Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-07-16 22:32:06| Engadget

Streaming has hit a new high on the American viewing charts. According to the latest Nielsen data, streaming services were responsible for 40.3 percent of daily TV viewing in June 2024. It's a banner result for streaming video, which first overtook cable in Nielsen ratings back in 2022. The June result marks not only the biggest share recorded for streaming since Nielsen added it as a tracked category on The Gauge report, but it is also the largest share Nielsen has ever recorded for a single viewership category. Cable TV secured 27.2 percent of American viewing for the month, followed by broadcast TV at 20.5 percent. YouTube was the favorite streaming platform with 9.9 percent of the monthly usage, followed by Netflix at 8.4 percent. The summer sensation of Bridgerton helped boost Netflix's performance; the costume drama was responsible for a staggering 9.3 billion minutes of viewing during the month. There's a notable drop after those two services, with Amazon's Prime Video securing 3.1 percent, and companion platforms Hulu and Disney+ coming in with 3 percent and 2 percent shares, respectively. In case those streaming figures seem low, it's important to note that Nielsen tracks viewing only on television screens. That means the vast number of hours Americans spend streaming shows on their phones and tablets isn't part of this accounting. While streaming continues to draw ever-more eyeballs, executives are more focused on drawing in dollars. Another report, this one from analyst PricewaterhouseCoopers, projected that advertising would be responsible for about 28 percent of global streaming revenue. In 2023, the ad share was 20 percent. The report credited that shift to the growth rate of subscription revenue stalling out. "Usage and consumer uptake of the core offering is continuing to increase albeit at a lower rate than in recent years but companies are having greater difficulty getting people to pay more for digital goods and services," PwC said. "As the number and range of streaming services proliferate, a form of market saturation has begun to kick in." In response, recent years have seen many of the top video streaming services, including Netflix, Disney+ and Amazon Prime Video have introduced hybrid models that offer lower monthly subscription costs in exchange for viewers watching ads. If the PwC forecast is accurate, we can expect other platforms to follow suit.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/streaming-accounted-for-more-than-40-percent-of-tv-viewing-in-june-203206939.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

10.07SEO Principles: A Guide for Beginners [Infographic]
10.07How Persona-Driven AI Is Reshaping Brand Engagement and Audience Research
10.07AI-Driven ABM: Scaling Precision and Impact for B2B Growth
10.07Faroe Islands tackle overtourism with mystery road trips
09.07Tin Can brings back the landline to keep kids connected, not hooked
09.07What Influencers Want From Brand Partners
09.07Powering Agile Transformation: Why Marketing Is the Hidden Accelerator
08.07How CMOs Are Approaching Generative AI
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

11.07Meta Infotech shares list at 40% premium over IPO price on BSE SME platform
11.07Friday Watch
11.07Nifty 50 companies grew only 3.5% last quarter, next 450 companies grew over 20%: Alok Agarwal
11.07Positive Breakout: These 9 stocks cross above their 200 DMAs
11.07Trump threatens 35% tariffs on Canadian goods
11.07S&P 500, Nasdaq rise to record highs boosted by Nvidia record valuation, strong Delta forecast
11.07Income Tax department mulls probe into Jane Street after SEBI allegations of market manipulation
11.07Can TCS overcome short-term challenges to achieve its FY-26 growth targets?
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .