Mediapost reporting:
In what is likely the most significant change in the methods Nielsen
uses to measure TV -- and potentially all forms of video content -- the
ratings company this week quietly began informing
clients of a major initiative to develop a suite of new audience meters
and digital tracking codes that could begin replacing its current meters
as soon as 2014.
Dubbed “GTAM,”
which stands for Global Television Audience Metering, the initiative
includes the development of four new audience metering technologies
designed to deal with all of the conceivable challenges
involved in measuring the viewing behavior of contemporary consumer
households.
The initiative is significant for several reasons
beyond the technologies being developed, including the fact
that it is a major reaffirmation of Nielsen’s strategy for basing
audience measurement around in-home viewing, which has been the
foundation of its audience measurement systems, although some
components of the GTAM initiative will make it easier for Nielsen to
incorporate mobile, wireless and Internet-based video audience exposure
as well. The other major reason the plan is significant is
that as its name might imply, it will be a global effort -- and the
technologies being developed would likely be deployed as part of a
standardized methodology across the 16 international markets
Nielsen currently measures media audiences in.
The four new
metering solutions include the so-called “GTAM meter,” which will be the
primary device Nielsen plans to use for
audience measurement. The GTAM meter is said to be smaller, more
ergonometric, easier for consumers to interact with, and far less
“invasive” than Nielsen’s current industry standard
“A/P meters.” Like the A/P meters, which stand for active/passive
metering components, the new GTAM meter is expected to utilize a
combination of active and passive measurement
technologies, but unlike Nielsen’s current meters it will not require it
to be physically connected to any household media devices, such as a TV
set, set-top tuner, DVR, etc., to function.
The second technology in development is a lighter, somewhat less sophisticated meter, aptly named the “GTAM Lite Meter,”.....
Read more: http://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/174443/nielsen-unveiling-suite-of-next-generation-tv-mete.html?edition=46732#ixzz1uf1KGCgs
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