Nielsen Three Screen Report: video consumption continues to increase

Posted on 02 September 2009 by Robert Seidman

via Nielsen Wire:

Three Screen Report: Media Consumption and Multi-tasking Continue to Increase Across TV, Internet, and Mobile

Americans are increasing their overall media consumption, and media multi-tasking is part of the equation, according to new data from The Nielsen Company’s most recent Three Screen Report. During 2nd Quarter 2009, the number of people watching mobile video increased 70% from last year and people who watch video online increased their viewing by 46% compared to a year ago. In addition, the average American TV consumption remains at an all-time high (141 hours per month) compared to the same time frame last year.

Monthly Time Spent in Hours:Minutes Per User 2+
Activity 2Q 09 1Q 09 2Q 08 % Diff Yr to Yr
(2Q 09 to 2Q 08)
Absolute Diff Yr to Yr
(2Q 09 to 2Q 08)
Watching TV in the home* 141:03 153:27 139:00 1.5% 2:02
Watching Timeshifted TV* 7:16 8:13 6:05 19.5% 1:11
Using the Internet** 26:15 29:15 26:29 -0.9% 0:14
Watching Video on Internet** 3:11 3:00 2:12 45.5% 0:59
Mobile Subscribers Watching Video on a Mobile Phone^ 3:15 3:37 3:37 -10.0% 0:22
Source: The Nielsen Company
Note: TV viewing patterns in the U.S. tend to be seasonal, with TV usage higher in the winter months and lower in the summer months leading to a decline in quarter to quarter usage, yet increasing from 2Q08 to 2Q09.As of 2Q09 the 290 million people in the U.S. with TVs spend on average 141 hours: 3 minutes each month tuning into television. June 2009 data (used in this report in place of 2Q09) shows that 134 million people watching video on the Internet spent on average 3 hours:11 minutes during the month doing so. As of 2Q09 the 15 million people subscribing to mobile video in the U.S. spend on average 3 hrs:15 minutes each month watching video on a mobile phone.

“Although we have seen the computer and mobile phone screens taking on a significant role, their emergence has not been at the cost of TV viewership,” said Jim O’Hara, President, Media Product Leadership, The Nielsen Company. “The entire media universe is expanding so consumers are choosing to add elements to their media experience, rather than to replace them.” Nielsen data also shows Americans are using DVRs more than ever, watching one hour more of timeshifted TV each month than a year ago. Currently, 30% of homes in the U.S. have DVR devices.

The Simultaneous TV and Internet Experience

Nielsen’s Convergence Research Panel, launched in 2008, provides single source electronic measurement of TV and Internet usage in the same homes. As of June 2009, this panel shows 57% of consumers with Internet access at home watch TV and go online simultaneously at least once a month. On average these consumers spend 2 hours, 39 minutes each month simultaneously using the Internet while also watching TV. Their online experience at home is in front of the television almost a third of the time.

“Persons 2+ Watching TV and Using the InternetSimultaneously At Least Once Per Month — June 2009 °°°
Activity Persons (P2+)
% of Persons Using TV/Internet Simultaneously 56.9%
Estimated Number of Persons Using TV/Internet Simultaneously 128,047,000
Time Spent Simultaneously Using TV/Internet Per Person in Hours:Minutes 2:39
Average % of TV time Panelists spent also using the Internet 2.7%
Average % of Internet time Panelists spent also using TV 27.9%
Source: The Nielsen Company

Other Key Facts and Trends

  • As Americans continue to watch more TV each year there are also more TVs in each home than people – in 2009 the average U.S. home had only 2.5 people vs 2.86 television sets. 54% of Americans have three or more TV sets in the home. (link to universe estimates)
  • Online usage is relatively flat since last year, though more people are viewing video online than ever before. Certain age groups also view online video more than others do – Adults 18-24 watch more than 5 hrs each month vs. Adults 65+ watching just over 1 hr of online video.
  • Short form video (such as YouTube clips) still makes up the lion’s share of online video viewing – 83% in May 09 – while name-brand TV network content comprises the majority of mobile video viewing.
  • Younger demographics aren’t using the Internet as much as older demographics, yet the growth rate of kids 2-11 online clearly outpaces the overall Internet penetration. The number of kids online has increased 18% compared to 10% growth for the total active Internet universe (P2+).
  • Mobile video viewing continues its upward trend, with over 15 million Americans reporting watching mobile video in Q2 2009. This is an increase of 70% versus last year – the largest annual growth to date.

Download Nielsen’s complete Three Screen Report for complete details and methodology.

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10 Responses to “Nielsen Three Screen Report: video consumption continues to increase”

  1. Mikey says:

    Amount of time average American spends with each screen per day:
    (based on figures above and total population of 289.95 million Americans)

    TV: 4 hours, 37 minutes this year; 4:30 last year

    Timeshifted TV: 4 minutes a day this year, 2.5 minutes last year

    Internet: 35 minutes a day this year, 29 last year

    Internet Video: 3 minutes a day this year, 2 minutes last year

    Mobile Video: 20 seconds a day this year, 13 seconds last year

    Needless to say that most people who write about this report will focus on online video comsumption being up 46% and will leave out that those figures represent an increase of just one minute per person per day.

    Also find it interesting that timeshifted TV accounts for only about 1.5% of all TV watching.

    More than any other piece of information, these quarterly Nielsen reports are really effective at blowing apart the misperceptions of how DVRs and online video are impacting traditional TV.

  2. the majority of DVR recording happens in primetime for new episodes. So you’re working with something that’s only ~10%-15% of the day and available in 30% of the homes, with repeats and most live events far less recorded, the result doesn’t seem striking to me.

  3. Bill Gorman says:

    Mikey, these overall numbers substantially obscure the effect that DVRs have on broadcast primetime viewing since DVRs are little used for non-primetime broadcast and most cable viewing.

    Last season for the English broadcast networks, their primetime adults 18-49 viewing was increased between 20-30% by DVRs, for adults 18-34 it was 26-33%. So, overall TV viewing hasn’t been affected much by DVRs yet, but broadcast primetime definitely has and the trend will continue.

  4. Grady says:

    This is pretty fascinating. It looks like all those predictions about media convergence ultimately all becoming singularly dominated by the computer aren’t exactly taking shape. People appear to enjoy watching TV on TV, not on the computer. Poor CW….

  5. Cath says:

    One of the problems with watching TV on your computer is how up to date your computer is or how up to date the particular Internet site is. I just got a notice yesterday that alerted me to the fact that if I install Mac’s Snow Leopard Cooliris (has a lot of network shows, news, old movies etc.) will not work UNTIL they have upgraded their platform for Snow Leopard. They’ll send me an e-mail when they are up to speed. That led me to wonder how many other places that offer video have to upgrade before I can watch if I install Snow Leopard. Guess I’ll find out soon.

    Except for the big analog shut down (I have cable anyway) your TV is going to run your TV shows. The internet is a good choice if you miss a show or the DVR machine didn’t record the correct show.

    I just can’t see the family gathering around the computer to watch the Super Bowl in the near future.

  6. kariato says:

    It would be interesting to break down these figures by age.
    What’s interesting is that DVR rates are so low. People don’t seem fill their DVR and then select from a list of their favorite shows which is what I thought people would do. Rather they just pick a few program. These figure don’t match the viewing habits in my household. I’m surprised that my family is so atypical.

  7. BIG DADDY says:

    If i didn’t want to watch live sports i’d get rid of my cable.
    I work odd hours because i’m a sportscaster and referee part time so i miss a lot of shows i like during the week especially in the fall and winter.

  8. Bill Gorman says:

    kariato, there are some age breakdowns of the numbers in the report itself, which you can see/download in the link in the second line above.


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