The Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) India has implemented a significant shift in television audience measurement. From June 26, BARC has discontinued its four-week rolling average system and begun releasing unrolled weekly viewership estimates across all genres. The move is aimed at offering a more immediate and transparent view of audience behaviour and will bring television ratings in line with digital-era expectations of real-time insights.
New data not comparable to old
In a note to subscribers, BARC advised that the new weekly unrolled figures should not be compared with historical rolling average data, as the two follow fundamentally different methodologies.
It also clarified that historical unrolled data will not be back-calculated for periods when only the rolling average was in use — meaning channels or genres without previous weekly tracking will not see retroactive figures under the new model.
Impact on advertisers and planners
The shift is widely expected to have a substantial impact on the media and entertainment (M\&E) industry, both in how television content is evaluated and how advertising decisions are made. For advertisers and media agencies, the availability of faster, week-on-week viewership data enables agile media planning and campaign optimization.
Like in digital advertising, where real-time metrics drive performance-based planning, this transition allows brands to respond swiftly to shifting audience preferences and time-slot dynamics.
Faster programming insights for broadcasters
Broadcasters will also benefit from the move, gaining quicker feedback on the performance of newly launched shows, revised programming strategies, or promotional efforts. Scheduling decisions can now be made with greater confidence and responsiveness, especially for genres with high volatility.
Boost for niche and regional content
The shift to weekly unrolled data also levels the playing field for smaller or niche content creators. Previously, rolling averages often masked sudden surges in viewership that certain genres or events generated—especially those with limited run times or erratic viewing patterns. With unrolled data, such spikes become immediately visible, offering more accurate recognition and monetization opportunities.
Toward a more agile TV economy
Industry analysts believe the shift could drive greater accountability and innovation across television programming and ad planning. By enabling near real-time performance tracking, BARC’s weekly unrolled ratings may also spark a recalibration in how media spends are allocated, favoring those who can consistently deliver spikes or sustain niche loyalty.
In the confusion of fragmented viewing, content oversupply, and multiplatform competition, BARC India’s move to weekly unrolled reporting should help TV measurement get closer in spirit and responsiveness to digital media norms.


