August 15, 2007

Looking back: Communications industry spending outpaces GDP growth. Looking ahead: Internet advertising poised to overtake newspaper ad revenue

Posted by Ben Compaine

There have been a number of developments and announcements in recent weeks, which, individually, amount to little more than the now-normal background noise of the media business. But seen collectively, they add further arrows to the growing quiver of ammunition that the media landscape is continuing to sift beneath our feet.
For today, I want to highlight the data and analysis published last week by the media-centric private equity firm, Veronis, Suhlis & Stevenson (VSS) in its latest Communications Industry Forecast, covering through 2011. This has nuggets which, if accurate (this is a forecast) would bring to higher resolution the winners and losers in the media arena. For example, total spending on all communications grew substantially faster than GDP between 2001 and 2006. Furthermore, VSS predicts that communications industry spending will continue to grow faster than the overall economy through 2011, making it the third growing sector of the economy.
That’s some good news. On the other hand, the report finds that, for the first time since 1997, consumers spent less time with media in total last year than in the previous year. VSS believes this decrease, though small in percentage terms, is due to changing consumer behaviors and digital media efficiencies. “The drop in consumer media usage was driven by the continued migration of consumers to digital alternatives for news, information and entertainment, which require less time investment than their traditional media counterparts.” It continues: “Consumers typically watch broadcast or cable television at least 30 minutes per session while they spend as little as five to seven minutes viewing consumer-generated video clips online.”
VSS does not see this decrease as part of a long term trend, expecting consumer media usage to stabilize in 2007 and increase slightly through 2011. However, this would be driven by time spent with out-of-home media and videogames as the only major segments to achieve accelerating growth in this timeframe. Overall consumer time spent with media is forecast to increase at a compound rate of 0.5% from 2006 to 2011, down substantially to the 0.8% in the previous five-year period.
The real headline, however, is this prognostication: “In what would be a watershed moment in communications history, VSS predicts that Internet advertising – including pure-play websites and digital extensions of traditional media – will replace newspapers as the largest ad medium in 2011.”
I assume they mean that advertising in printed newspapers will be supplanted by advertising online—which includes the advertising that newspaper publishers generate from their online sites. Still it would be another stake in the heart of what once the biggest rooster in the barnyard.
But here’s another bombshell: “In addition to shifting their attention to alternative media, consumers are also migrating away from advertising-supported media, such as broadcast TV and newspapers, to consumer-supported platforms, such as cable TV and videogames.” Time spent with consumer-supported media grew at a compound rate of 19.8% from 2001 to 2006, while time spent with ad-supported media declined 6.3% in the period. This is not a measure of revenue but of consumer time spent. But with all the buzz about everyone moving to totally ad supported models (see Rebuilding Media’s latest foray into this space), this finding more than suggests that consumers are willing to part with their discretionary income for the right content or platform.
Another data point is found in a piece by Bobby White in The Wall Street Journal (sub. required). "Across the cable TV industry," writes White, "… independent channels are also turning away from TV to the Internet." Black Family History, The Lime Channel, The Employment and Career Channel, Horror Channel and HorseTV are among those that pulled the plug on their cable affiliation in favor a going Internet only.
“The shift illustrates how the Internet is offering a second chance to certain segments of old media. Web-based TV is now becoming a more viable business route, and Internet video is exploding. Running an online-only video channel, which doesn't require expensive cameras and broadcasting gear, is cheaper than operating a cable TV channel. While starting a new cable channel today takes an initial investment of $100 million to $200 million, a broadband channel needs just $5 million to $10 million to get going, says Boston-based research firm Broadband Directions.”
It’s a constant challenge when in the midst of change to separate trends from simple data points. One needs a series of data points over time that show direction. The Journal article may well be a data point that fits into the trends the VSS study provides. It seems though that enough data points are aggregating to confirm some direction with far reaching strategic implications for and broad array of players in the media industry. 

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