The Broadcast Research Council (BRC) of South Africa has finally released its latest Radio Audience Measurement Survey (RAMS) AMPLIFY™ report.
The report was released on Friday, October 29, via webinar. It followed days of delay after the data was officially launched and presented.
BRC’s CEO Gary Whitaker said while the industry was eager to have access to the newest RAMS data, the council believes that the delay was slightly in the interests of delivering a stable currency and
“We are pleased to announce that the data, which the media and advertising industry have been eagerly awaiting, will be available in cross-tab format via third party data providers Telmar and Nielsen (Arianna) after the industry presentation,” Whitaker had said.
He added that, “This is the media and advertising industry’s bold step into a new era of audio measurement, designed to support commercial trading.”
This release is based on five months’ worth of data, covering the period Q2 (+2 months), April to August 2021, with an achieved sample of just over 15,000 respondents.
Due to the change in methodology from face-to-face manual completion seven-day diaries to the dual method of CATI (Computer Aided Telephonic Interviews) DAR (Day After Recall) and a MediaCell passive listening panel, this new dataset is not comparable to the previous BRC RAM™ dataset.
The methodology has been structured into two parts. Firstly, 3 000 CATI conducted monthly (36 000 per year and nationally representative) providing audience measurement in 15-minute segments, along with audience tracking on radio events and roadshows. The program covers over 280 stations (commercial, African language and community).
Secondly was a MediaCell passive listening panel, which measures linear broadcast and digital consumption of 4 000 panelists daily, with minute-by-minute tracking of activities.
MediaCell data will only be incorporated at the end of Q1 2022 once the fully recruited panel is in place. This dual methodology will ensure an uninterrupted radio currency that delivers data more frequently with granular insights to aid all sectors of the market.
At this point in time, the data will only be made available in a cross-tab format with reach and frequency data to follow as the sample grows. The full CATI sample of 36 000 respondents will be realized after a full year of fieldwork has reached completion.
The South African market has been without radio currency data since Q1 2020 hence the need to release a viable dataset now. As the sample grows month on month more granular analysis will be possible.
The release and presentation will be held on Friday, 29 October from 11:00 via webinar. Due to the nature of this release, the BRC expects the webinar to end at 13:00. The webinar will be accessible to everyone in the industry, and all are invited to join the Zoom webinar here.
“We understand that the industry was eager to have access to the newest RAMS data; however, we stand by the decision to delay the data release slightly in the interests of delivering a stable currency and taking a long-term view to realize the larger vision for the study,” concludes Whitaker.