Tag: music genre

  • TAM AdEx: Rewinding 2023 for advertising in music genre

    TAM AdEx: Rewinding 2023 for advertising in music genre

    Mumbai: TAM AdEx India has released a report on television medium – reminiscing 2023 for advertising in music genre.

    Trends: Ad volumes/channel in music genre: 46 per cent rise in 2023 compared to 2019

    Ad volumes for movie genre per channel witnessed growth during 2021 and 2022 with 37 per cent and 42 per cent share compared to 2019. Whereas, 2023 observed growth in ad volumes by three per cent over 2022 for movie genre. Compared to Q’4 of 2023, there was growth in ad volumes of 17 per cent in Q’2 of 2023.

    Share of music genre in overall TV advertising: 2019-23

    Over the past five years, the music genre constituted a share of ad volumes ranging from 11 per cent to 13 per cent.

    Top five sub-genres of music genre

    Tamil and Punjabi Music sub-genre maintained their ranks in 2023 over 2022, with Tamil having 18 per cent share of ad volumes and Punjabi 13 per cent share in 2023. Together, the top five music sub-genres accounted for 55 per cent share of ad volumes in 2023.

    Leading sectors: Top 10 sectors added 95 per cent ad volume share for ‘music’ advertising

    In 2023, the F&B sector emerged as the top contributor to ad volumes within the music genre, accounting for a 26 per cent share. During 2023, the top eight sectors retained their respective positions compared to 2022.

    Leading categories: Toilet soaps (nine per cent) led the music genre’s category in 2023

    During 2023, the top 10 categories had a collective share of 42 per cent with Toilet Soaps leading the list. Tea entered the top 10 list of categories in 2023 with three per cent share of ad volumes compared to 2022. Out of the top 10 categories present in 2023, five of them belonged to Food & Beverages Sector.

    Top growing categories: 100 plus categories registered positive growth

    Toilet soaps saw the highest increase in ad seconds (55 per cent), while eye make up topped in terms of growth percent with eight times growth during 2023 compared to 2022 in music genre.

    Leading advertisers: 2023 – 760 plus players were present in the music genre

    Top 10 advertisers contributed 70 per cent share of music genre’s ad volumes. Reckitt Benckiser and HUL retained their first and second positions during 2023 with 24 per cent and 21 per cent share of ad volumes. ITC was the only new entrant during 2023 compared to 2022.

    Exclusive^ advertisers present in music genre: Y 2023

    Over 45 advertisers publicised exclusively in music genre during 2023. Juniors Fashion Week was the top exclusive^ advertiser in Music Genre followed by Jay EII Healthcare.

    ^ Present in music genre but not in other genres

    Leading exclusive advertisers: 2023

    Over 295 advertisers exclusively publicized during 2023 in the music genre. In the year 2023, Bacardi Martini India emerged as the leading exclusive advertiser over 2022.

    Present in 2023 but not in 2022

    Leading brands of 2023: Over 1,980 brands were present in music genre during 2023

    The top 10 brands contributed 17 per cent share of music ad volumes. Dettol Antiseptic Liquid secured the first position with three per cent share of ad volumes in 2023. The top five brands retained their respective positions during 2023 over 2022. Veet Pure, Santoor Sandal, and Turmeric & Surf Excel Easy Wash were new entrants in 2023 compared to 2022. Mortein Smart Plus was an exclusive brand that entered the top 10 list and secured ninth position in 2023 over 2022.

    Advertising share by time bands in music genre

    Prime time garnered highest share of ad volumes of 32 per cent followed by afternoon with 27 per cent in 2023. Primetime, afternoon & morning time bands together added 74 per cent share of music genre ad volumes.

    Ad size in the music genre: 2023 and 2022

    Ad size of 20-40 seconds was majorly preferred by advertisers in both 2023 and 2022 with 72 per cent and 69 per cent share of ad volumes respectively.

  • TAM report: Top 10 sectors contributed 95 per cent of Jan-Jun’23 music genre ads

    TAM report: Top 10 sectors contributed 95 per cent of Jan-Jun’23 music genre ads

    Mumbai: TAM India has released a report on advertising on music genre for the period Jan-Jun 2023.

    Both H1 2023 observed nine per cent growth compared to H1 2022, but while comparing with Jan-Jun’21, the ad volumes dropped by two per cent in H1 2023 in the music genre.

    Food & beverages, personal care/personal hygiene & household products retained their first, second & third positions respectively during Jan-Jun’23 compared to Jan-Jun’22.

    ‘Auto’ was the only newly entered sector in the top 10 list of sectors during Jan-Jun’23.

    The top 10 sectors together contributed 95 per cent share of ad volumes in music genre during Jan-Jun’23.

    Toilet/floor cleaners ascended to first position during Jan-Jun’23 compared to Jan-Jun’22. Antiseptic creams/liquids & hair removers were the only new entrants in Jan-Jun’23 over Jan-Jun’22. Three out of the top 10 categories belonged to the food & beverages sector in Jan-Jun’23.

    Reckitt Benckiser (India) & Hindustan Unilever switched their positions during Jan-Jun’23 with Reckitt Benckiser (India) leading the list and had 27 per cent share of ad volumes. The top 10 advertisers together added 70 per cent share of ad volumes during Jan-Jun’23. Wipro & Colgate Palmolive India were the only new entrants in Jan-Jun’23 over Jan-Jun’22. Apart from Hindustan Lever, Pepsi Co & ITC all the advertisers in the top 10 list observed positive rank shift in Jan-Jun’23.

    Apart from Maaza, all the brands mentioned in the top 10 list belonged to Reckitt Benckiser (India). The top 10 Brands contributed 18 per cent share of television ad volumes.

    During Jan-Jun’23, the toilet soaps category experienced the most substantial increase in ad seconds, doubling its growth, followed by toilet/floor cleaners with a 77 per cent growth compared to Jan-Jun’22. Among the top 10 growing categories, Home Insecticides recorded a remarkable surge, growing by six times, while antiseptic creams/liquids and condoms each saw their growth triple, with a three-fold increase.

    During Jan-Jun’23, (Hindi + English) music was the leading subgenre for advertising with 34 per cent share of ad volumes. The top five channel subgenres accounted 80 per cent share of ad volumes during Jan-Jun’23.

  • MTV Beats increases share in music genre to 21% as it turns 5

    MTV Beats increases share in music genre to 21% as it turns 5

    Mumbai: Hindi music channel MTV Beats maintained the top position in the genre consistently with an average weekly time spent of 28 minutes per viewer. The channel garnered a total of 370 million viewers along with a total of more than 120 billion viewing minutes, further improving its genre share to 21 per cent as compared to 17 per cent the previous year.

    This year MTV Beats completes five years since its launch. The channel has launched a month-long interactive campaign to celebrate its anniversary. It has launched a series of contests hosted by singer and pop icon Dhvani Bhanushali. The channel is giving away 62 prizes along with five bumper prizes to the winners of the contests.  

    The channel has found innovative ways of revamping some of their existing shows by going remote with zoom call shoots and phone-based footage, some shot by artists themselves. The popular show “Dil Beats Lockdown Love” witnessed a cumulative reach of 38.7 million viewers with a total of more than three lakh viewing minutes, shared the channel.

    “MTV Beats’ journey has been exciting and exhilarating,” said Viacom18 head of youth, music and English entertainment Anshul Ailawadi. “Since its launch in 2016, the channel has demonstrated growth in the Hindi music genre by diving deep into consumer insights and upscaling its content to cater to its viewers. In the last one year, with realities changing daily, we have managed to keep our audiences thoroughly engaged with unique and original programming initiatives.”

  • Chrome Data: No major change in week 15

    Chrome Data: No major change in week 15

    MUMBAI: Unlike last week, week 15 didn’t see much of an increase or drop in the opportunity to see (OTS) data collated by Chrome Data Analytics & Media.

     

    The maximum gain was of mere 1.1 per cent for Business news channels in the eight metros. Zee Business gained the most with 78.3 per cent OTS.

     

    Music genre in the Hindi speaking market (HSM) jumped 0.8 per cent with Sony Mix continuing its grip on the top with 88 per cent OTS.

     

    It was closely followed by the English entertainment channels in the eight metros with 0.6 per cent gain. AXN continued its ruling the roster with 70.7 per cent OTS. Hindi News channels in the HSM came in last in the top gainers list with just 0.3 per cent gain. ABP News gained 94.2 per cent OTS.

     

    As for the bottom three, Infotainment channels saw a drop of 0.7 per cent. Discovery channels saw 85.9 per cent OTS. English news and English movie channels in the eight metros fell 0.2 per cent and 0.1 per cent, respectively.

     

    In their respective categories, Times Now and Pix continued to remain on top with 88.3 per cent and 77 per cent OTS.

     

  • 2011: The defining year for the music genre

    2011: The defining year for the music genre

    Year 2011 was special for the youth and music channels in more than one way. For starters, the genre grew with the advent of focused new players, and also came of age as channels clearly selected the model they want to follow.

    If 2010 was the year of uncertainty for the genre, 2011 was the Buddha moment, when the players found the light, the path and, most importantly, the business model.

    So far the category was suffering with the biggest limitation – no scope for differentiation as every channel had access to the same pool of music. But 2010 end was a watershed moment, after which viewers started witnessing an urge amongst the players to be, for the lack of a better word, different.

    Finally, in 2011, the two clear categories emerged within the genre – one was pure play music and other was youth centric channels.

    The clear distinction or segregation happened with the launch of pure play music channels like Mix and MTunes. This channel brigade was led-by 9XM with other players including B4U Music, Music India and, up to some extent, Mastiii. Meanwhile, the youth genre found stability on the tri-pad of MTV, Channel [V] and UTV Bindass.

    Though executives of all of these channels differ on their content strategies and business models, they all agree that this genre is extremely competitive and in order to reach their target audience, they need to be far more than a mere TV channel.

    The biggest challenge is that the genre is highly fragmented and is marred with low viewership. As it is, music is no longer the mainstay of music channels. So experimentation by the youth channels continued in 2011. While Channel [V] found solace in fiction properties, MTV went for a mix of reality along with non-film music. UTV Bindass targeted youth from campuses and also focused on relationships.

    Similarly, among the pure play channels, while 9XM continued serving latest Bollywood music with the animated characters, Mastiii had comedy gags to retain audiences. Mix, the four-month-old channel, opted for mood mapping and is working on improving its distribution.

    The genre now has 19 players and they are fighting for an ad pie between Rs 3.5-4 billion yearly and a share of 200-240 GRPs (gross rating points)on a per week basis. Thankfully, the music space has undergone transformation and today they have some differentiated content and not the same generic content – be it music or reality shows.

    UTV Bindass business head Keith Alphonso says, “Finally, after 14 years, the genre has matured in 2011. We have taken the positioning of a youth channel and it is a three-horse race – MTV, UTV Bindass and Channel [V]. Though every channel is creating its niche, we have decided that we want to own the three verticals which are close to heart of the youth – campus, relations and music. For us, it is important to emerge as a brand.”

    But the question remains: How will the music and youth channels survive with such competition? Answers MTV India EVP and business head Aditya Swamy, “Unlike general entertainment channels, youth genre is not sold on GRPs. In any case, the difference between the top and the eighth player will be less than 10 GRPs. Advertisers and clients look at what more we are putting on the table; its always GRP++. And so, we give them much beyond TV. We give social media, digital etc as we are engaging our consumers on multiple platforms.”

    Agrees Channel [V] EVP and GM Prem Kamath, “First I think calling this genre niche is a big oxymoron. Youth constitutes 60 per cent of total population. Everyone is targeting them, so definitely its not niche. But, having said that, the problem with the genre is that with only music, there is a certain level you can grow. Best chances are you can get up to 30-35 GRPs. Yes, you can make some money if you are on top, but there is no growth.”

    About Channel [V]‘s decision of entering into fiction, he says, “Our offerings are customised for the youth. The two fiction properties are top rated shows and in certain markets, they rate even higher than shows on the GECs.”

    Among the three youth channels, Channel [V] plays least amount of music. It has only two bands — 8-11 am and 4-6 pm – reserved for music.

    Kamath explains, “Today the maximum consumption of music is happening over the phone or music players. Secondly, it is same everywhere and exclusive music is not working as it is not monetiseable. Plus we do
    not want just a visual radio.”

    Interestingly, the genre suffers from a very low time spent of around 25 minutes per week. Even FM radio stations become a competition for the channels, given the passive listening that is happening with pure music channels.

    “The biggest challenge is to increase the time spent on the channel. The average time spent on our channel is 28-30 minutes per week, but that needs to grow. Secondly, the whole genre is struggling to get the due respect from viewers as well as advertisers,” Max EVP and business head Neeraj Vyas says.

    Vyas adds that in order to increase the stickiness and to get appointment viewing, the channel will have more format shows, and Mix will be a platform for the singers and other musicians.