List of Interviews

Oct 10, 2018

Tunity OOH Data Reports College Students Glued to the Supreme Court Hearings. Will It Impact the Elections?


The recent Supreme Court hearings for Brett Kavanaugh not only sparked greater in-home viewing for news, the event also caused a surge in out-of-home viewing. Paul Lindstrom, Head of Research and Analytics, Tunity, shared his company’s data with me and we discussed the insights drawn from it.


When it comes to OOH, it is location, location, location… and sports. Lindstrom explained, “It is clear to me that there are dynamics in terms of traffic to locations and there are dynamics in terms of curation. These two factors combine to create the potential for a dynamic profile in terms of users at any given point in time.” He believes that the Kavanaugh hearing is a great illustration of OOH having the ability to draw all types of viewers in who might not normally view news on TV or not necessarily be watching news OOH.  Notably, he referred to the ten-fold upswing of viewing in colleges and airports and that the viewing to CNN skewed much younger.

Charlene Weisler: Overall, how did the full Kavanaugh hearings do OOH? What were the overall takeaways?

Paul Lindstrom: Overall the Thursday session of the Kavanaugh Hearing averaged 4,035,400 OOH viewers according to Tunity Analytics for the full 10 AM to 7 PM duration. The highest overall usage occurred during the first portion of Kavanaugh’s testimony.  The OOH usage, according to Tunity Analytics, returned to nearly the same level following a drop during his break.

Weisler: Overall how did the hearings rank among all Tunity OOH programs ever? 

Lindstrom: The overall OOH average viewing levels for the Thursday full session were comparable to what we have seen for the Conference Finals of the NBA Playoffs. This is pretty remarkable given the weekday daytime time period for the hearing versus prime time for the NBA Playoffs.

Weisler: Is this the highest news event?

Lindstrom: This is the highest audience level for a news event since January of this year when I began to track this data.

Weisler: How did the hearings do comparatively in the time period?

Lindstrom: In total OOH usage was up almost 2.5 times indexing at 247 over the same hours from the previous week. CNN and Fox News received the bulk of the OOH increase indexing 755 week over week for CNN versus 431 for Fox News. CNN has historically gotten larger bumps in OOH usage for major news events than Fox News despite Fox News generally having larger OOH audiences on a day to day basis. It appears as if it is a curation issue. CNN is more likely to be tuned in at locations that are generally not carrying news during that daypart. Both Fox News and CNN brought in substantially younger audiences OOH they normally do. These young audiences found places to tune in.

Weisler: What OOH venues did the best?

Lindstrom: I think that this is a question that can be answered in two ways. First, the location with the largest degree of OOH viewing of the hearing on CNN was Offices. This was followed by Bars/Restaurants and interestingly Airports and Gyms. The three locations which showed the largest indices for week over week changes in overall OOH usage were Government Buildings, Colleges, and Airports.

Regardless of political persuasion we should all be encouraged to see the large increases for Colleges where viewing was up more than ten-fold. Airports had a week over week index of 825 compared to 247 for all locations and Government Buildings, not surprisingly were up twenty-fold.  Let me illustrate this using CNN as an example, although Fox News would show similar patterns. We see that the share of all OOH usage in this daypart was in single digits for most locations (Offices and Government buildings being exceptions) during the 10AM to 7PM time period for September 20th – the week prior to the hearing. CNN’s share of total OOH usage rose to 26 to 53% across all locations.

Weisler: And what tuning during the voting process and aftermath such as the announcement by Susan Collins?

Lindstrom: On Friday 10/5 Susan Collins announcement was seen by 2,232,300 OOH viewers on CNN and Fox News combined. This represented an increase of over 1.5 million OOH viewers compared to the hour prior. The audience returned to the normal viewing for the hour following the announcement. CNN accounted for 1,342,000 of the additional audience.

The results of the final vote drew in OOH viewers but not to the same extent as Friday. CNN and Fox News combined for 1,113,000 viewers at the peak of 4 o’clock. This represented an increase of 478,930 over the prior hour for the combination of networks. Interestingly on Saturday the increase in viewership was split nearly evenly between Fox News and CNN. The difference between Friday and Saturday in regards to increase in OOH viewing was almost entirely a result of CNN not getting the same magnitude of boost they did before. This is likely a curation issue. CNN has historically gotten the greatest lift for breaking news as a result of locations that do not normally carry news tune to CNN.  It is reasonable to assume that on the weekend many locations that do not normally have news on but tune in to CNN for breaking news did not because of the heavier degree sports programming.

This article first appeared in www.Mediapost.com


No comments:

Post a Comment