The end of sweeps? "People meters" will give stations detailed demographic information about their audiences every day.
Potter, Deborah
For decades local television news has danced to the rhythm of
sweeps, hyping and stunting to win viewers in the four months of the
year that matter most to advertisers. Now, that rhythm is beginning to
change. Could it mean the end of sleazy sweeps tricks, or will stations
simply pander year-round?
The question arises thanks to new audience-measurement technology
that's rolling out in local markets this year. Nielsen Media
Research is replacing its old system of paper diaries with what it calls
"people meters" to collect demographic information about local
viewers every day of the year. Los Angeles is scheduled to go online
this spring, with New York, Chicago and San Francisco to follow later in
2004, and the rest of the top 10 by 2006.
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If you're thinking those cities already are metered markets,
you're right. But the meters now in use in more than 50 cities
count only the total number of homes watching news and other programs on
each station. These overnight ratings don't reveal what kinds of
viewers are watching, specifically by age and gender, which is what
advertisers really want to know. The new people meters do.
In Boston, where people meters have been in use since 2002,
stations can tell exactly what viewer groups are watching their
newscasts from one day to the next. "We get our report card every
day," says Liz Cheng, vice president of programming for WCVB. The
result, she says, is a dramatic shift in the station's approach to
news. "We're not saving our best stories, our best reporters,
for [sweeps] a month away."
The change may be most noticeable in the promotions stations air to
entice viewers to watch during sweeps. Walt DeHaven, general manager of
CBS 4 in Denver, told TelevisionWeek that his station already is doing
things differently, even though people meters aren't yet planned
for his market. "You won't see anything on this station in
[sweeps] that says, 'Your house is going to kill you. Stay tuned at
10.'"
But stations trying to get a jump on the new way of doing things
might want to heed the experience of WNBC in New York. In a Newsday
article, President and General Manager Frank Comerford blamed a sudden
ratings slump last November in part on "operational"
decisions. Translation: The station decided not to air sweeps stunts and
tune-in promotions because of the impending people-meter switch, leaving
the other stations in town more running room to snag viewers the
old-fashioned way.
Once people meters do take hold in a market, there's another
potential complication. Stations accustomed to seeing audience
demographics only in February, May, July and November will now see the
precious demos every morning. They might be tempted to try producing
daily news by the numbers, checking the overnights to see what kinds of
stories seem to draw the most prized viewers and adjusting their nightly
lineups accordingly.
WCVB's Cheng does not believe that's likely. For one
thing, it's difficult to say precisely what stories attracted
viewers or caused them to tune out because the demos are collected only
every 15 minutes. A minute-by-minute log is available. But, says Cheng,
"That is technology we do not want." Even without that level
of detail, the stations get so many demographic numbers every day
"it gets overwhelming to try to figure it out," she says.
"The sheer amount of information you get precludes making ...
judgments day to day."
But the new technology won't change one critical fact about
television news. The name of the game remains the same: More viewers
mean more revenue. So what's to keep stations from airing exactly
what they do now to get people to tune in--fear-mongering consumer
reports and watch-to-win contests--and doing it daily instead of just
four months per year?
Nothing, perhaps, except basic economics. Many sweeps stunts may be
silly, but they're not cheap. It takes time and effort to compare
the wait time in supermarket checkout lanes, as one Dallas station did
in February, even if the resulting story wouldn't be classified as
solid journalism. If the Boston experience is any guide, stations are
more likely to invest their resources in covering daily local news and
promoting that coverage. "We think one of the best things about
people meters is that we are in the game 365 days a year," says
Cheng. "Our goal is to deliver a superior newscast day in and day
out."
Now that really is a revolutionary idea: stations actually trying
to produce better journalism year-round. How ironic that we might have
Nielsen to thank for helping to bring TV news back to its senses.
Deborah Potter is executive director of the Radio and Television
News Directors Foundation. The former network correspondent can be
reached at dpotter@rtndf.org.