Oman Daily Observer

TV loses its grip on eyeballs and ads that want them

- — Bloomberg

Remember this moment in five to 10 years, when obvious the television industry is in trouble. Television has long been the favourite entertainm­ent habit in America and beyond, and as a result TV commercial­s have been the world’s favourite way to sell people soda and laundry detergent. But that is changing.

Money spent globally on commercial spots in YouTube videos, Facebook feeds and news websites will overtake the ad dollars spent on TV commercial­s for the first time in 2017, research firm ZenithOpti­media confirmed in a new report.

Last year, Internet advertisin­g was about 30 per cent of all ad spending globally and TV took about 37 per cent. Next year, Zenith estimates ads online and on mobile devices will account for 36 per cent of all advertisin­g spent in the world, compared with 35 per cent for TV.

It’s hard to imagine TV losing its primary spot in our leisure time and in the budgets of advertiser­s. After all, television has continuous­ly reinvented itself for more than 50 years to keep up with the times. From the invention of cable TV to “time shifted” viewing through DVRs and now TV programmin­g online, the television industry is the world’s hippest baby boomer. And my Gadfly colleague Leila Abboud recently wrote about how the TV industry was fighting back against the technology die-hards predicting the demise of the 30-second commercial spot.

But change is inevitable. Ad dollars eventually — even if it takes a while — follow eyeballs. And the eyeball demographi­cs are not in TV’s favour.

Young people are still spending big chunks of their time watching TV, but the young are finding different ways to waste their lives. On average, Americans 18 to 24 years old watch 16 hours and 18 minutes of TV each week, or more than two hours a day, according to Nielsen. That is a lot, but people less than a generation older in the 35-to-49-year-old range watch on average more than 32 hours of TV each week, or four-and-half hours a day, Nielsen estimates.

This is the TV gap. An average 18-to-24 year old spends half as much time watching TV as a cohort just a bit older. Just two years ago, young adults watched more TV than they do now.

Young people who shift their time from TV to their smartphone­s are giving fuel to web companies that badly want to break TV’s hold on “brand” advertisin­g — that is, commercial­s that make you feel good about drinking Budweiser or driving a Hyundai. Facebook, Google, Twitter, AOL and every other web and media company is pushing into live web video in a grab for those brand ads. It’s not as if Budweiser is going to stop advertisin­g during the Super Bowl next year, but live web video will slowly, inexorably steal brand ad money from television. it becomes

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