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[ecrea] Adapting to Social Media: Commerce, Creativity and Competition in UK Television Production
Fri Jun 08 11:07:20 GMT 2018
Colleagues may be interested to read the report ‘*Adapting to Social
Media: Commerce, Creativity and Competition in UK Television
Production*’ by James Bennett and Niki Strange (published May 2018).
Free to download at
www.adapttvhistory.org.uk/social-media-project/report2018
<http://www.adapttvhistory.org.uk/social-media-project/report2018>
The report explores the impact social media is having on UK Television
production and distribution. Whilst there has been significant concern
with how social media is changing audience habits, this research focuses
on the role it is increasingly playing as a production technology within
the TV industry.
Based on 57 one to one interviews with industry figures, along with 2
surveys of trade body Pact members in 2016 and 2017 and ethnographic
observations of digital teams on /The Voice,/ /X Factor/ and /Sunday
Brunch, /the report sets out how financial, organisational and business
imperatives intersect with the sector’s production cultures, working
practices and skills base to make social media a major concern for the
industry’s future. 44% of our 2017 Pact member survey respondents regard
social media as the most significant strategic, technical and creative
innovation challenge for television producers, ahead of virtual (26%)
and augmented reality (12%).
There are already a range of companies innovating in this space,
creating both compelling experiences and viable business models. At the
micro level, new job roles and expertise – such as the ‘Preditor’ and
the Social Media Manager – have emerged that are making particular skill
sets a valuable commodity in the sector’s economy.
But it is also clear that the industry needs to move rapidly as new
players are ready to step in and exploit the social television market.
Broadcasters find themselves competing with social platform operators
who are increasingly acting like channels, adapting to learn the lessons
of television’s past to secure their future.
Television production companies find they must now compete or
collaborate with digital agencies able to reach audiences ‘where they
live’ on social platforms and in formats that speak to different viewing
and consuming sensibilities. We provide new insights into the way
television is produced that will illuminate both current industry
practice and scholarship to understand the challenges and barriers for
those seeking to address the social television opportunity gap.
To download this report
<http://www.adapttvhistory.org.uk/social-media-project/report2018>, and
read more about both the Social Media project, and the broader 5 year
ERC-funded ADAPT research project, led by Prof. John Ellis, of which
this was a part, please visit www.adapttvhistory.org.uk
<http://www.adapttvhistory.org.uk>
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