Pare por um momento e pense em como você consome mídia em seu dia normal. Você pode começar ouvindo rádio ou podcast durante o trajeto para o trabalho ou verificar alertas de notícias em um aplicativo móvel, percorrer feeds sociais, transmitir música enquanto trabalha, assistir ao seu programa favorito na TV à noite e talvez até mesmo olhar para vários outdoors enquanto dirige a caminho de casa. Sem perceber conscientemente, você provavelmente se envolve com a mídia dezenas de vezes em um único dia. Multiplique isso por bilhões e você começará a entender a diversidade absoluta e avassaladora de como as pessoas se envolvem com o conteúdo.
For brands and marketers, this daily reality presents a significant challenge—where is the audience, really? Audiences aren’t just consuming content in one familiar place anymore; their attention is splintered across countless platforms. For example, you might still tune into your favorite show when it airs on TV, you could also be streaming it on demand later, catching up on clips on social media, or discussing it in a dedicated online community. Accurately navigating this complex landscape demands a fundamental understanding of what media fragmentation is to create strategies that grab audiences’ attention no matter where they’re watching.
O que é fragmentação de mídia?
A fragmentação da mídia refere-se à proliferação de canais e plataformas de mídia. Isso fez com que o público ficasse cada vez mais dividido e disperso em uma vasta gama de veículos de nicho, em vez de concentrado em alguns poucos veículos dominantes. Há cerca de uma década, alguns poucos veículos dominantes, como as principais redes de TV ou jornais, atingiam públicos enormes. Hoje, a explosão de plataformas digitais, serviços de streaming, mídias sociais e criadores de conteúdo de nicho expandiu o conjunto total de opções de mídia que o público está acessando, criando uma variedade aparentemente ilimitada de opções.
A clear indicator of this shift can be seen in how vast the array of options consumers engage with. Consider Thailand, for example—while a substantial 87% of the population still tunes into traditional TV, this now exists alongside a massive digital ecosystem where 91% are online and 89% are actively engaging with social media. For audio, the options have clearly multiplied, with music streaming services now attracting 56% of listeners, while traditional radio accounts for a smaller 12%.1 Hence, marketers face the challenge of navigating a highly fragmented media environment where reaching and engaging target audiences across a multitude of channels requires increasingly sophisticated strategies and data-driven insights.

Making this even more challenging are some digital platforms and RMNs that can function as walled gardens. These platforms control their own content and user data, meaning much user engagement is locked within their sealed environments. It limits how marketers can access comprehensive data, understand cross-platform customer journeys, and unify their marketing efforts.
Given the explosion of content sources, it’s easy to assume that the splitting of media automatically means the audience is doing the same. This often leads to a common misconception—confusing the fragmentation of media platforms with the actual dispersion of consumer attention.
Isso é diferente da fragmentação do público?
Yes, it is, and understanding the distinction is important to effectively strategize how to reach and engage today’s diverse audiences. While media fragmentation refers to the supply-side proliferation of channels—the sheer, ever-increasing number of media outlets, platforms and content options available—audience fragmentation describes the demand-side behavior of audiences actively scattering their attention across these many options.
The widespread availability of options has led to scattered attention, a reality that is seen in markets around the world. Recent data from Nielsen’s The Gauge report published in May 2025 shows that traditional broadcast and cable programming collectively accounts for 44.2% of time spent with the television set in the U.S. That share is now nearly matched by streaming services, which capture 44.8% of viewing time. Such a shift in media consumption highlights how audience attention is no longer concentrated in a handful of predictable spaces—it now flows across a wide array of platforms, reflecting increasingly fragmented viewing habits.

Estratégias para navegar em mídias e públicos fragmentados
With so much media and audience fragmentation, you really need to change how you connect with audiences. The old days of “one-size-fits-all” campaigns, designed for a time when everyone watched the same few TV shows, just don’t work anymore. That broad approach is much less effective now that audiences are spread across countless apps, websites, and platforms. What’s needed is a much more precise and relevant approach.
Para alcançar o público em um ambiente de mídia fragmentado, é necessário priorizar essas estratégias principais:
- Understand your audience deeply: Reliance on a handful of go-to channels is no longer a sufficient strategy. Marketers now need to really dig into what makes their audience tick, like their interests, behaviors, and how they actually use different platforms. Such granular insights enable the creation of audience segments based on genuine engagement patterns and demonstrated preferences, moving beyond superficial categories.
- Integrate multi-channel approach: Brands can elevate their potential by strategically integrating a multi-channel approach. Marketers need to activate diverse touchpoints—like niche online communities, new streaming services, podcasts, and traditional media to ensure they’re present precisely where audiences are engaging.
- Personalize content at scale: The ability to use data and technology to deliver customized content to individuals has shifted from a competitive advantage to a fundamental requirement. Going beyond basic demographic targeting, leveraging past interactions, stated preferences, and real-time actions delivers messages that are inherently more relevant and less intrusive, thereby enhancing the user experience and boosting campaign efficacy.
- Optimize content for platform native experiences: Delivering messages that intrinsically align with each platform’s unique format and the user’s mindset within that environment is important for impact. A concise, visually compelling video ad might thrive on fast-paced social feeds due to its immediate nature, while more in-depth, informational content finds its audience on specialized blogs or within targeted email newsletters where longer engagement is expected. Authenticity to the platform drives receptivity and better results, leading to more effective marketing decisions.
Garantir a eficácia da estratégia com insights de várias plataformas
A atenção do público está dispersa em inúmeros pontos de contato, portanto, medir o envolvimento e a eficácia da campanha de forma holística torna-se extremamente importante. Confiar apenas nos números de plataformas individuais cria um quadro incompleto e isolado da jornada do público, impossibilitando a compreensão real do ROI ou o aprimoramento de estratégias futuras.
Nielsen ONE provides a deduplicated and unified view of how audiences engage across all media channels—digital, traditional linear TV, and new platforms. It empowers marketers to understand how different touchpoints contribute to plan, optimize, and evaluate their campaigns with unmatched clarity, taking out the guesswork and allowing for smarter decisions.
Observações:
1 Nielsen Consumer Media View 2024, Base All people age 12+
Nielsen’s Need to Know reviews the fundamentals of audience measurement and demystifies the media industry’s hottest topics. Read every article here.



