The latest TV viewing figures show that people in the UK watched an average of 27 hours, 34 minutes of live, linear TV each a week during January to September 2010 (3 hours, 56 minutes a day), with growth across every age group.
This represents an increase of 1 hour, 50 minutes on the same period last year, according to Thinkbox.
Commercial TV continued to perform strongly, accounting for 62% of TV viewing during the period – with the average UK viewer watching 17 hours, 5 minutes of linear, commercial TV channels a week (2 hours, 26 minutes a day). This is an increase of 49 minutes a week on the same period last year and of 1 hour, 22 minutes on the five year average viewing time for the period.
Reasons behind the continued growth include:
The increase in commercial viewing has provided a boost to TV advertising. Commercial impacts (the number of ads watched at normal speed) during January to September were up 5% on the same period last year, and have grown by 21.3% over the last five years to a new record high. The average viewer watched 44 ads a day during January to September compared to 43 ads on the same period last year.
Over £2.8 billion was spent on TV advertising during January to September 2010, according to Nielsen. This is up 19.2% on the same period last year. (Nielsen’s figures do not include investment in TV sponsorship, advertiser funded programmes, interactive services or online TV.)
According to BARB, non-live, ‘time-shifted’ viewing accounted for 6.8% of the UK’s TV consumption during the period. In households that own digital television recorders, such as Sky+ or Freeview+, timeshifting represented a slightly larger proportion of TV viewing (13.3%).
Tess Alps, Thinkbox’s chief executive: “It is increasingly obvious that viewers want to watch TV live and as it happens; they turn to on-demand services primarily to catch-up with something they’ve missed. These new figures reiterate the enormous appeal of linear TV in the UK as new ways to watch TV grow. This enduring popularity stems from a basic human desire to share experiences and it shows no sign of diminishing.”