And we share that with advertisers and agencies if they wish to use
it.
Weisler: What would
you say makes these segments unique or special and make them a standout? There
are a lot of segmentations out there.
Plante: There ARE a lot of segmentations out there. We
looked at a lot of historical research on segmentations and were happy to find
that a lot of our results compared to historical segments. What makes ours
different is the slightly larger universe because we are including broadband-only
homes now too. And we are able to fuse this with Nielsen and MRI. That helps
with the actual application of the data. One of my frustrations as a researcher
in my career is that we have segmentations but are unable to use it after the
fact. We have found that within the company, people understand what FIM is and
everyday it is activated when we engage and interact with our audience.
Weisler: What would
you say are the implications for UPtv, for programmers and for advertisers with
these segments?
Plante: For advertisers, environment is the hot button right
now. Everyone is talking about how their content can be in a safe and
appropriate environment. This underscores that- when you reach out to those who
are in the Family In Mind segment and you reach them in an appropriate
environment, you ad performs on steroids. We have found that environment makes
a big difference. By targeting people in an appropriate environment who are in
this mind-frame, your ad will perform well.
For programmers, we are seeing that there is a general shift
happening and the industry seems to be getting a little bit softer in these
times. When you look at UPtv, we are one of the few places that is super
serving this audience. And when we talk to them, they still say that they want
more programming that is appropriate for my entire family. They are saying that
there is too much content with too much violence and sex. That is something
that we have taken to heart. Some of our most recent campaigns show families
that watch together – and that has come directly from our research.
Weisler: What are
your plans going forward in this study?
Plante: I would love to get other programmers and other
advertisers interested in the segments and join forces with us to have a
bigger, better and complete understanding of this audience. Although we have
built a pretty large base, the industry is expanding and changing so fast that
a study conducted six months ago is already behind the eight ball. We would
also like to start to look at some non-linear behaviors like video in the
digital space.
This article first appeared in www.MediaVillage.com
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