-
Arbitron To Accelerate Cell Phone Only Target Increase
December 21, 2009 at 4:21 AM (PT)
What do you think? Add your comment below. -
ARBITRON has announced plans to accelerate a scheduled increase in its diary market cell-phone-only household sample target. Updating its AUGUST 13th announcement, ARBITRON now plans to raise the proportion of its diary sample coming from CPO households to an average of 15% across all of its diary markets in the continental U.S., HAWAII and ALASKA by SPRING 2010.
When implemented, the planned increase in cell-phone-only household sampling will represent an increase of 50% from the year-end 2009 sample target, which is equal to an average of 10%. Previously, ARBITRON had announced that this increase was scheduled for completion by year-end 2010.
Effective with the current FALL 2009 survey, ARBITRON implemented CPO sampling in all of its 268 diary markets, completing the rollout of CPO sampling to all ARBITRON-rated radio markets in the 50 UNITED STATES, including diary- and PPM-based ratings services.
ARBITRON began CPO sampling in 151 diary markets during the SPRING 2009 survey where CPO sampling yielded a 25% gain in the Designated Delivery Index (DDI) sample quality metric for Persons aged 18-34. CPO sampling helped maintain the sample quality momentum in Summer 2009 diary markets where DDI improved by 11 points over the SUMMER 2008 survey for Persons aged 18-34 in markets with CPO sampling."ARBITRON is committed to reflecting the increasing trend of CPO households across the U.S., which is why we’ve moved up the date to increase the number of these households in our samples, said CMO/EVP ALTON ADAMS. "Our continuous improvement program means that we are always raising the bar to enhance the quality of our services. The company completed the roll-out of cell-phone-only sampling in all 50 states in FALL 2009, and we are delivering improved sample performance in those markets. We are very proud of this milestone and are looking forward to achieving the quality improvement initiatives ahead."