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'TV is the new online': Why a bunch of online media empires suddenly want to get on the box
Vice HBO
Vice HBO

(Jemal Countess/Getty Images)
HBO president of programming Michael Lombardo, host and executive producer Shane Smith, HBO Co-President Richard Pepler and executive producer Eddy Moretti attend the 'Vice' New York Premiere at Time Warner Center on April 2, 2013 in New York City.

Not settled with amassing huge audiences of tens of millions of online users, digital media companies are now trying their hand at TV.

From NBCUniversal pumping $200 million into BuzzFeed in August to help it break into movies and TV, Vice launching the international cable TV channel Viceland in February, to Mashable completely pivoting its business to focus on video and TV after receiving a $15 million funding round led by Turner Broadcasting, the newest giants in media are now trying to compete in one of the oldest broadcast mediums.

They already did compete with TV, of course, for eyeballs. In their pitches, digital media companies have done a good job in convincing many advertisers and investors that people, particularly young people, are migrating away from TV – preferring instead snackable, unscheduled content that they can consume for free on their mobiles.

BuzzFeed was noted in 2014 for touting that its reach was larger than huge TV networks like Fox like CNN, Fox News, and Comedy Central. This is still the point YouTube makes to advertisers about the size of its audience compared to TV.

So why are the digital whizzkids suddenly so bullish on the box?

TV is still where the money is

While linear (TV watched as it is scheduled) TV ratings have broadly declined, TV ad spend continues to grow. Carat, a media buying agency, predicts global TV ad spend will increase 3.1% this year and 2.9% in 2017. Marketers still spend more on TV than any other medium. And even though "digital" ad spend is predicted by eMarketer to overtake TV ad spend next year — much of the money spent on "digital" is associated with content from TV networks (especially on their video-on-demand players.)

Part of the reason that traditional TV revenue has continued to grow is that as ratings fell, TV networks — particularly those in the US — began stuffing more and more ads into every hour of broadcast. But part of the reason is that ad buyers are most comfortable with buying TV.

In a note entitled "TV is the new online," Liberum Capital head of European media research, Ian Whittaker, said that the recent moves from BuzzFeed and Vice towards TV "shows even the newly-launched online platforms that have been part of every single future of media conference in the last two years actually [have started] looking at more traditional media and more specifically TV, which is the media channel with the highest ROI [return on investment.]"