WHAT IS THE ALDEN CURVE ?

What is the Alden Curve?  (Or, perhaps more to the point: Why?)

It's a pattern of content consumption. 

More specifically, it's the contrast between two different patterns of video content consumption: a contrast between how all of us used to consume video content in the fading world of scheduled "traditional media," and how more and more of us now enjoy video in the ever-growing, on-demand and interactive world.

It's a concept I started noodling around with a couple of months ago, and recently started showing to a few friends who work in various corners of the media industry.

(For the record: Andrew Heyward, the former president of CBS News, dubbed it, "The Alden Curve." And who am I to argue with Mr. Heyward?)

* * *

Below is the curve for TV News and Entertainment.

              (Click on the images to enlarge them.)

Warshaw_curve_1_6
Warshaw_curve_2_1

So, what's the significance of the Curve?

I'm still noodling with that — but almost all the folks I've showed it to agree that, unlike Gertrude Stein's opinion of the city of Oakland, there's at least some there, there.  Or, more to the point, in the words of Stephen Stills: "There's something happening here. What it is ain't exactly clear."

But the pattern is real, and I do think it tells us something about the direction in which content consumption is heading — and that has a good deal of significance for content producers, programmers and distributors.

(I'll posit some of the details in future posts.)


AN UPDATE TO THE CURVE

"Disruptive Selection."

In May of 2009, I peaked over the shoulder of my 15 year-old biology (and "House") obsessed daughter as she was studying evolution, and I saw the below images in a textbook she was reading:

EVOLUTION

(Click on the images to enlarge them.)

The curve on the bottom-right looks pretty familiar, doesn't it?

Makes sense that The Alden Curve, which is about the effect of disruptive technologies — like video on demand, YouTube, et al — would match up with what biologists refer to as the curve for "Disruptive Selection."

Hmmmmmmmm….