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TiVoed: The Effects of AdAvoidance Technologies on Broadcaster Behaviour

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Title: TiVoed: The Effects of AdAvoidance Technologies on Broadcaster Behaviour


1
TiVoed The Effects of Ad-Avoidance Technologies
on Broadcaster Behaviour
  • Simon P. Anderson (Virginia)
  • Joshua S. Gans (Melbourne)

2
Advertising and Consumers
  • Do consumers like ads?
  • Information view will pay to buy ads (e.g.,
    trade mags)
  • Nuisance view will pay to avoid ads (e.g.,
    television)
  • Rise in ad-avoidance technologies
  • VCRs
  • DVRs (e.g., Tivo)
  • Download TV (e.g., iTunes) and DVDs
  • Ad-avoidance is a threat to the traditional
    two-sided model of selling content it unbundles
    the product.
  • Will it cause a death spiral?

3
Research Question
  • How will broadcasters respond to DVR penetration?
  • Informal response
  • will move to reduce the cost to consumers so as
    to limit incentives to purchase DVRs decrease
    clutter
  • will try and target niche audiences to tailor
    more effective advertising
  • Our formal result
  • DVR penetration means that the marginal viewer
    has lower ad disutility so broadcasters will
    increase clutter
  • will try and broaden the appeal of programming

4
Literature
  • Anderson and Coate (2005)
  • Armstrong and Weeds (2006)
  • Wilbur (2005)

5
Notation and Set-Up
  • Broadcaster ( content provider)
  • Monopolist
  • No marginal costs
  • Viewers
  • Located in (x, g) space Uniform on
  • Utility
  • Advertisers
  • Price per viewer r(a) various concavity
    assumptions
  • Revenue per viewer R(a) r(a)a

6
Equilibrium without AATs
  • Choose a to maximise R(a)N
  • Anderson-Coate condition
  • Proposition 1 Equilibrium level of advertising
    is unique.

Viewers
(ql)/l
7
Modeling AATs
  • Durable good
  • Consumers purchase AATs fixed price, p
  • Broadcasters observe AAT penetration
  • Broadcasters choose advertising level
  • (Technical issue look for rational expectations
    equilibrium)
  • Rented good
  • Consumers rent AATs and adjust behaviour
    simultaneously with the broadcaster choice of
    advertising level
  • Later in the talk

8
Non-equilibrium Outcomes
AAT Viewers
AAT Viewers
Viewers
Viewers
(ql-p)/l
(ql-p)/l
(ql)/l
(ql)/l
Advertising level anticipated by consumers
9
Equilibrium with AAT
  • Proposition 2 For a given p, there is a unique
    equilibrium

AAT Viewers
Viewers
(ql-p)/l
(ql)/l
10
Impact on Advertising
  • Proposition 3 A lower AAT price increases
    equilibrium advertising.
  • High disutility viewers purchase AATs so the
    marginal one has lower disutility. Hence, profit
    maximising to increase their price.

Decreasing in a
Increasing in p
11
Network Effects
  • As increase AAT penetration
  • Broadcasters increased advertising clutter
  • Marginal consumers purchase AATs
  • AAT purchases governed by a positive network
    effect

12
Impact on Welfare
Viewers watch TV
Viewers stop watching TV
  • Decreased welfare
  • low disutility viewers including some who
    purchase AATs
  • Broadcaster
  • Increased welfare
  • High disutility viewers increased viewership
  • Advertisers? When there is low quality and mild
    AAT penetration

AAT Viewers (gt)
Without AAT
AAT Viewers (lt)
With AAT
Non AAT Viewers (lt)
(ql-p)/l
(ql)/l
13
Impact on Content
  • q vertical quality
  • AAT penetration decreases incentives to increase
    q
  • l horizontal quality
  • AAT penetration decreases incentives to increase
    l
  • Lower l implies flatter demand switch to
    programming with more mass market appeal
  • Marginal niche consumer has an AAT so focus on
    average one that doesnt.
  • Less targeted viewership

14
Extensions
  • Endogenous AAT pricing
  • Demand for AATs more elastic than an ordinary
    good due to the negative externality imposed on
    non-purchasers
  • Broadcaster competition
  • Results robust and simpler
  • Pay television
  • Advertising rates become linked to subscription
    rates when there are AATs

15
Subscription-Based AATs
w/o AATs
  • Proposition 6 For low enough p, equilibrium
    advertising is set to shut out AATs.
  • Always profit maximising to reduce advertising by
    a little bit to capture marginal AAT users.

(ql-p)/l
Viewers
(ql)/l
16
Conclusions
  • Case of emerging substitutes on one side of a two
    sided market.
  • Reaction to the substitute can be to accommodate
    rather than deter it.
  • Suggests that two-sided markets cannot viewed in
    isolation of a broader strategic context.
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