Los Angeles Times

Nielsen system will measure TV tweet audience

New ratings will take into account those exposed to episodes’ Twitter comments.

- By Dawn C. Chmielewsk­i dawn.chmielewsk­i@latimes.com

In a move that ref lects the deepening connection between television and social media, Nielsen has introduced a new type of ratings system that seeks to measure the audience for TV-related conversati­ons on Twitter.

The new Nielsen Twitter TV Ratings will take into account not only the people commenting on a TV episode, but also the broader universe of people exposed to those tweets. The measuremen­t firm’s analysis found that the average Twitter audience for a show such as NBC’s singing competitio­n “The Voice” is 50 times greater than the number of people tweeting.

“We always knew there’s a larger audience being impressed by and influenced by the tweets about TV,” said Sean Casey, founder of Nielsen’s SocialGuid­e unit. “We’re excited now to present that data.”

Twitter has emerged as a virtual water cooler, where viewers gather to discuss in real time the events unfolding on TV — be it the finale of AMC’s Emmy Award-winning drama “Breaking Bad” or a high-profile sporting event such as the Super Bowl.

Some 19 million people in the U.S. produced 263 million tweets about TV in the second quarter this year, a 38% increase in volume of comments from a year earlier, Nielsen reported.

“It speaks to Twitter’s default status as being the essential social data point around television viewing,” said Tim Hanlon, founder of media and technology consulting firm Vertere Group. “And it speaks to a consumer consumptio­n reality that television — and by extension, video — is a multifacet­ed thing. It is no longer exclusivel­y a live, linear, sitback-and-watch phenomenon.”

Both Twitter and Facebook have sought to capitalize on the popularity of TV shows and grab a piece of the billions of dollars advertiser­s invest in the medium. In Twitter’s regulatory filing last week in preparatio­n for its initial public stock offering, the company describes how it has worked to make its platform more attractive to media outlets as well as to advertiser­s.

Networks and advertiser­s have been dedicating resources to capture audiences when their eyes are drawn to their smartphone­s, tablets or laptops — what the industry refers to as the “second screen.”

Prominent TV showrunner­s such as Marlene King of “Pretty Little Liars” interact with viewers on Twitter as each episode of the ABC Family show airs. Advertiser­s have designed campaigns that pair TV and Twitter — such as a Wheat Thins giveaway that Twitter cited in its regulatory filing that generated more than 242,000 tweets mentioning the brand.

In such an environmen­t, measuremen­t is key.

“I think marketers and agencies in today’s modern media world have to be accepting of many more and new data points around media delivery and consumptio­n,” Hanlon said. “The permutatio­ns of programmin­g, and the advertisin­g that goes with programmin­g, are moving faster than the industry’s ability to measure it.”

Casey said SocialGuid­e has focused on measuring Twitter activity around TV since before its acquisitio­n in November by Nielsen. It uses electronic program data for every program that airs, across 247 networks, to develop a set of key words, phrases and shorthand classifica­tions (or hashtags) re- lated to each show. It also has identified 35,000 Twitter accounts, created by networks, actors, athletes, profession­al sports teams and others associated with TV programmin­g.

A Nielsen SocialGuid­e team also monitors conversati­ons in real time to identify relevant key words and phrases that occur during a broadcast.

This informatio­n helps SocialGuid­e understand how many people are talking about a show. With its new Twitter TV rating, it has expanded the universe beyond those typing their 140-character running commentary to those exposed to the remarks. Nielsen furnishes a list of those tweets about a show to Twitter, which identifies the users who were active on the platform at the time and would have been exposed to the comments.

Nielsen considers the moment a TV-related tweet crosses a user’s screen as an “impression” — regardless of whether the comment provokes any reaction, Casey said. It uses this new methodolog­y to determine the size of the Twitter audience for a show such as ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars,” which in the week of Sept. 23 had 46,400 people actively tweeting about the dance competitio­n, whereas its Twitter TV audience is 3.2 million.

The number of impression­s generated on the social media platform reached nearly 11 million, according to Nielsen.

But several network executives expressed reservatio­ns about Nielsen’s approach for measuring a show’s Twitter TV audience, with some saying there is no evidence that the users “exposed” to a tweet actually read it.

 ??  ?? found that the average Twitter audience for a show such as “The Voice” is 50 times greater than the number of people tweeting.
found that the average Twitter audience for a show such as “The Voice” is 50 times greater than the number of people tweeting.

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