Is Lunchtime the new Primetime? Maybe for some content.

Next New Networks published some interesting data last week about viewership to their family of online video channels, which include Indy Mogul, Barely Digital (home of Obama Girl) and new addition Hungry Nation. The study, conducted with the help of web video measurement firm Visible Measures, showed that the peak period for video viewership was the six hours between 12pm ET to 3pm PT, when many North Americans are presumably looking for a short distraction from work.

[caption id=”attachment_32” align=”alignnone” width=”481” caption=”Source: Visible Measures via Silicon Alley Insider”]Source: Visible Measures via Silicon Alley Insider[/caption]

This trend is hardly surprising given the type of content that Next New Networks specializes in…. short-form entertainment videos. I recall from my time at Channel 4 that short-form videos were popular during the day and long-form videos were popular during the evening (and I bet if you looked at data for Hulu you’d see a similar trend).

By contrast, the general trend for most online news sites is still a morning peak (for instance, DailyMe.com has a readership peak most days between 7am ET and 10am PT). However, I suspect this general trend masks differences between different types of content on online news sites, some of which may provide a similar lunchtime ‘outlet’ to the Next New Networks videos. Newstogram, our soon-to-launch analytics / intelligence platform, will provide an easy way for online news sites to drill down and find the popularity of different categories, topics, people etc. throughout the day in order to identify the types of content where Lunchtime is the new Primetime.