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60% of TV Viewers Are 'Ad-Tolerant' if It Lowers Cost, Says TiVo Report

Despite inflation and financial pressure, video entertainment spending is a moderate to high-priority discretionary spend for about 70% of consumers, Xperi reported Thursday, citing results from a Q2 survey of 4,503 U.S. and Canadian consumers. A quarter of respondents said they had cut back on entertainment spending amid rising inflation.

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The average number of video services consumers use reached 9.86 in Q2, up from 8.8 in the year-ago quarter, with ad-supported VOD (AVOD) and free ad-supported streaming TV (FAST) services accounting for about a third of video streaming consumption, up from 26% in Q4 2021.

Fewer than a quarter of survey respondents identified as “ad-averse” to the point that they were willing to pay for ad-free plans to avoid watching commercials, the report said. About 60% said they were “ad-tolerant,” and 19% were “ad-favorable.” Interaction with ads grew from Q4 to Q1: 21.7% of consumers said they used their phone to scan a QR code in a TV show or commercial; 22.3% tapped on an interactive ad on a phone or tablet; and 16% tried an interactive game in a video game ad, it said.

While video content is a priority for consumers, “if they can get it at a lower cost, or free, consumers are demonstrating a growing tolerance for more ads as part of the content they consume,” said Walt Horstman, senior vice president-monetization, for Xperi’s TiVo.

About 80% of consumers said they wanted their paid service to offer a free, ad-supported option, but a quarter of AVOD users said they watch a new AVOD service for only three months before moving on to a new option. Pay-TV subscribers hopped between AVOD services at double the rate of broadband-only users, the report said.

Discovering what to watch remains a top pain point for most streaming TV viewers as content and services continue to grow. Three-fourths with access to voice search use it to help find content, the report said. Some 64% used voice to search for specific programs, 37 used it to change channels, 31% used the feature for browsing for programs, 29% for changing the volume and 27% to launch streaming apps, TiVo said. 17% used voice to get viewing recommendations.

A quarter of respondents identified as “pay-TV revivers,” who previously cut the cord with a traditional linear TV service and then resubscribed. Pay-TV “continues to have a significantly lower churn rate than subscription VOD,” TiVo said. Some 60% of respondents said local content was somewhat or very important, with local weather (68%), news (65%) and sports (36%) at the top. Pay-TV subscribers spend 25% of their viewing time on local content vs. broadband-only subscribers at 16.2%, TiVo said.

Among transactional VOD viewers who purchased or rented content, just over 30% of respondents were Amazon Prime Video subscribers, 13.7% got content from Disney+ Premier Access, 12.1% watched movies and shows on YouTube, 9.3% were Apple TV store/iTunes customers, and 8% bought video content from Google Play. About 5.5% used Redbox Online, and 4.7% ordered Vudu rentals or purchases.

About 30% of survey respondents said they bought a smart TV between Q4 and Q2, and one in five planned to buy a smart TV in the next six months. A low price was the top TV purchase criterion (52%), followed by quality and resolution (48%), brand reputation (40%), good quality audio (36%) and built-in streaming apps (33%).

About 55% of respondents said they preferred watching new movie releases in theaters vs. at home because of cost, with movie tickets under $30, the price of a new release on Disney Plus Premier Access. Fifty-three percent would be interested if the theater had a better screen and sound system; 35% liked theater popcorn and snacks, 23% enjoyed seeing previews, 19% liked the audience experience and 16% said a theater has fewer distractions than viewing at home.