Definition of TV up for debate
Consumers easily switch between video distributors and devices, but for advertisers, the definition of TV has never been more contested. What once was a stable, shared medium is fragmenting in both definition and delivery, which in turn is impacting planning. This means how TV is bought and measured is also being rewritten.
- YouTube has proclaimed itself as the “new TV”
YouTube is making a concerted play for TV ad dollars. The platform earns a rapidly growing amount of revenue from ads displayed on CTV screens, and TV companies themselves are looking to boost monetisation by distributing content on YouTube.
In the US, YouTube viewing on TV devices recorded a 12.8% share, per Nielsen, rivalling that of broadcasters and streamers. In 2024, YouTube earned $36bn in ad sales across devices — more than all four US broadcast networks combined. The platform is looking to acquire sports IP to sustain this momentum and expand into sitcom-style programming.
UK TV measurement body Barb, has begun to measure TV-set viewing of 200 YouTube channels, offering fresh insight into YouTube’s role as a TV player, but early results show relatively modest reach at a channel level with the top 20 dominated by kids’ shows.
- TV fragmentation creates risk
As linear TV buyers and digital specialists often sit in separate siloes, with different ways of working, measurement remains the great bottleneck. Broadcasters know that reach and frequency are no longer enough. In a world where Big Tech speaks directly to CFOs in the language of growth, TV ad sellers wish to prove outcomes, not just exposures. The industry requires more standardised and robust measurement across all forms of TV.
Forces shaping TV’s Future
The next decade in TV will be defined by data convergence, device gatekeepers, platform-fit creative, and new buying models.
- Retail data fuels pivot to performance
The integration of retail data with TV promises to redefine how brands approach campaigns. By next year, global retail media spend is forecast to exceed the total TV market, according to WARC Media. Retailers may increasingly assume the role of senior partners, with TV services an upper-funnel arm amidst a full-funnel proposition. Broadcasters know that reach and frequency are no longer enough. Retail data can help TV to prove outcomes, and not just exposures.
Less standardisation of non-broadcast ad formats means fewer reasons to treat the 30-second spot as default. Some brands are experimenting with interactivity like QR codes, shoppable overlays, and gaming integrations. AI will also be a disruptor.
- TV’s small business opportunity
Small brands are a key target for TV media owners. The largest brands in the world spend on average 38% of ad budgets on TV; among smaller brands that falls to 9%. A shift to programmatic selling in CTV may open the medium to a new share of advertisers.
WARC Media subscribers can read the report in full.
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