Tag: Partho Dasgupta

  • BARC: CESP validates TV Measurement Panel Apr ’17 & Establishment Survey ’16 representativeness

    MUMBAI: The representativeness of BARC India’s Panel – the cornerstone of its TV Viewership measurement system – has been certified by CESP, a global multi-media body that audits media research. CESP is a joint industry committee that specializes in audience measurement audits and has worked in more than 20 countries. The certification further strengthens BARC India’s credentials of capturing “What India Watches”, basis a truly representative TV panel.

    CESP’s certification validates that BARC India in April 2017 has successfully aligned its research design and data collection methodology with the best international practices. BARC India has also received representativeness certification on Broadcast India 2016 – the Establishment Survey which was the basis for the new universe estimation that was rolled out earlier this year, and also forms the basis for ongoing panel home expansion.

    The certification has been awarded on the strength of quality benchmarks defined by BARC India Board and Technical Committee. The BARC India representativeness certification was also mapped against “Global Guidelines for Television Audience Measurement” (GGTAM) and CESP best practices based on panel audits conducted in more than 20 countries in the world.

    “CESP Scientific Committee fully certifies the representativeness of BARC India panel. Our Scientific Committee was really impressed with the quality of BARC India’s research design and deployment of panel homes. Considering the size of India and challenges for representativeness, the mission was fully achieved,” said Olivier Daufresne, Director of International Projects, CESP.

    “It is a proud moment for all of us at BARC India. Panel home selection is the key to true representation and robust TV viewership measurement. It is important to have the right mix of panel homes to be able to then extrapolate the data and report “What India Watches”. The certification is a stamp on the great work that our team has been doing,” said Partho Dasgupta, CEO, BARC India.

  • Indian English news channels boycott BARC’s viewership monitoring

    MUMBAI: In a coordinated move, the English TV channel news members of the News Broadcasters Association (NBA) have decided to pull out of Indian viewership ratings monitor Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC). As of 7 pm today – India Today, Times Now, News X, CNN News19, and NDTV 24×7 – have stopped inserting the BARC water mark in their TV signals from their studios.

    This follows BARC CEO Partho Dasgupta’s decision to publish Republic TV’s viewership data today despite the NBA urging it to refrain from doing so on account of the members’ belief that it had allegedly resorted to massive multi LCN placement of the channel on various MSOs/DPOs and cable TV networks nationally.

    The latest viewership data showed that Republic TV had gone on to capture more than 52 per cent of the viewership.

    The five channels have stated that they have written to BARC in the past about the alleged abuse and tampering of its monitoring methodology and have received a standard response which has been almost indifference to their concerns. And the snub by the ratings agency this morning was the last straw, hence they decided to pull out of the watermarking.

    Sources state that the five channels would like an assurance from BARC that it will only report the data after Republic TV stops allegedly messing around by placing itself in multiple genres and LCNs.

    Additionally, they would like an assurance from the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) that the MSOs and DPOs have totally cleaned up their acts and placed Republic TV only in one genre and LCN.

    As the five will not be part of the monitoring from BARC, its next week’s report could end up showing that Republic TV has maximum viewership of the Indian English news genre with international news channels such as BBC, CNN and Al jazeera also picking up. (Updated on 19 May 2017 at 3 pm)

    Indiantelevision.com placed a call to the BARC spokesperson but received no response at the time of writing.

    Questions that arise from this fracas around the ratings and the news channels boycott: How long will this faceoff continue? Will BARC blink first? What currency will advertisers use to decide on which shows and channels to advertise on in the English news genres? Why does it seem like déjà vu? Did the industry err by backing BARC and pulling the shutters down on TAM’s viewership ratings? Will the TRAI or MIB now step in to ensure that some sanity comes into the news channel business (many dread this)? Or will BARC step back and heed the request of the members of the NBA?

  • NBA urges BARC not to release Republic TV viewership data until LCN issue is resolved

    MUMBAI: L’affaire Republic TV continues to throw up new nuances by the day. After writing to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) about the new channel’s presence on multiple LCNs/genres on several DPOs, distributors and MSOs, the News Broadcasters Association (NBA), on 17 May, written to  Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) CEO Partho Dasgupta  urging him not to release Republic TV’s viewership data until it completely stops the alleged malpractice.

    NBA secretary-general Annie Joseph has informed BARC that Republic TV is not its member, and has warned it that the release of Republic TV’s data would be tantamount to “aiding and abetting such malpractices which will have serious consequences on the news broadcasting industry in India.”

    Referring to market researcher Chrome Data & Analytics dual frequency report, the NBA has cautioned that “Republic TV’s dual LCN malpractice is rampant and widespread in over 15 major MSO headends pan-India which could have an over reaching influence of over 50 per cent spurious bias on English news viewership. This will completely distort the viewership ratings.”

    The news association had earlier on 15 May written to BARC cautioning it about Republic TV’s distribution ploy and urged it  to follow the action it had agreed upon with the NBA in the past in case anyone violates the protocol and places a channel in several LCNs and genres.

    BARC had in a statement two days ago informed indiantelevision.com that it would go ahead and release viewership data – even for Republic TV; the new set of numbers are slated to be released on 18 May.

    Also Read :

    Being a ‘cry baby’ won’t help Times Group, says Republic TV’s Arnab Goswami

    Republic TV claims  ‘stunning’ debut on Hotstar

    Republic TV buzzing with pre-launch teasers featuring ‘soft’ targets, issues

    Of Arnab’s Republic, nationalism, need for opinionated media & ‘outdated’ BBC

    Times Now leadership continues, new launches notwithstanding, says MK Anand

  • Republic TV, TRAI, NBA and the case of multiple LCNs

    MUMBAI: The media went to town about Arnab Goswami’s Republic TV getting carriage in multiple genres (dual or multiple LCNs) on select cable TV networks across India. This followed reports that the News Broadcasters Association (NBA) had complained to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) about this so-called violation by cable TV MSOs of the quality of services regulations which were notified in early March 2017.

    TRAI, on its part, then sent out notices to the MSOs asking them to toe the regulatory line which states that “…each channel shall be listed under the respective genre of the channel as declared by the broadcaster under applicable tariff order or regulations …and one channel shall appear at one place only.”

    And, by end-16 May, many MSOs following pressure from the regulator gradually started pulling out the channel from other genres and placed it in one genre only – that of, news. However, sources indicate that Republic was not the only channel which resorted to seeding multiple feeds in different genres on cable TV networks.

    “For a long time, channels have been doing this — whether it is Times Now or CNN News18 or CNBC News18 or Headlines Today – almost every news channel has opted for this, and even GECs,” says a distribution professional. “It is a shrewd marketing ploy which has helped viewers find a channel easier as well as got a spike in viewership as multiple LCN placement tends to fox BARC India’s measurement. In fact, even this time, two of the popular English news channels did the same though no one has mentioned them, but with TRAI cracking down, even they have dropped the multiple channel feeds.”

    A source close to Republic TV questioned the NBA’s decision to write to the TRAI without approaching the channel’s management.

    “The thing is the existing clique of news channels is getting nervous about Republic’s spectacular launch and recall in the viewers’ minds. The ratings are expected soon and, for sure, there are going to be a few upsets,” says he. “Hence, they banded together against the debutant.”

    Indiantelevision.com reached out to BARC CEO Partho Dasgupta, and the official comment from the viewership ratings agency was that it would go ahead with the release of its data as usual. “BARC India measures viewership of TV channels on the basis of their unique Watermark ID, irrespective of the platform that the channel is available on, and number of instances, within that platform. For channels with the same WM ID, which may be available on more than one slot/LCN, the viewership reported is a combined one for all in BARC India weekly data,” BARC India stated.

  • Industry needs to understand on-ground changes in distribution, not question flux in data, says Partho Dasgupta

    ‘Works at something sometimes somewhere’. That’s the description of the work profile on the Facebook page of Partho Dasgupta, chief executive of Broadcast Audience Research Council of India or BARC India. And, that probably also gives a hint to all about the personality of the man, who sits on a hot seat balancing the delicate (and, may be, at times challenging, some would say) interests of various stakeholders of the organization, including the government.

    When Dasgupta is not busy absorbing the data collated and crunched by his team at BARC India, he is, probably, strategizing along with his core team about the initiatives to be rolled out in a complex and diversified market like India or reading about branding and getting an insight into Indian media through books like ‘Behind a Billion Screens: What Television Tells Us About Modern India’.

    And, when he does get some family time, he would love nothing better than to travel along with his family and follow the F1 races around the world (speed helps me breathe, he says on his FB page) with a single malt whiskey – the older it is the better, his friends chuckle.

    A media industry veteran,  Dasgupta’s stints at various organizations also do give a glimpse at his various areas of interests, which include organizations like the Times of India Group, Future Group, BARC India and also an entrepreneurial jab at a start-up that he mentored. Though he’s a hard taskmaster, as claimed by some of his past and present colleagues, he is also looked up to as a ‘yaroon ka yaar’ or a true friend who’s always around when you need him most.

    On the occasion of BARC India’s second anniversary, Indiantelevision.com engages Dasgupta on a wide range of subjects in an interview. Excerpts:

    How would you describe the journey till now — challenging or a process of evolution?

    Any change is challenging and it’s true for us as well. From the time BARC India started reporting TV viewership, it has been a process of evolution for the industry, including us. The industry evolved when they understood fidelity of BARC India data, which was a true representative of actual viewership behavior. With support of industry, we have grown in both size and experience over the last two years. We have hired the right talent who have successfully reduced client queries and helped in a smooth transition for adopting the data.

    Apart from addressing data needs of our clients, we also made an effort to reach out to the public at large, and sensitize them about BARC India data. We have made headline viewership data available to all through our mobile app and social media platforms. While we have achieved some of the things we had set out for, there is still a lot we aspire to do.

    Going forward, how do you see BARC making progress? What are the timelines and signposts?

    This year we will see our panel expanding from 20,000 to 30,000 reporting homes. Combined with the newly added homes, we will also be seeding some new homes as part of our regular churn policy. We will also stop reporting on all analogue homes across the country with the exception of Tamil Nadu state from 1 July 2017. With the current digitization mandate for TN, hopefully the state’s analogue reporting will also stop soon.  All this may lead to some interim flux, but in the long term will improve robustness of our viewership data. We are also trying to innovate panel expansion by tying up directly with key DTH and digital cable operators to enable return path data (RPD).       

    This year is also crucial for us as we will launch something that hasn’t been attempted in the country as yet — a third party digital viewership measurement. We have set the ball rolling by announcing the umbrella brand EKAM under which our digital products will be offered. We are hoping to roll out the first EKAM product this year.

    Apart from ensuring a stable weekly data service, we have launched THiNK (a monthly insights newsletter), Alpha Club (a report on viewership trends of NCCS A1, A2, A3 of 6 mega cities), and kids genre special report for the benefit of our subscribers. Earlier this year, we successfully rolled out our new universe estimate. We have also set up an independent disciplinary committee to check attempts at panel infiltration. Very soon industry will also be able to access designated independent consultancy firms who would provide strategic consultancy services.

    Unlike some other global audience measurement currencies, BARC India’s impressions method seems a tad complex. How is it explained to clients, data users and the regulator and the government?

    The terminology and methodology for data outputs is in keeping with global standards. BARC India Media Workstation (BMW) software used by subscribers for viewership data is easy to operate and is being used across 27+ countries. We also engage with our clients to understand their needs and that helps us align our services accordingly. We have a strong training team, which trains and provides support to every subscriber, new and existing.

    In fact, last year we launched a BMW certification programme for our subscribers  to enable them to test their knowledge of the software. The results have been very encouraging. We also meet the regulator and government from time to time to update them about the developments.

    While it is endorsed by the industry, BARC India still faces some criticism from certain quarters and smaller TV players about security and its biases towards the biggies who are funding it. Your reactions.

    While we are a joint industry company (JIC), we have never functioned like a monopoly and so we always welcome feedback from subscribers. As far as funding goes, we got the funding without any substantial equity investment from any shareholder. Our operations are built upon a unique debt funded model. So, it would be incorrect to say that “biggies” funded BARC India. We have a common pricing philosophy for all broadcasters, irrespective of whether it is a small or big broadcaster. For transparency, we have also placed it (the subscription methodology) on our website.

    Talking of security, BARC India didn’t hold back any punches while taking action against those involved in panel infiltration and it included some of the big names as well. Yes, there are some issues which our subscribers face. But that is more to do with understanding the data. Our team is working day in and day out to help them. This is normal for any new system and for all measurement companies around the world.    

    Did BARC India and its top management foresee some of the problems and controversies that have beset the organization in recent times? Like the court cases arising out of chastising some users of paid/subscribedBARC data for alleged attempts at data manipulation?

    If acting against defaulters who try to infiltrate our panel homes leads to controversy, we would happily get into it. That’s because we are answerable to our subscribers and it is our responsibility to ensure that the data we release holds value. Panel infiltration is a legacy issue, but BARC India has decided to take it head on. With advertising expenditure on TV in an upward trend, it is very important for us to ensure infiltration activities are rooted out.

    While the defaulters have been crying foul, we have received tremendous support from the industry. Our intent is to always produce a currency which is fair, transparent and representative.

    Was the formation of the disciplinary council, which seems a revamp of the ethics committee, a result of such cases mentioned above?

    The independent six-member disciplinary council, under the leadership of Justice Mukul Mudgal, will further strengthen transparency and credibility of our measurement system. As it is an independent body, cases of infiltration or any such issue can be heard by the committee. This will ensure that both the subscribers and BARCIndia get a fair hearing in matters like these.

    We have our on-ground vigilance team, which keeps a track of any malpractice. The disciplinary council will independently examine vigilance team reports and where culpability is clearly established, it will be empowered to order punitive action appropriate to the level of an offence. This has again been done in keeping with our philosophy of transparency.

    Rolling out digital measurement was announced by you in a Hong Kong conference almost two years back. What has held back the rollout so far?

    Third party digital viewership measurement has never been attempted in India. In fact, some of the products we are launching are a global first. Also, we are a JIC, which takes a 360 degree feedback from all its stakeholders. We had to first understand the industry needs and then design services accordingly. That apart, consumption pattern in India is very different from what exists globally. This only makes the task more challenging. We wanted to come out with a product that is robust and meets everyone’s needs.

    It is important to understand that nowhere in the world have these kind of services been launched in less than at least four to five years. They are still evolving. In fact, we are being extremely ambitious when we say 18-24 months roll out of all products, which will start in a phased manner from 2017 onwards.

    Did the digital measurement rollout get entangled in lack of consensus amongst various stakeholders and plain industry politics?

    Frankly, I do not feel that there has been any unjustifiable delay. We have a digital technical committee, just like for TV. We went to several countries to understand digital measurement in those markets. Also, we had to set up a new digital team from scratch. We have invested a lot of time in understanding the needs of the industry and setting up a team which could give us the best product. We always wanted to come up with a product, which is as strong as our TV measurement. As regards consensus, I guess we are the only JIC in a major country, which has digital publishers, platforms and broadcasters on the same table, taking consensus decisions.

    What lessons have you and the organization learnt in these two years of operation in a complex, but diversified and a big market like India?

    Learning has been a continuous process and we still learn every single day from the market. What we have understood is that nothing here is permanent. Someone might be happy with the data released this week and the same person might be upset the next week as he might feel the data isn’t in his favour. I, frankly, don’t blame them. Our subscribers have been used to seeing data with hardly any variation, for years. Now, when we capture data from more number of panel homes, use better and advanced technology to monitor and measure data, the data is bound to faithfully fluctuate, which arises out of normal human behavior. This does not mean our data is not accurate, but it shows that we are capturing what India is watching.

    To give an example, in months when Indian kids are busy preparing for exams or are giving exams, kids’ genre (ratings) is bound to fall. This picks up again from March onwards when the vacation season kicks in. Our data captures such nuances and changes. Not just this, take, for instance, total TV viewership in the country. Instances of heat waves and power cuts across the country from March onwards leads to a drop in TV viewership — when compared to the October-December period. This has been a trend for long and this education is an ongoing task for us.  

    Personally you have held a view that TV is far from dead despite digital’s impressive march. What gives you so much of conviction?

    Look at advertising expenditures. Yes, digital is growing, but TV remains the most important medium for advertisers to get eyeballs. Talking of statistics, while more people are moving to digital, TV with 64 per cent penetration contributes to almost 45 per cent of ad revenue. Not just this, print, even today, contributes to 30 per cent of ad revenue and this happens only in India. With penetration of TV increasing in the next few years, its contribution to ad revenue will only go up and so, while digital is a significant contributor, it is still a small base and thus would take a while for any such tectonic shift to happen in India.

    India is an under-marketed country with the ad:GDP ratio of 0.38 per cent, while the global averages are 0.7 per cent. Countries like China and Brazil have 0.46 per cent and 1.02 per cent, respectively. Good measurement being one of the drivers, I feel advertising spends will increase in India substantially and all mediums will grow, led by TV and digital.

    How much of growth in TV viewership do you foresee in the short to medium term of one to three years? What will fuel this growth — rise of multi-TV homes in rural areas or simple one-TV homes coming under the measurement radar and, thus, increasing the total number of TV HHs in India?

    As of 2016, India boasts of 183 million TV households, a 19 per cent growth from 2015. Sixteen years ago, one-third of Indian households had TV, but today close to two-thirds of households own TV. These figures will only go up in the coming years, led by rural. Of the 183 million TV households, rural contributes to 99 million homes, but its TV penetration remains at 52 per cent. This leaves huge headroom for growth.

    Multi-TV homes in the country today stands at 3.4 per cent of total TV homes. Increase in TV homes will also be driven by this.

    Our Broadcast India 2016 survey shows a drop of 19 per cent in NCCS D/E. This means that people are moving up the affluence chain. The relative share of NCCS `A’ homes has also come down due to the rise of nuclear families. This has led to growth in NCCS `B’ and `C’ homes, and, thus, increase in TV homes. Such phenomena of nuclear families will increase in the future, leading to further growth in NCCS `B’ and `C’ as well as TV homes. Hence, overall, we still feel there is big headroom for TV growth still.

    BARC India was supposed to have been in talks with DTH operators for return path data (RPD) to boost data generation. What’s the status of that proposal?

    Yes, we are in talks with a number of DTH and MSOs. We should be making some announcement on this front soon. These are complex solutions and some of them will be world firsts.

    What are some other initiatives being planned by BARC in the short term to bring more robustness in its data generation?

    Expansion of panel size will help build higher degree of accuracy in our data. The RPD initiative is also aimed at the same objective. Annual universe updates will allow us to map changes on the ground, and that will reflect in accuracy of the data as well.

    Will the technology and the methodology used be future proof?

    Yes. In fact, the reason we chose to use unique audio watermarking technology in the first place was to ensure that it is future-ready. BARC India system captures data about TV content consumed through any form of distribution — terrestrial, DTH, analogue cable, digital cable and digital.

    Would BARC look at STB-embedded software rather than a separate meter to counter attempts at hacking and manipulations? Sign-ins could be like in Netflix where profiles sign in and tracking/recommendations happen based on profile of user.

    Our tie-ups with DTH operators and MSOs for RPD are an attempt to do this. This will not only increase the number of sample panel homes, but will also make infiltration efforts ineffective. We will innovate more with our meter technology to make it as much hack-proof as possible.

    With the movement towards handset consumption of video growing, what tech is BARC looking at monitoring such trends? When would the rollout happen and who’d fund it?

    EKAM Pulse, the first digital product will be rolled out by this year. EKAM Pulse will allow granular level ad campaign measurement. It will measure reach of ad campaigns at multiple levels of an ad campaign. Some of the metrics it will provide are unique reach, frequency, on-target percentage and demography by geography. The other digital products will be rolled out in a phased manner in the next 18-24 months. All these products will be funded byBARC India.

    Do you see BARC working with clients just as the former TAM is with Tata Sky to offer them viewing solutions?

    Yes.

    With AI coming in, how do you see that being put to viewership enhancement/tracking/recommendation and how do you see BARC reacting/using it, if at all?

    We have already deployed AI at two levels. One at the panel level, which is then extrapolated to know TV viewing habits of TV universe and the other that helps us track any aberration in the viewing pattern of our panel. We use technology in a big way and are looking to move all our applications to the big data environment and accessible through cloud to make us future ready.

    Is BARC contemplating measurement of radio listenership?

    Not as of now. The radio industry should be able to support the cost of measurement to make it viable for any player.

    What would be your message to the industry, players, the regulator and the government on the occasion of BARC India’s second anniversary?

    The industry has been very supportive in the last two years and we hope that it would continue to offer its support. In fact, I would like to take this opportunity to thank all our stakeholders and subscribers.

    One point that I would like to raise is that factors like analogue switch offs in Phase IV (of digitization), TRAI order(s) and seasonal swings will continue to impact TV viewership. However, we would like the industry to understand these on-ground changes before questioning the flux in data. While the MIB mandate is to increase the panel size by 10k each year, till our fourth year of operation, we are aiming at multi-fold increase. We would like the industry to come together and support us to achieve this target.

    Also Read :

    BARC India to halt analogue measurement from July, up overall data collection

    ‘Common standard’ good to measure ‘unbundled’ viewership & ads cost-effectiveness: EKAM

    BARC India gets thumbs up for 2016…but challenges remain

    BARC India suspends three errant channels’ review

  • BARC India to solve digital puzzle with ‘EKAM’

    MUMBAI: BARC India today announced the phased roll-out of its much-awaited digital measurement service along with the brand name and logo of its digital measurement products. The digital products will be launched under the brand name EKAM (Sanskrit for “One”). The logo of EKAM draws inspiration from the four colors (Red, Blue, Yellow and Green) as BARC India. The branding highlights BARC India’s commitment to provide industry with a single platform for all measurement products, across TV and Digital.

    The EKAM suite of products will include: EKAM Pulse, EKAM Beam, EKAM Stream, EKAM Ad-Scan and EKAM Integra.

    EKAM Pulse will measure video ad campaigns and will be the first digital offering to be rolled out by BARC India. EKAM Beam, the next product lined up for release, will measure linear broadcast that is viewed on a Digital device . EKAM Stream, will measure both non-linear and pure play digital video content. BARC India will also provide industry with EKAM Ad-Scan – which will be a global first-of-its-kind product. It will give an overview of digital ads in India, look at where the advertising money is being spent and which sectors are producing more digital ads. The final product in this suite – EKAM Integra – will help industry with common, robust and independent audience numbers that will give more accurate incremental reach figures. To do this, BARC India’s TV data will be tied with Digital Video data with the help of Single-Source and Digital Booster panels on top of the census measurement and big data.

    Advertisers in digital space face several issues today. These include: dependency on publishers/platforms for data, lack of quantifiable differences in impressions, inability to see unique and de-duplicated reach & frequency across publishers/platforms and lack of knowledge on ROI, among others.

    BARC India, as a Joint Industry Company, has been studying the problems and has developed the EKAM suite of products based on industry-specific needs. By providing unique Reach and Frequency across devices de-duplicated by Brand, Campaign, Site or Placement, the EKAM solutions will allow analysis and comparison of different platforms and their offerings. With a Single-Source Panel, large TV and Digital Booster panels, Census level impressions and Big Data on Digital side, EKAM will offer a much more robust and accurate ability to show key metrics like incremental reach.

    “We are happy to announce the launch of the EKAM, our digital offering. The ecosystem needs Measurement of both Video Ads and Content, whatever the pipe and device maybe. As the brand name suggests, BARC India is working towards its goal of integrating TV and Digital measurement. Our EKAM suite of products will be rolled out over the next 18-24 months. It will provide the industry with independent third party measurement, verification of audience and eventually viewability of video ads and content,” said Partho Dasgupta, CEO, BARC India.

  • Ad Club announces another property ‘Marquees’ awards

    GOA: Having given to the industry marquee properties like the EMVIES, EFFIES and ABBY’s, The Advertising Club that has been a catalyst in developing the industry and a leading ideas exchange platform has announced another annual property ‘Marquees’ addressing the needs of marketeers who form a large constituency of the Advertising Club.

    The club has get on board Network 18 as the presenting partners and the Partho Dasgupta will be the chairman of this new property.

    The Awards intend to recognise brands for their excellence in marketing, but also those who have come out successful despite facing numerous adversities iterating the well-known adage “That which does not break you only makes you stronger.” The debut edition of The Marquees is slated to premiere in August, 2017.

    Speaking about newly constituted awards, The Advertising Club president Raj Nayak said, “Brands operate in a dynamic and evolving environment where challenges are manifold and mostly unpredictable. It is hence important to recognize and honor creativity and effectiveness of brands that take challenges to their stride and emerge triumphant. The Marquees will play the role of acknowledging and cheering brands and marketing initiatives that have been game changers.”

    Speaking about the raison d’être of the awards Marquee awards chairman Dasgupta said ,“We believe that brands are a force of change and influence in society. The awards will recognize all the elements of marketing with communication being just one of them. We are sure that the awards will emerge as an ultimate benchmark for excellence in marketing.”

    Apart from the regular category awards for sectors such as FMCG, Banking, Auto, Insurance, Telecom & DTH, Consumer Durables & E-commerce. The Marquees will also have “Marquee special awards” and will recognize brands who have made a name for themselves differently. Some of the examples of the special awards are: Conquering an impregnable fortress, Riding on an emerging wave, Reinventing for the better, Carving out a niche and Traversing unchartered waters.

  • BARC India formally sets up independent council to probe viewership malpractices complaints

    MUMBAI: BARC India has set up an independent disciplinary council to further strengthen transparency and credibility of its measurement system.

    The six-member BARC India Disciplinary Council (BDC) will investigate and address complaints related to viewership malpractices and tampering of BARC India’s measurement system.

    The BDC will be headed by Punjab & Haryana High Court’s former chief justice Mukul Mudgal and has former Mumbai police commissioner and DGP Maharashtra D Shivanandan and independent technical expert Paritosh Joshi as its members. Viacom18 group general counsel and company secretary Sujeet Jain, GroupM South Asia CEO CVL Srinivas and GCPL AVP corporate legal Pankaj Phadnis are the other members, representing the three stakeholder bodies – IBF, AAAI and ISA.

    BARC India has already set up a vigilance team to probe viewership malpractices complaints, as well as investigate abnormal viewership data recorded from BARC India panel households. The new council will independently examine vigilance team reports, and where culpability is clearly established, it will be empowered to order punitive action appropriate to level of offence. The action could range from written warning and a fine for first level offence, to suspension of viewership data for three months, leading up to termination of BARC India’s contract with the subscriber.

    Alongside setting up of the high-level BDC, BARC India has re-drafted terms of the contract it signs with its subscribers. This has been done to address limitations in the current End User License Agreements (EULA) and strengthen legal provisions that will allow the BDC to act against viewership malpractices. The updated EULA will soon be circulated to all BARC India subscribers, and they would be required to sign them.

    “The BDC is a step forward in our commitment to ensuring transparency, and eradicating this long existing malpractice of panel tampering. We hope to build further credibility in our processes and systems under guidance of Justice Mudgal. The independent council will also benefit from the advice of a seasoned law enforcement expert like Shivanandan, and the continued support of industry stakeholders,” said BARC India CEO Partho Dasgupta.

  • TV viewership jumps by a whopping 18%: BARC India

    MUMBAI: BARC India has released its weekly viewership data on the basis of a revised Universe Estimate (UE), which is based on the results of Broadcast India Survey – the largest-ever research study undertaken to ascertain TV universe & television viewing habits in India.

    With this, BARC India has updated and aligned its TV universe with ground-level changes in demographics, TV ownership and connection type, language preference and changes in NCCS profiles etc.

    Fieldwork for the Broadcast India Survey was carried out over November 2015 to Feb 2016, and covered 3,00,000 homes across 590 Districts comprising of about 4300 Towns/Villages. All 1 Lakh+ towns were covered, while towns below 1 Lakh were selected by a Probability Proportional to Size (PPS) method.

    With the new UE, Week 8 has seen a significant increase of 18Per cent in Total TV viewership in the country. Total TV impressions have grown from 22.7 billion in week 7 to 26.7 billion impressions in week 8.

    “BI 2016 is one of the biggest survey’s done in the country so far. The TV universe in India is ever growing and changing and so is the profile and choice of a TV viewer. The last survey done was in 2013 and the last Census was in 2011. The consumer and viewer landscape is changing rapidly – with electrification, prosperity, changing modes of signal and digitisation. We wanted to reflect this change in viewership numbers and hence conducted our own Establishment Survey. This will help our subscribers and the eco system align their strategies for better targeting. The new reality is TV viewership is rapidly growing and how,” said BARC India CEO Partho Dasgupta.

    The study also highlights the fact that TV HHs have grown faster in NCCS B and C, thus increasing the share of the middle class. While NCCS A has dropped from 22 per cent to 21 per cent , NCCS B and C have gone up from 24 per cent to 27 Per cent and 31 Per cent to 32 Per cent respectively. NCCS D/E on the other hand has de-grown from 23 per cent to 20 per cent . These trends are in line with fragmentation of family sizes (leading to lower average family sizes) and rising economic growth and rising prosperity. It also shows that India has more nuclear families without elders than ever before, and it is also the dominant family group among TV owning homes. While composition of joint families in the universe has come down from 26 per cent to 22 per cent, nuclear families with elders has grown from 53 per cent to 58 per cent .

    Some key changes have been seen in the BI study like electrification, migration, digitisation, rise in smaller and nuclear family culture, increase in middle class, inclusion of rural markets and single TV households which has an impact on TV viewership behaviour.

    BI-2016, the report based on the survey, contains not just an updated count and composition of TV homes across urban and rural India, but also offers data and insights that would be of immense value to marketers and advertisers. It contains granular data and information on media consumption habits of Indians, as well as select durable ownership and packaged goods purchase profiles. It is an updated database of Indian consumer behaviour.

  • Guest Column: Measure by Measure

    Guest Column: Measure by Measure

    Year ends are always a good a time to reflect on the past, take stock of the present and plan for the future. So let me begin, by reflecting on the year that was.  

    In 2016, the state of audience measurement in India grew by leaps and bounds. From just 10,000 homes in the previous system, we are already at 22,000 homes, with the course set for 55,000 as mandated. Over the year, the broadcast industry got a better idea of ‘What India Really Watches’, thanks to the addition of rural viewership measurement which BARC introduced– a fact that has been applauded by all. In fact, BARC’s investment in technology has ensured greater robustness in the system, with more automation and less manual interventions. Our system is also very scalable as our Bar-o-meter costs less than US$400 compared to the previously used meters which cost US$2500!

    The watermarking technology adopted by BARC, is two generations ahead of the rest. It not only captures catch up TV but also simulcast. What this means is that BARC can monitor any recording of a programme, seen within seven days of its telecast, and can also accurately measure a simultaneous telecast of a cricket match across say 20 channels, including Doordarshan, and can report which channel is drawing the highest eyeballs. In fact, the watermarking technology is also future-ready which can be used for digital measurement, which BARC currently is evaluating.

    Taking stock of the present, we at BARC are immensely proud of the credibility we have established and the trust that we have earned from the industry. This has come about as a result of support of our stakeholders and our commitment to transparency. Incidentally, the need for transparency was also the one big reason industry came together and formed BARC. It propelled the need for the formation of a joint industry body, where all stakeholders’ representatives are part of the board and the technical committee. A unique aspect of that is BARCs governance structure which ensures that decisions must necessarily be agreed to jointly. To further strengthen transparency and credibility, BARC has partnered with Ernst & Young (E&Y) so that data can be audited by an external independent auditor. Evidence enough to the seriousness of thought that was given to credible data by the three industry bodies which make up BARC.

    Having established credibility in our data and systems, our task for the year ahead on that front is cut out: we will leave no stone unturned in our endeavour to maintain integrity, and take every step possible to ensure a robust and reliable viewership measurement environment: which is essential for the broadcast industry to thrive and grow. The support of our Board validates the faith we have in our systems and processes, and we will continue to build on that. We have set up a vigilance team that works with specialist agencies on the ground to track mala-fide activities. Any attempt to unfairly influence our measurement system has been dealt with firmly and we will continue to maintain zero-tolerance towards any acts of infiltration or tampering of our panel homes.

    The TV Industry draws in multiple crores of rupees worth of advertising in a country with over 153.5 million TV homes, where watching TV firmly remains a family routine. Be it entertainment or news, sports or movies, music, kids shows or a national events like Independence and Republic Days, TV will continue to take centre stage in the lives of Indians. And monitoring who is watching what will continue to remain a critical need for the growing stakeholders.

    While welcoming 2017, we at BARC, promise to continue our commitment to a transparent and credible viewership measurement system, because that’s the only way we know to measure things.

    public://Parth.jpg The author of this article is Broadcast Audience Research Council India CEO. You can follow him on Twitter @parthodasgupta. The views expressed are personal and Indiantelevision.com need not necessarily subscribe to them