Interesting article from Nielsen Research, their study found that in a typical month, 12.2% of millennials can be reached on TV only (using the top 10 networks), vs. 14.2% who can only be reached on Facebook. Similarly 16.3% of U.S. Hispanics can only be reached on TV vs. 17.5% only on Facebook, the study found.
A couple of questions that weren't answered in this article...what were the top 10 networks and how were they rated? How important is looking at facebook only?
A couple of questions that weren't answered in this article...what were the top 10 networks and how were they rated? How important is looking at facebook only?
Nielsen Research for Facebook Shows It Now Edges TV in Reaching Millennials, Hispanics. Social Network Edges Top 10 TV Nets With Key Demos, Study Says
Source: Advertising Age 10/8/15 by Jack Neff
Facebook has been going hard after marketers' TV budgets, and with some success. Now, it's coming armed with research from Nielsen suggesting it's a better reach medium than TV for millennials and Hispanics coveted by so many marketers.
A wide-ranging study using Nielsen's Homescan panel of consumers and audience-measurement tools shows buying Facebook alone now reaches more of each group than running ads on the 10 most watched TV networks combined -- though it also shows that using both Facebook and TV combined reaches a far larger slice of both groups.
Millennials and Hispanics are two of the fastest growing and hence most coveted demographics for a variety of brands. They're also among the demos most likely to include families with children, particularly coveted by packaged-goods marketers selling everything from diapers to food for home use -- because families with kids buy more of each.
"If you're a packaged-goods marketer, that's a point of market entry that these people are now moving into, and the best way to reach them is through the device that's always with them, which is, of course, the smartphone," said Erin Sills, director-global consumer insights for Facebook.
...The Nielsen study found that in a typical month, 12.2% of millennials can be reached on TV only (using the top 10 networks), vs. 14.2% who can only be reached on Facebook. Similarly 16.3% of U.S. Hispanics can only be reached on TV vs. 17.5% only on Facebook, the study found.
A far larger 69.3% slice of millennials and 61.2% of Hispanics can be reached using a combination of the two. But the Facebook-only audience accounts for $2.6 billion of millennials' packaged-goods spending and $3.9 billion of Hispanics' packaged-goods spending in just the first half of 2015 alone, according to the study.
A wide-ranging study using Nielsen's Homescan panel of consumers and audience-measurement tools shows buying Facebook alone now reaches more of each group than running ads on the 10 most watched TV networks combined -- though it also shows that using both Facebook and TV combined reaches a far larger slice of both groups.
Millennials and Hispanics are two of the fastest growing and hence most coveted demographics for a variety of brands. They're also among the demos most likely to include families with children, particularly coveted by packaged-goods marketers selling everything from diapers to food for home use -- because families with kids buy more of each.
"If you're a packaged-goods marketer, that's a point of market entry that these people are now moving into, and the best way to reach them is through the device that's always with them, which is, of course, the smartphone," said Erin Sills, director-global consumer insights for Facebook.
...The Nielsen study found that in a typical month, 12.2% of millennials can be reached on TV only (using the top 10 networks), vs. 14.2% who can only be reached on Facebook. Similarly 16.3% of U.S. Hispanics can only be reached on TV vs. 17.5% only on Facebook, the study found.
A far larger 69.3% slice of millennials and 61.2% of Hispanics can be reached using a combination of the two. But the Facebook-only audience accounts for $2.6 billion of millennials' packaged-goods spending and $3.9 billion of Hispanics' packaged-goods spending in just the first half of 2015 alone, according to the study.
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