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TELEVISION'S NEW TECHNOLOGY: HARDWARE PLUS SOFTWARE EQUAL SEGMENTATION RESEARCH

Teresa J. Domzal (Assistant Professor of Marketing at George Mason University, Fairfax, VA)
Jerome B. Kernan (Professor of Behavioral Analysis at the University of Cincinnati)

Journal of Consumer Marketing

ISSN: 0736-3761

Article publication date: 1 March 1985

138

Abstract

The necessity to assess television programming as programming (rather than merely as a vehicle to deliver advertising audiences) is discussed against the background of commercial television's rapidly changing technology, a principal effect of which has been to fragment formerly “mass” audiences. Traditional ratings data (because they lack adequate quantitative detail, contain no qualitative information, and measure programs only after they are aired) are becoming an insufficient basis for making either programming or advertising decisions. As audiences become increasingly segmented, the necessity to understand them (exactly who they are and why they watch particular programs) becomes apparent‐whether for purposes of developing programs, scheduling them, or ascertaining whether they constitute an efficient vehicle within which to place advertising messages. Audience understanding can come only from a considerably expanded base of systematic research.

Citation

Domzal, T.J. and Kernan, J.B. (1985), "TELEVISION'S NEW TECHNOLOGY: HARDWARE PLUS SOFTWARE EQUAL SEGMENTATION RESEARCH", Journal of Consumer Marketing, Vol. 2 No. 3, pp. 17-26. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb008129

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1985, MCB UP Limited

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