- So Lance Admits Guilt on Ca… by Don Seaman

So Lance, you’re a fallen American icon seeking some damage control and a way to rebuild your brand. But you have some harsh realities to face. You’ve been branded a cheat by most of the public. You need some soft focus and a gentle hand, hoping that the public can see you as a sympathetic[...]
- Electing a President: When … by Don Seaman

At the end of the day – Election Day, that is – numbers matter. They matter very much. There are three numbers that matter for two men in particular, and thus for their beloved country. They are: 65,899,557, 51.1%, and 332. Total votes, percentage of the popular votes, and the Electoral College delegates. Those were[...]
- What Topped TV’s Holiday Li… by Abby Auerbach

The next holiday shopping list you check off is likely to be done on your new gift. With over 21 million tablets flooding the marketplace this holiday season, chances are good that tablets are going to be declared the hot electronics item under the 2012 tree. eMarketer sets the number at 54.8 million tablet owners[...]
- Lessons From a Dark and Sto… by Don Seaman

Somewhere in the suburbs of northern New Jersey, a phone rings. The caller is bearing news: “I just heard that there’s a station open. I’ll text you where you need to go.” It doesn’t matter that it’s 9PM. You have to take your opportunity when you can. So you run out the door to get[...]
- Project Roadblock – Broadca… by Don Seaman

Driving drunk is never a pre-planned decision. It’s usually a bad decision compounded by unintended circumstances, but one that very often has dire consequences. To make sure that message sinks in, the Ad Council, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the TVB and local TV broadcasters are banding together for the ninth annual “Project Roadblock”[...]
- Campaign Finance Inform: Gi… by Don Seaman

Now that Election 2012 has been handed off to the history books, it’s a good time to take stock of what broadcasters did to serve the American voting demographic. There will be a lot said about the tidal wave of political ads that aired during this election cycle, yet that is only the paid side[...]
- Local Broadcast TV a Super … by Don Seaman

During the beginning of this month, it became eminently clear to millions of Americans in the Northeast that at least one part of the future can’t come soon enough. Hurricane Sandy was the latest example of how isolating a blackout can be – not just a power blackout, but an information one as well. As[...]
- Statement of TVB President … by Don Seaman

NEW YORK — The TVB (www.tvb.org), the not-for-profit trade association of America’s commercial broadcast television industry today issued the following statement from Steve Lanzano, President and CEO of the TVB: “Following the devastating Hurricane event of last week, the New York TV DMA was hit with a significant Nor’easter causing a second bout of power[...]
- Quotable by Don Seaman

“Watching cable news because you want to become better informed is like going to Olive Garden because you want to live in Italy.” – Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker
- The Shining Bastion of Demo… by Don Seaman

This season, NBC’s The Voice has averaged nearly 11 million viewers per episode. Each episode of ABC’s Dancing With The Stars brings in over 12 million viewers. They’re among the highest-rated programs on Primetime TV for the season, a pattern that’s held for over a decade, since the first episode of American Idol took hold of American television and never let[...]
- Commentary (44)Recent Posts
- So Lance Admits Guilt on Ca… by Don Seaman
- Electing a President: When … by Don Seaman
- What Topped TV’s Holiday Li… by Abby Auerbach
- Lessons From a Dark and Sto… by Don Seaman
- Project Roadblock – Broadca… by Don Seaman
- Quick Thoughts (2)Recent Posts
- NADA Presentation Preview by Don Seaman
- TV Viewers Spend Nearly 20%… by Don Seaman
- Press Releases (2)Recent Posts
- Statement of TVB President … by Don Seaman
- Academy Awards Broadcast De… by Don Seaman
- Quotable (1)Recent Posts
- Quotable by Don Seaman
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- Sandra on Don’t Over-Look Over-the-Air TVI've been coming to your blog for a while now, amoslt hoping to find you had closed up or switched ...
- Ralf on Don’t Over-Look Over-the-Air TVWhy is it I can have great OTA reception for days or weeks, then have signal drop off on some/many ...
- dave on Don’t Over-Look Over-the-Air TVI am too an OTA viewer for 2 years now....live in the SF bay area, plenty of signals to receive. ...
- James on Don’t Over-Look Over-the-Air TVI am one of those OTA tv viewers. I switched from cable tv to outdoor antenna in 2009 before the ...
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Shattering Scatter
There’s some institutional lunacy that defines the national television buying marketplace. What other buyer/seller dynamic exists where if sellers set their demands too high for a buyer’s liking, the buyers walk away, only to come back to the same sellers later in the year— and usually will be paying more?
When you think about it, it’s really a very troubled relationship.
The networks risk the possibility that their shiny new shows aren’t so shiny after all and that they’re not delivering to their initial upfront expectations. Advertisers are risking their need for GRPs and a lack of inventory that might be sewn up by others by the time their Scatter needs arise.
What if advertisers had another choice other than this deeply flawed relationship? How impactful would a credible alternative be, having a real walk-away point that would pay off in more than just an empty negotiating threat?
They do – and it’s been here all along. It’s local television.
Local delivers a customizable, targeted national footprint at lower cost. And it delivers the content — and corresponding GRPs — that aren’t available nationally. How much more credible of an alternative could there be?
The most justifiable reasoning is cost. An ongoing analysis of SQAD data by the TVB proves that Spot Television costs are lower than Scatter in most dayparts, and has been for several years. This includes Prime, where TSA-level costs are lower than Scatter by up to an average of about 25%. TSA includes the homes reached by an affiliate’s entire signal, not just what falls within the DMA. Essentially, it’s with spill. Incidentally, this is also what you’d get by buying Network Scatter as well – it’s not tidy geographically, either.
Other Spot dayparts, such as Early AM, Early News, and Late Night, are widely accepted as more cost effective than network. But it’s clear now that you can have your prime and save money, too.
Another fundamental advantage that Local Spot Television holds over Network Scatter is in exclusive content, therefore increased inventory. A basic part of the broadcast day for many, if not most, TV viewers, is the local news. On an average day, 78% of Americans get news from their local broadcast stations. This content simply isn’t available on a national basis. No network content finds people where they live, work, and shop as effectively and routinely as Local Spot Television.
Lastly, Spot Television allows “near national” advertisers the opportunity to be national in scale but regional in execution. For example, for a large chain that has nearly 200 locations in Texas but only 2 in New York – neither in New York City – a nationally distributed buy includes a vast amount of potential waste. By reallocating dollars where they will do the most good effectively weight-averages a national buy. It also mitigates the impact of advertising your product to viewers who can’t geographically be your customers – but can certainly be driven to your competitors, influenced by your misdirected ad.
So it is possible to escape the “definition of insanity” of expecting a different outcome while taking the same action. Local Spot Television not only offers network content, but additional content that you can’t get there. It offers targeting. It offers surplus. You get more, you pay less. It’s called value.
Once you walk out of that network showroom, head down the block to Local Broadcast, where the prices are good, the customers are hungry, and there’s always something in stock that you’re looking for.