in

Nielsen has started tracking shows on Amazon, Hulu, and Netflix

When a television studio wants to know how popular one of its programs are, it turns to Nielsen. The company has been tracking the demographics and viewership of television programs for decades, and now it’s making its way into the world of online streaming. Nielsen has been working on a program these past few months to track how many viewers there are for shows on online streaming services like Hulu and Netflix, and the company is now tracking somewhere around 1,000 of them. Even though it’s going along with the program, Netflix has been a bit dismissive because Nielsen doesn’t factor in mobile users or people viewing content from outside the United States. 

When asked recently if she knew how many people were watching the comedy “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” on Netflix, co-creator Tina Fey said she had no idea. “We don’t have any actual numbers,” Ms. Fey said at a recent gathering of television critics. “I feel a lot of people are watching the show. Let’s go with that,” she cracked. Netflix Inc. is notoriously secretive when it comes to sharing such information—be it with content providers, the media or Wall Street—arguing that since it doesn’t have advertisers to please, ratings for its subscription streaming service are irrelevant. But now Hollywood is getting its first real peek inside the black box of online video streaming. In recent months, measurement specialist Nielsen has been scaling up a program to track viewing on Netflix and other online services like Amazon.com Inc.’s Prime Instant Video and Hulu. Nielsen said it is now tracking nearly 1,000 shows. Most major TV studios are receiving detailed readouts on how their own programming is performing, including the total viewers for any episode and basic demographics such as age and gender, Nielsen said.

What do you think?

Avatar of Alfie Joshua

Written by Alfie Joshua

Alfie Joshua is the editor at Auto in the News. Find him on Twitter, and Pinterest.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Instagram no longer forces users to crop their photos to a square

Google is helping app developers bypass Apple’s new security feature