Thursday, August 07, 2008

Turning off the T.V. and Turning on the computer

Here is a story from my favorite show on NPR. The story is about how T.V. viewers are watching their favorite programs online on demand. I have written on this topic before after watching an interview on Charlie Rose.

The Marketplace story discusses how viewers with busy schedules want their programs to fit their busy schedule. They do not want to be at a certain place at a certain time for they T.V. shows. If this is the case with a lax activity such as entertainment, how many students are we losing for a more demanding activity (education)?
Link to previous post on why students take online classes at Rio

Also the story points out that online viewers become a more loyal viewer if the show catches their interest. Imagine how many students could be attracted to Rio Hondo face-to-face classes, if we succeed in capturing their imagination with exciting online classes.

I have copied and pasted the text of the story below for those without a sound card. Also I have highlighted the sections that relates to our situation at Rio.


TEXT OF STORY
Kai Ryssdal: The television at my house is on the fritz, so we've all been gathering around the laptop to catch our favorite shows online.
It's nice to cuddle together and all, but Marketplace's Steve Henn reports the number of viewers making a habit of watching on the Web is giving executives in TV-land an enormous headache.
Steve Henn: Up to 20 percent of TV viewers are no longer watching TV. Instead, they're streaming their favorite shows on the Net, according to a new survey by Integrated Media Measurement.
Brad Adgate is with media buyer Horizon Media.
Brad Adgate: The pitfall is what does that do to the ratings on the television show.
And advertising dollars. That's a conundrum for network executives and shows like Gossip Girl.
Announcer: The CW network's hottest new series...
Gossip Girl did so well online network executives worried it was cannibalizing the TV audience, so they pulled it off the Net.
But Amanda Welsh at Integrated Media Measurement says that's a bad idea. Online viewers tend to be busy.
Amanda Welsh: Being able to decide when and where they watch TV is critical for them.
They also tend to be women.
Welsh: Well-educated, high-income women of a certain age are very attractive to advertisers because we know they drive a lot of purchasing decisions.
Welsh says when a network streams programs on the Web, more often than not it ends up building its broadcast audience.
In Washington, I'm Steve Henn for Marketplace.

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