Los Angeles Times

Networks cut back on commercial­s

They’re trying new tack as viewers defect to digital

- By Stephen Battaglio

The emergence of Netflix and other streaming services that offer subscriber­s a commercial-free TV viewing experience means a generation could grow up without ever knowing the meaning of the phrase: “We’ll be right back after a word from our sponsor.”

The broadcast and cable networks that took in $19.7 billion in revenue for advanced sales of commercial time last year don’t want to see that happen. That’s why Fox and NBC plan to reduce the amount of commercial time in their shows starting next fall. Both are looking to offer advertiser­s the chance to run commercial­s in shorter breaks where they will hopefully find a more attentive audience. Other media companies have launched similar initiative­s to slash the number of commercial­s on their cable channels.

But doing so comes with a risk. Airing fewer commercial­s could mean less revenue for the networks — unless they can convince advertiser­s that it’s worth it to pay more to have their spots running in a less cluttered program. The topic is being debated ahead of the upfront market, where most of the advance ad time for the 2018-19 TV season is sold.

The networks need a new selling strategy as their TV ratings continue to decline. The prime-time audience of the broadcast networks is off nearly 20% compared with the previous year and many of the major entertainm­ent cable networks have experience­d double-digit declines as video content gets consumed to a greater degree on digital platforms.

Airing fewer commercial­s could help reverse that trend, and advertiser­s would welcome a less crowded environmen­t for their messages.

“I absolutely think a shorter commercial pod is better for the advertiser,” said David Campanelli, senior vice president and managing director of video investment for the adbuying firm Horizon Media. “How much better will it be versus how much more they charge for it? That’s a big outstandin­g question.”

Networks have reconfigur­ed their commercial breaks to deal with changing technology before.

Once remote controls were used in a vast majority of homes by the early 1990s, the networks eliminated the breaks between programs because they found that was when viewers most often flipped channels.

When digital videorecor­ders started reaching critical mass in 2008 and cut into prime-time viewing, Fox, with great

fanfare, reduced the number of spots in several of its new series as a way to encourage viewers to sample them.

Still, those changes occurred when broadcast and cable remained the only places for viewers to go for original programmin­g. That’s no longer the case, with the explosion of new programmin­g across multiple platforms. Streaming video is the greatest challenge yet to ad-supported television — and it’s not just from Netflix.

Millions of people are watching their favorite hit network shows such as NBC’s “This Is Us” on a streaming device or through a video-on-demand service within the week after they air for the first time on television.

Those viewers watching on a delayed basis are seeing commercial­s too, just fewer of them, and it’s conditioni­ng them to expect fewer.

Broadcast networks’ hourlong prime-time shows carried an average of 11 minutes and 32 seconds of national ads in the fourth quarter of 2017, about the same amount as four years earlier, according to data from media strategy firm Magna Global.

Clutter is seen as a larger problem on cable networks, some of which carry as much as 18 minutes of national advertisin­g per hour. That has led Turner, Viacom and A+E to announce they are cutting the ad load on some channels by as much as 50%.

Digital and on-demand platforms that air network shows carry a smaller load of commercial­s. The most recent episode of NBC’s “This Is Us” available on Hulu carries around seven minutes of ads.

The networks are seeing increased revenue from digital advertisin­g on their shows.

But their linear TV channels still command higher ad prices because they can potentiall­y reach nearly every home in the country and have a long legacy of effectiven­ess. It’s why advertiser­s still turn to them despite the audience declines.

Nonetheles­s, television’s historical advantage is being threatened by millennial­s who have adapted more quickly to watching on digital devices than older viewers. Their expectatio­n of seeing a lighter commercial load on their favorite shows has some networks feeling pressure to take a similar approach on convention­al or linear TV.

“Obviously part of it is people are choosing to watch on their own schedule,” said Mark Marshall, executive vice president for entertainm­ent advertisin­g sales at NBCUnivers­al. “But the other part of it is that it’s just a better environmen­t with a lighter ad load. We had to be honest with ourselves and say, ‘Knowing that, how do we figure out a way to make TV more like digital?’ ”

NBCUnivers­al is reducing ad time by 10% in original prime-time programs across NBC and its cable networks that include USA, SyFy and Bravo.

Along with that overall cutback, the company will offer advertiser­s one-minute commercial breaks. Spots that run in those smaller breaks will be priced at a premium because they can be more effective in marketing a product.

“We’re talking about something that has never been done before,” Marshall said. “You’ll be able to see one or two spots in the first 24 minutes of ‘This Is Us,’ the No. 1 drama on TV.”

Fox Networks Group, which includes the Fox network and the cable networks FX and Fox Sports, has an aggressive long-term plan in the works, aiming to get its commercial load down to two minutes per hour by 2020.

The network recently gave advertiser­s and viewers a taste of what the format would look like in a March 18 episode of “Family Guy.” It ran uninterrup­ted, with just two one-minute spots from Sony PlayStatio­n airing before and after the episode.

Fox is also approachin­g clients with a variety of commercial formats as an alternativ­e to the traditiona­l 30second spot. The network showed six-second ads during NFL telecasts, where fans have bemoaned frequent commercial breaks. During the World Series, Fox ran spots in an on-screen box while keeping a live image of the event on screen, a technique that has been used for years in auto racing and soccer.

Ed Davis, chief product officer for Fox Networks Group, said failing to address the issue of advertisin­g clutter in the face of digital competitio­n risks having some viewers fall out of the TV habit completely.

“If we don’t create a sustainabl­e model for quality storytelli­ng there are portions of the audience that become unavailabl­e for marketing,” Davis said.

Donna Speciale, president of advertisin­g sales for Turner, welcomes the efforts by her competitor­s to reduce advertisin­g clutter, which her company has pursued since 2015.

Turner cut the commercial load in its reality-based comedy network TruTV by 50% last year. TruTV was one of the few entertainm­ent cable networks to not experience a year-to-year decline in ratings among its target audience of 18- to 49-yearolds. Turner has also cut ad time by 30% in original series that run on TNT.

The pitch to advertiser­s who buy time on the channels is that they are getting more effect for the money they spend.

“We are charging more but the client is getting more value for it,” Speciale said. “When clients and brands do this, they are paying a little more than they would in a traditiona­l pod, but they are getting a four-times lift in sales.”

Speciale declined to specify how much of an increase TruTV has seen in its ad rates since it reduced the number of commercial­s but said, “It’s working for us.”

Ad buyers are carefully weighing the benefits of the new approaches before paying higher rates.

Shari Cohen, executive director of media investment­s for Mindshare, noted that prices did not go down when networks added commercial time over the years.

“I give the networks credit for trying to evolve and be innovative,” Cohen said. “I don’t know if it should come with incrementa­l costs.”

 ?? Fox ?? NETWORKS are competing against streaming services offering commercial-free viewing. Above, Fox aired this March 18 episode of “Family Guy” uninterrup­ted by ads, which were shown before and after.
Fox NETWORKS are competing against streaming services offering commercial-free viewing. Above, Fox aired this March 18 episode of “Family Guy” uninterrup­ted by ads, which were shown before and after.
 ?? Ron Batzdorff NBC ?? AUDIENCES WATCHING network shows such as NBC’s “This Is Us,” above, on a streaming device have come to expect fewer ads.
Ron Batzdorff NBC AUDIENCES WATCHING network shows such as NBC’s “This Is Us,” above, on a streaming device have come to expect fewer ads.

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