Sinclair Broadcast
Group recently completed a groundbreaking study as part of a US International
Media’s Secret Society initiative pairing Sinclair and Tribune stations and using
Nielsen and comScore/Rentrak measurements. This study had a clear purpose - Sinclair
wanted the ability to attract more national dollars into local and, by using
data, enhance the value of their inventory for these national clients.
The project,
presided over by USIM’s Director, Advanced Television, Mitch
Oscar, convened as a “Data-ist” subgroup this past week to explore the initiative.
“We always want to fly visibly under the radar and find the next trends,” posited
Mitch. The results, presented by Stephen Spencer, Sr. Financial Analyst, Sinclair
Broadcast Group, proved that not only was it possibly to roll up a programmatic
buy into a nationalized footprint, it was also possible to measure it, with de-duped
data, at a level that offers greater granularity, larger, more stable population
sizes for niche targets and less data volatility.
Russell Zingale,
President, Eastern Region, USIM, outlined the approach, “We were able to put
two stations groups together with Sinclair’s help and take national money and
move it more efficiently into local impact. Further, we wanted to be able to
use a comScore/Rentrak guarantee to see what we could learn vis a vis Nielsen. This
was helpful for our clients and a learning experience for the industry. We
wanted to maintain our impression guarantee on our primary demo age and gender but
also utilize the behavioral aspects of the consumer target to deliver more in
the secondary target without hurting the primary target.”
Going National Programmatic
The first
step in a national campaign is to be able to advertise to a national footprint.
USIM was interested in working with Sinclair, whose footprint is not quite as
national as what was needed - 40% of the country. But in partnership with
Tribune stations, the usable footprint expanded to 80% of the country, about
the reach of most cable networks. With a nationalized footprint having been
achieved and a target audience of downscale Adults 25-54 identified, the next
step was to examine the potential results of a campaign using comScore/Rentrak
data and Nielsen data.
Maximizing Panel Size
Data has
become central to the new technological sales process but the Secret Society
has revealed challenges with the data that have previously not been discussed
publically. One is the large issue of data duplication that was presented
in the previous meeting . For this data sub-group meeting, data stability
and volatility was explored.
Stephen outlined the reasoning for comparing Nielsen to
comScore/Rentrak, “We compared panel size for both Nielsen and comScore/Rentrak
to establish a baseline to examine stability and granularity of the reported
viewing. In the three markets we selected, panel size difference was
meaningful: Washington (165,000 homes/comScore vs. 800/Nielsen), Cincinnati
(41,200/ comScore vs. 500/Nielsen) and Little Rock (91,700 comScore/
300/Nielsen). In our opinion the larger the panel penetration in the market
correlated to the more stable the reported viewing. We saw less hills and
valleys on programs that aired during the same time period across the week.”
Increasing Data Stability
The three
markets in the January 2016 buy represented the three different Nielsen data
collection methods. Washington is measured by people meter, Cincinnati is
measured by household meter and Little Rock is measured by diary. Campaign deliveries
from these three markets with their three different Nielsen collection methods
were compared to each market’s STB data, collected from comScore/Remtrak. The
target was a25-54 with incomes below $30k. As Jonathan Spaet, VP Network Sales
and Development, Sinclair, explained, “Our retail client wanted to use adults
25-54 in early morning, daytime and fringe in an equitable distribution and
equitable rotation. We came up with a schedule and ran the exact same ads on
Sinclair and Tribune and analyzed the first week of the schedule using both
data sets.”
The results
- In the larger markets there was less difference in delivery between the two measurement
services but as Nielsen measurement sample size decreased, there was more
volatility and bounce, resulting in larger differences in delivery compared to
the STB data. The concerns of the agency were flow stability, consistency and
granularity (which included how to best combine the three data collections of
Nielsen people meter, household meter and diary) and the fair comparison to
comScore/Rentrak STB data. This was all achieved. “The biggest issue we have is
post buys and stewardship” stated Steve Lanzano, President of the TVB.
Conclusion
Russell
concluded, “We need a standard that we can plan against. Agencies have limited
resources and we can post on many different metrics. There has to be one way to
test and see how it goes and track calls we are getting for our client. We
decided to measure our buy on comScore / Rentrak grps which for us had more
stability, to see how it drove the business.”
For Steve Pruett, Chief Operating Officer, Sinclair TV Group, this initiative was an excellent first step. “As a result of this project, Sinclair and Tribune will continue to work together to expand our relationship in order to pursue network and programmatic dollars," he stated.
This article first appeared in www.MediaBizBloggers.com
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