We have a formula for the assessment of public value, which we know as RQIV. Those initials stand for reach, quality, impact, and value for money.
We tend to assess the success of our services not by share but by reach. It is on how many people are attracted to the content, not on how we have done against our competitors.
Quality is also a very important component. A program that wins awards for its quality is regarded as having high public value even if its reach was not perhaps as high as we might have hoped.
Impact, again, is an important factor in the equation. How much did the audience like what they got? We have, for example, a radio network, Radio 3, which broadcasts only classical, some jazz, and world music. Its audience share is very small, but we know it is extremely valued by that audience, so its impact and quality are high.
Value for money comes in as well. Obviously your ideal program is one of exceptional quality that secures high reach, is very much appreciated by its audience, and, better still, was cheap to make. You don't always get all four. Value for money is not simply a basic formula of cost-per-viewer hour. I think we assess that against the other three factors. Did we get good reach? Did we get good quality? Was there real audience appreciation for what we did? We assess value for money on that basis.
The share is not something that is a primary consideration for us. Yes, it matters, of course. If people are watching our competitors far more than they watch us, then in time that starts to raise questions about value for money, doesn't it? It is reach rather than share on which we concentrate.