Comedy Central International’s Claire McArdle on moving TV content to platforms

Subscribe: iTunes | Stitcher | RSS | Anchor

Claire McArdle, vp of multi-platform at Comedy Central International, discussed the company’s strategy for moving linear content to platforms at the Digiday Video Summit earlier this month in Amsterdam.

“Our audience is watching things on linear, but they are on platforms,” said McArdle. “As a brand, we need to be talking to those audiences, providing content and being relevant on the platforms they are on. We make content that is specifically for the platform on which it sits. We don’t repurpose it. We make a version for the platform. Our mantra is: what the audience wants and what the platform rewards for that in terms of behavior.”

Edited highlights from the session appear below:

Don’t go to a platform without an audience
“It’s always a concern how platforms can move out of favor with audiences, or an algorithm changes, and suddenly, you’re not in the same place. We monitor that closely. We respond; we move quickly. We factor that in when we commission content. We have a good spread of platforms we’re on. You don’t have the capacity to serve on every platform. If you can’t capture the right audience, then there is no point of being there.”

Going global
“The majority of the content is being produced in the U.K., but series are being produced out of Australia, the Middle East, the local team. We have learned that we can take content from other territories and languages, and subtitle it. It’s starting to be consumed by English-language markets. It’s exciting given the amount of content we make in our territories like [the Latin American] market.”

Moving production in-house
“We moved everything [production] in-house in the last eight to nine months, largely because it’s difficult to get external producers to bear in mind the international aspect of it. We don’t have huge budgets, and we need to make sure everything goes on screen. We expand and contract internally. This means we can move more quickly.”

https://digiday.com/?p=293507

More in Future of TV

Future of TV Briefing: Media Rating Council identifies ‘the problem of our time’ for measurement

This week’s Future of TV Briefing looks at how the industry’s measurement arbiter is looking at ensuring measurement systems are able to reliably identify audiences across channels in a privacy-compliant manner.

Future of TV Briefing: Making sense of the TV industry’s latest measurement moves

This week’s Future of TV Briefing looks at the recent developments in the TV measurement market on the eve of this year’s upfront negotiations.

Future of TV Briefing: How Axios Entertainment is looking to expand its original programming business

This week’s Future of TV Briefing looks at how Axios’s entertainment division has its eyes on moving physical production in-house and getting into scripted programming.