Nielsen Unveils DVR Stats – Time To Rethink The 30 Second Ad

For avid TV watchers, May is one of the best times of the years. The networks strut out their best quality stuff, there are plenty of cliff hangers, NBA finals (Go Lakers) and don’t even get me started on the season/series finales. It’d be nicer if we could just have fresh content all year round, but for whatever reason the networks want to make consumers gorge on television, just to take it all in for one month. At least there will be time for sunlight during summer reruns. ;)

For advertisers and the studios though, May marks the start of a vicious frenzy of negotiations, where fortunes can be won and lost in a bizzarre game of chicken, that I’m not sure I’ll ever understand. Every year, we see the same dance, the studios unveil their A list stuff and the marketing agencies come drooling with their blank checkbooks.

Last year though, things didn’t go as smoothly as planned. Issues like DVR usage and streaming internet video started to creep into the negotiations. The marketing agencies demanded that they only pay for live viewers and the studios tried to convince them that DVRs were somehow actually good for them.

The truth was though, that the studios had lost control and eventually the ad agencies were able to negotiate rates on their terms, instead of having to cave to last minute pressure. With May sweeps about to start up all over again, you can bet that both sides are positioning themselves for how they plan on dealing with these irritating DVR owners.

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Bear Stearns TiVo Guidance

Bear Stearns is out today with some TiVo thoughts after a few references in Amazon’s quarterly statement and conference call: The Company launched “Amazon Unbox on TiVo,” available to over 1.5 million broadband-ready TiVo boxes and offering subscribers a great way to find, download and watch on their televisions thousands of movies and TV shows … Read more

Search Engine Strategies Conference & TiVo, Part 1

After Day 1 of the Search Engine Strategies Conference 2007, Bear Stearns believes TiVo is uniquely positioned to capitalize as companies reevaluate their return on advertising investments. Bear Stearns writes: As TiVo gains distribution across the Comcast and Cox subscriber bases, and DVRs reach critical mass, we believe advertisers will be attracted to the “new” … Read more

The Network DVR: Cablevision Presses On

A few weeks after being killed in District Court, Cablevision is taking their network DVR concept to a higher authority. Cablevision really only has three options: Broker deals as Time Warner has, drop the idea, or continue the fight. Guess what they chose? According to Multichannel News… Hoping to revive plans to pursue a network-based … Read more

Comcast DVR Ads Spread to Bay Area

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Jeremy was disappointed to discover Comcast dropped banner ads onto his DVR this week:

I noticed I’d lost about 1/8th of my overall screen space to a new “advertisement slot.” Worse yet, I’ve lost 2 (of 6) lines of the visible grid area, meaning I have to spend roughly 1/3 longer than before just to scroll through channels.

Assuming he’s stuck with them, JT provides several interesting suggestions on how Comast (or is it Motorola?) might improve their ad-serving implementation. Until then, he wonders where that Comcast-Motorola-TiVo is… While he’ll get a better interface (one day), the ads won’t be going away:

make the TiVo(R) service and advertising capability widely available to Comcast customers

combine TiVo’s unmatched DVR features and innovative advertising capabilities with the power of Comcast’s advanced digital television services

TiVo and Comcast will make TiVo’s interactive advertising platform available across Comcast’s customer base

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NY Times Grades TiVo’s Internet Features

I was just discussing yesterday that TiVo’s biggest challenge (in relation to One True Media movie sharing) is getting the word out and educating consumers on the features they offer above and beyond the typical CableCo DVR. Pogue’s large piece in the NY Times does a nice job explaining the basics of many of these … Read more

Network DVR Killed (In Court)

10 months after heading to court, Cablevision’s network DVR concept has been killed. No surprise here, though we may see follow-on court action and/or a tweaking of their proposed implementation… By contrast, Time Warner has successfully launched a head end-based service (Start Over) by sharing revenue with the networks. Multichannel News writes: The U.S. District … Read more

AppleTV is NOT a DVR

AppleInsider quotes ThinkEquity analyst Jonathan Hoopes: Apple TV can, in our opinion, be easily turned into a DVR with little or no hardware modification and a software upgrade If we define a DVR as a device that time shifts broadcast content (I do), the current Apple TV will never be a digital video recorder. A … Read more