Revenue in the US television industry will fall below the $20 billion mark starting this year, according to a report from BIA Advisory Services.
BIA’s data found that several markets in 2008 showed surprising positive revenue streams due to fierce Presidential and Congressional campaigns in battleground states. This enabled only a 6.6% decline by the end of the year.
Mark Fratrik, vice president of BIA Advisory Services, said: “Since 2003 TV revenues have held steady but are now beginning a dramatic downward shift. This corroborates our calls for transformation as the only path to expansion for the industry.
“This will come from cross-platform growth and real energies put into finding local advertising revenues available through mobile and online advertising.”
Analysts at BIA forecast a slight positive revenue increase in 2010 of 0.6%, attributed to an election year and a recovering economy. Preliminary forecasting expects a dip into the negatives again in 2011 before a solid return to positive revenue streams in 2012.
In March, Screen Digest forecast that UK TV advertising revenue would drop by 7.7% in 2009. Amplified by audience fragmentation, analogue terrestrial TV will be hit hardest, it said, with both ITV1 and Channel 4 forecast to be down 10% in 2009. (see UK ad revenue to drop 8% in 2009).
A recent report from Ball State University, meanwhile, found that despite the proliferation of computers, video-capable mobile phones and similar devices, TV in the home still commands the greatest amount of viewing in the US, even among those aged 18-24 (see Home TV viewing still popular in the US).