The show's popularity among the urban audiences, and more specifically, in the affluent audience segments, makes it a lucrative option for advertisers looking to advertise on GEC's during the weekends.
Colors'
costume drama Naagin,
currently in its third season, boasts consistent audience in urban
markets, taking the sting out of the myth that the show's viewership
is rural-skewed.
According
to data from the Broadcast Audience Research Council of India (BARC),
66 per cent of the show's viewership comes from urban India. For
season one, the contribution of urban India was 65 per cent, and in
season two, it was 64 per cent.
One
of the major reasons for the urban skew would be because Naagin is
aired on Colors, a paid channel, and hence is more widely distributed
in urban India. Free-to-air (FTA) channels have better and wider
reach in rural areas since they are available on DD Freedish.
That's
not all. In terms of NCCS (new consumer classification system), it is
the affluent segments, NCCS A and B, that contribute 51 per cent of
the show's viewership. NCCS is a system of categorizing households
according to socio-economic status based on criteria such as
education and goods owned. NCCS A and B are the groups advertisers
usually target. Add to this the fact that 46 per cent of the
viewership on the show comes from male audiences. This, however, is
below the average viewership of males on general entertainment
channels (GECs), which is 48 per cent of the total eyeballs the genre
attracts.
"The
success of Naagin
in the urban and NCCS A and B markets is a positive for Colors. Since
the paid GECs anyway only look at urban data, a show doing well in
that market means more leverage with advertisers. Having the affluent
audiences hooked and a healthy male skew means that advertisers have
a good vehicle on Colors during the weekend prime time slot," a
broadcasting executive says.
The
show's viewership ebbed and flowed over the three seasons. The first
season had a viewership of 17.6 million impressions in the Hindi
speaking market (HSM). The figure dropped to 11.9 million impressions
in the second season. And now, the third season has bounced back with
a viewership of 15 million impressions, so far.
Experts
believe that adopting a seasonal format has actually helped the show
hold its own in viewership. Unlike other soaps/dramas on GECs, Naagin
has successfully adopted the format of the finite episode.
"Having
a break between seasons allows for crisper storytelling. It also
allows the show to end on a cliff-hanger, baiting the audiences to
return next season. It has been done successfully in the west and is
a norm there," the industry expert says.
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