Los Angeles Times

NBCUnivers­al to run fewer ads

The 20% reduction across all networks is aimed at winning back some TV viewers.

- By Stephen Battaglio stephen.battaglio @latimes.com Twitter: @SteveBatta­glio

NBCUnivers­al is cutting the number of commercial­s it will run across its broadcast and cable networks next season in the hope that advertiser­s will pay more for them.

The move announced Wednesday is an apparent response to the changing habits of viewers who are spending more time streaming video content online from Netflix, Amazon.com and other services that can be watched commercial­free. Also, a growing number of viewers record network programs to watch on their own schedule, but many don’t watch the commercial­s during playback.

NBCUnivers­al is hoping it can win over some of those lost viewers by reducing the number of ads across its channels by 20%. Total ad time in original prime-time programmin­g will be cut by 10%.

“The industry knows that television is already the most effective advertisin­g medium there is, but we need to make the experience better for viewers,” Linda Yaccarino, NBCUnivers­al’s chairman for advertisin­g and client partnershi­ps, said in a statement.

The company — which along with NBC owns such top-rated cable networks as USA, Bravo, E! and Syfy — is banking on the notion that fewer ads will raise ratings. Cutting the supply of commercial­s is also seen as a way to increase demand and boost pricing.

NBCUnivers­al is also planning to offer advertiser­s what it calls “prime pods” of ad time that will run at the beginning and end of a program.

The pods will last for one minute instead of the 21⁄2 minutes for a typical network commercial break.

The moves come two months before the annual “upfront” sales market in which advertiser­s purchase broadcast and cable commercial time in advance of the 2018-19 TV season.

Spending in the market was up nearly 6% to $19.7 billion last year, as some advertiser­s saw TV as a more secure place to put their commercial­s amid concerns over inappropri­ate content showing up on digital video ad platforms such as YouTube.

But the continued decline in traditiona­l TV usage among the 18-to-49 age group highly sought by advertiser­s is likely to take its toll on ad revenues at some point.

In recent years, other media companies have tried reducing their commercial loads in their channels with no demonstrab­le results.

In 2017, Viacom cut the number of spots it runs on MTV and other channels. Turner Broadcasti­ng has been running fewer spots on some of its channels as well. But neither company can point to a lift in ratings or revenue.

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