Hungarian Grand Prix suffers in Summer heat

A dramatic Hungarian Grand Prix, won by Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo, drew its lowest audience in six years despite the race averaging over four million viewers, according to unofficial overnight viewing figures.

Race
Traditionally, despite its late July slot, the Hungarian round has always rated very well despite any warm weather that may occur. And, to a degree, the same can be said this year. The race, Sky Sports F1’s 50th, averaged 996k (10.9%) from 12:00 to 15:30, up on last year’s average of 923k (10.2%). Sky’s coverage peaked with 1.44m (15.2%) yesterday, compared with a 1.35m (13.7%) peak from last year. BBC One’s highlights programme averaged 3.20m (22.0%), peaking with 3.67m (23.6%), down on 3.64m from 2012 and 2013. The combined average of 4.20m and peak of 5.11m looks fairly good compared to a typical Formula 1 race.

The problem, as I mentioned above is that the Hungarian Grand Prix has always rated well. So whilst, 4.20 million looks good it actually, for Hungary, is not a great rating. For example, the 2011 race, exclusively on BBC One, averaged 4.65m (42.2%), peaking with a whopping 6.10m (50.0%). The combined audience of 4.20m is the lowest since 2008. The races between 2009 and 2013 have all recorded programme averages between 4.46m and 4.81m.

Qualifying
Live coverage of qualifying, not taking into account overrun, averaged 402k (5.6%) from 12:00 to 14:35. BBC Two’s highlights at 17:40 added 1.50m (12.4%). The combined figure of 1.90m is very marginally down on 2012, but still the lowest since 2008. It is worth noting that Sky have been promoting Sky Go all weekend where Formula 1 is concerned, but I don’t think that is going to make up the viewers that Formula 1 appears to have lost since 2011.

Despite that, I don’t think the race number is terrible, as I do think the weather played some part in the number. However, in the context of the season so far, it is not very good. Like I’ve said before, Formula 1 has to reverse the trend after the Summer break as an absolute must. The four week break should also be considered a ‘reset’ from both BBC’s and Sky’s perspectives in order to get the viewing figures back to what they once were.

The 2013 Hungarian Grand Prix ratings report can be found here.

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What today’s announcement means for Sky Sports F1 across Europe

The announcement today that BSkyB have acquired Sky Italia and purchased a 57.4% stake in Sky Deutschland poses some questions about Sky Sports F1 as a channel going forward under the creation of “Sky Europe”. Given that Sky Sports F1 exists in all three territories, one can imagine that resource will be shared in the future. It looks like, Sky are thinking the same way, under the guise of cost-cutting.

At today’s BSkyB earning presentation for Q3 2013/14, Andrew Griffith, their Chief Financial Officer, said “Firstly, [we expect to reduce cost in] production and commissioning. The enlarged group will be able to share programming, channel brands and creative across territories, as well as to be more effective in the production of live cross-border events. An example is Formula 1, where all three broadcasters each currently send their own separate production capability.”

I know that Formula 1 was given as an example above, however it is pretty fair to say that Sky are looking into the possibility of having centralised production for Formula 1. Assuming that Sky Deutschland and Sky Italia take a similar sized production team to BSkyB to the F1 races, then you would be slashing the Sky production team on-site by 60 percent.

If you’re going to have a centralised production team, does that mean we could well have a centralised on-air team as well? I don’t know the answer to that question, but it could be an interesting few months ahead as we head towards 2015 and beyond…

UK F1 TV ratings paint mixed picture at halfway stage

Despite a British driver currently in the championship race, at the halfway stage of the 2014 Formula One season, viewing figures do not paint a rosy picture. Currently, according to unofficial overnight viewing figures, television audiences have dropped to their lowest level since 2008 – the year Lewis Hamilton won his first Formula One championship.

> BBC bears brunt of drop as Sky’s figures show increase
> Combined figures follow same trajectory as between 2011 and 2012
> BBC “very pleased with how the season is going”
> Does online growth muddy the water?

Before going into detail, it is best re-iterating what exactly the numbers are. All terrestrial television numbers are programme averages. Sky Sports F1’s numbers for 2014 are for their race show from 12:00 to 15:30 (or equivalent), and I have used the equivalent timeslots for their 2012 and 2013 shows where possible in order to give the fairest comparison. BBC’s programme average number will either be for the live airing or highlights airing irrespective of channel for European or the American-based races; for Asian-based races, the re-run is included where applicable. All comparisons are for the first half of the respective seasons only, in the event of an odd-rounded season, the number is rounded up (i.e. in a 19 race season, the halfway stage is after round ten). The viewing figures are for TV viewing only, hence, they exclude BBC iPlayer and Sky Go.

The 2014 story
Starting off with Sky Sports F1, their race day programme has averaged 746k across three and a half hours from 12:00 to 15:30, or equivalent. The number is up 3.0 percent on 2013’s mid-season number of 724k. It is, however, down on the first half of 2012, which across the respective three and a half hour slots averaged 779k. The main reason for the drop is because, in 2012, Sky Sports offered their channels across the German Grand Prix weekend as free, something that has not happened since. Removing this would bring their 2012 average into line with the 2014 number.

Any increase is good, but it needs to be remembered that we are talking tens of thousands rather than hundreds of thousands where Sky are concerned. Is that a good thing? Well, not really. It definitely does not help Formula 1, that’s for sure. A 3 percent increase for Sky is a meagre 22k. In the grand scheme of things, that is not a lot, when you consider that an average of over 4 million viewers watch Formula 1 in a typical season. Sky may argue that they are bringing in new viewers. I’d argue that they’re not bringing enough new viewers. Unless Sky market F1 as a completely separate channel, with a separate price structure instead of bundling it in with the Sky Sports pack, for those not interested in football, cricket and the like, that will not change.

Over on the BBC, their figures have dropped. Average audiences for Formula 1, in comparison to the first half of 2013 have dropped by 18 percent, and are now back in line to what they were in 2012. An average of 3.12m tuned in to the first ten races on the BBC, compared to 3.81m in 2013 and 3.16m in 2012. Even removing last year’s inflated German Grand Prix highlights programme, 2014 is down half a million currently on 2013. The figures do not look good, and as a Formula 1 fan, seeing declining figures is not a good sign, at all. The problem for BBC this year is that the scheduling has not been favourable. Let’s look at the races which have been shown on BBC Two so far this year.

– Bahrain > highlights – clash with Grand National and The Boat Race
– Austria > highlights – would have meant not picking Canada, so Austria lesser of two evils
– Britain > live – clash with Wimbledon final
– Germany > highlights – clash with final round of The Open Golf

As I mentioned in my British Grand Prix scheduling piece, some of the scheduling this year has been terrible by FOM and the FIA. The BBC say that the amount of people who have watched 15 consecutive minutes of Formula 1 in 2014 (the reach figure) has dropped 4.3 percent.

Reach vs Average
The combined average at the halfway stage of the year is 3.87m, the lowest since 2008. It is down on 4.53m last year, marginally down on 3.94m from 2012 and considerably below any average recorded between 2009 and 2011. In 2011, when Formula 1 was exclusively on the BBC, race programmes used to average 4.6m and peak in excess of six million viewers, which was fantastic to see. It’s worth noting that the programme lengths were just as long, if not longer then compared with what BBC offer now for live races, I remember a British Grand Prix programme back then lasting until 15:40 before another hour on the forum! The sizeable six million peaks does not happen as much nowadays. The drop between 2011 and 2012 was 16 percent, compared with 15 percent between 2013 and 2014 at the halfway stage, so a very similar drop.

A drop of only 4.3 percent for the reach (BBC only) versus a more extreme percentage drop in average is of potential interest, when also looking at the similar drop mentioned above. Because some race highlights are scheduled on BBC Two, therefore to a lower audience, it means that the overall audiences are lower, hence a bigger drop in average audience. However, those people are still tuning in to the live races on BBC One, for example Canada which was level year-on-year, which is why the reach figure has not dropped as much in comparison. Whilst I can understand why this deal started in the first place, I really do not like seeing programming moved to BBC Two. All it does is hurt Formula 1 in the long run. If the alternative was really pay-TV only, then maybe this was the best option.

Online and final thoughts
As always, BBC iPlayer, Sky Go and the such like are not included in the figures. Whilst they will make some difference to the overall totals, I do not believe that they will change the overall year-on-year trend, although it may well bring 2014 above 2012. I think it should be pointed out though that people tend to watch live sport via television. When you remove that ‘live’ element, you either choose to seek out highlights elsewhere, or just don’t watch at all. This isn’t Sherlock or Doctor Who, where people will watch at their own leisure. Live sport is not consumed like that. Sport has a second screen experience by all means, but it’s first port of call is the television. Live sport is what draws people together. Moving Formula 1, partially, behind a pay wall does not achieve that (irrespective of who did what, why, when etc), which of course brings us around to the ‘next generation’ argument again.

I find this year’s figures actually worser than 2012, because we have a British driver in the title race. Viewing figures should be higher. Logically, viewing figures should start to improve year-on-year if Hamilton remains in the title race. I think some of the figures already this year have been alarming, but we should see some improvements soon, especially when you consider that 2013 fell off a cliff in the latter stages. Also, at a time like this, with Hamilton in contention, you cannot in any way, shape or form gain momentum ratings wise when you are chopping and changing between live, highlights, BBC One and BBC Two. If every race in 2014 was live on BBC One, you could pretty much guarantee that ratings would build to a crescendo towards the end of the season. The current rights structure, in my opinion, does not allow for that. But, given the BBC’s current predicament, is the current rights deal better than having every race live and free on ITV? I’d argue it is, but from a Formula 1 marketing perspective, there is not much in it compared to three years ago.

A BBC spokesperson said: “The BBC has seen great audiences for F1 this year, with the highest peak for live being 5.2m for Canada with a 4.6m average, and the highest for highlights being 4m for Monaco with a 3.3m average. We’re very pleased with how the season is going, especially with such a busy sporting year. Overall reach is slightly down at this point compared to 2013 (down 4.3%) which is a very small margin and it is completely expected for there to be fluctuations in audiences through the year – some races are up, some are down which we see every season as the story unfolds. Fluctuations are also expected around other major events such as the World Cup and Commonwealth Games. Note that the BBC shows a different arrangement of live and highlights each year so figures are not directly comparable – the only comparable figure is the end of year reach.”

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Sky F1 moving EPG slots in Sky Sports reshuffle

Sky Sports F1 is moving EPG slots on the Sky platform in what is a major reshuffle for the portfolio of channels.

The move, which will happen on August 12th, will see:

– 401 = Sky Sports News HQ (was 405)
– 402 = Sky Sports 1 (was 401)
– 403 = Sky Sports 2 (was 402)
– 404 = Sky Sports 3 (was 403)
– 405 = Sky Sports 4 (was 404)
– 406 = Sky Sports 5 (new)
– 407 = Sky Sports F1 (was 406)

This seems like a lot of unnecessary changing for one new channel, if I’m going to be honest. F1’s viewing figures may be slightly affected, but I don’t anticipate any major knock in effects.

No word if Virgin Media will be following suite with a reshuffle (update – turns out it moved on Virgin last week). It means that this weekend’s Hungarian Grand Prix will be its last in the current EPG slot.

German Grand Prix performs solidly

The German Grand Prix viewing figures in the UK were higher than those recorded for 2012, unofficial overnight figures show.

Race
Live coverage of the race, from 12:00 to 15:30 on Sky Sports F1, averaged 820k (9.2%). Whilst the share is up year-on-year, the raw number is down on 2013, which averaged 882k (8.8%) for the equivalent timeslot. Perhaps unsurprisingly, it is also down on the 1.12m (11.6%) number from 2012. On that occasion, Sky offered its portfolio of channels as free for the entire weekend. As always, all the numbers exclude those who watched online or at pubs and clubs.

BBC Two’s highlights show from 19:00 averaged 2.92m (14.9%), peaking with 3.57m (17.1%) at 20:05. Given that the 2013 race highlights programme followed on directly from Andy Murray’s Wimbledon victory on BBC One, comparisons are really invalid, but for completeness purposes, that averaged 5.15m (31.2%). Yesterday’s rating however is up on 2012, which averaged 2.13m, also on BBC Two.

Given the above, it is no surprise that the combined 2014 average for the race sits at 3.74m, much lower than the inflated 2013 number of 6.03m. It is higher than the 2012 average of 3.25m. If you want to compare yesterday to the averages between 2009 and 2011, then the number is down between 360k and 560k. 2011, the last year that Formula 1 was exclusively on the BBC, averaged 4.30m (40.4%) for the German round.

Qualifying
Live coverage of qualifying on Sky Sports F1 from 12:00 to 14:35 averaged 416k (4.5%). Some of you will correctly point out that the programme went slightly longer than billed due to the red-flag period. The programme average therefore is probably in the region of 380k to 400k, however, it does not make a substantial difference in the grand scheme of things. BBC One’s highlights programme averaged 2.34m (17.8%) at 17:25. The combined figure, in the region of 2.7m is slightly down on last year, but in-line with the figures recorded between 2009 and 2011.

For a highlights round, with coverage of the race on BBC Two, it’s a better rating than what I was expecting in the context of the season’s ratings so far. Later this week, or next, I’ll be publishing a halfway review of the season’s numbers so far, and examine how well, or not, F1 is performing in comparison to previous years.

The 2013 German Grand Prix ratings report can be found here.

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