Verizon who owns FiOS TV is
FiOS Operator Presses Smaller Media Firms for Deals Based on Audience Size
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Advertisers already pay for C3 (Live+3 days) of DVR time-shifting viewings.
While this is mainly a cable provide fee thread it is not quite related older thread that is an overall long term plan:
a la carte programming - TV
proposing to shake up the pay-television business based on a simple premise: it wants to tie the fees it pays to carry TV channels to how many people actually watch them.
Under existing arrangements, distributors like cable and satellite operators pay a monthly, per-subscriber fee to carry channels based on the number of homes in which they agree to make the channels available, regardless of how many people watch those channels. "We are paying for a customer who never goes to the channel," Mr. Denson said.
Mr. Denson said that for the companies with which he has negotiated so far, his plan has been a "head-scratching thing" because "it's such a disruptive model." Discussions are "inching forward," he said.
Verizon Seeks to Shake Up Fees for TV ChannelsThe executive said he hasn't yet raised the idea with big media companies, which own most TV channels, but he planned to bring it up with them as contract renewals roll around. He acknowledged that it would be difficult to persuade the big companies to get on board and "just go cold turkey."
FiOS Operator Presses Smaller Media Firms for Deals Based on Audience Size
via
Going away from the Nielsen model will take time. Years.The company wants to pay providers not by the subscribers they can reach, but by the number of people who actually watch a show.
Advertisers already pay for C3 (Live+3 days) of DVR time-shifting viewings.
sourceWalt Disney, News Corp., NBC Universal and CBS Corp. for a new system that would expand the currency of the business. Instead of counting the audience for commercials over the first three days from a program's original showing, the standard known as C3, networks are increasingly agitating to include audiences for commercials over seven days, a standard called C7.
The broadcast networks have seen seven-day DVR viewership shoot up this season. Last year 77 percent of broadcast viewing was live; this year it’s down to 71 percent. More people have DVRs now than last year at this time, 47 percent versus 43 percent, which explains some of the gains. People are also getting more comfortable with time-shifting. But another factor to keep an eye on is the rise of video on demand viewing, a function provided by most satellite and cable providers. If a VOD show contains the same commercials as the original broadcast, it can count toward the Nielsen rating. Most notably for advertisers, the fast-forward function can be disabled on these broadcasts so that viewers are forced to sit through the commercials. Networks may start pushing harder on VOD because it is measurable, unlike tablet and mobile viewing.
sourceJust going to C7 will take time. Small media companies will be doing that and we'll see what happens when their new contracts run out with Verizon. You can bet these new small media company contracts will include VOD.What we know from early data Nielsen is collecting is between 3 and 5 percent of time shifting is coming from VOD in the first three days, and about 10 to 15 percent in the first seven days. So that means more is coming from that four to seven days, which is not what we see in the regular time-shifting trends.
While this is mainly a cable provide fee thread it is not quite related older thread that is an overall long term plan:
a la carte programming - TV
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