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Analyzing the Exceptional Demand Data for Dragon Ball Z: Insights for Content Executives

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Parrot Analytics Insights - September 2023

Parrot Analytics' demand data offers content executives insight into their audience's viewing habits, which can be used to make more informed content, distribution, acquisition and programming decisions. Their data-driven approach can help executives understand where viewership is highest, which genres are resonating with their audience, and what elements of existing content viewers like the most.

In analyzing the demand data for "Dragon Ball Z," executives can see that this TV series has exceptional audience demand in the United States, with 34.4 times the demand of the average show over the last 30 days. This information on "Dragon Ball Z" content valuation reveals the dollar value contribution of this title to any streaming platform in any region. The show ranks at the 99.7th percentile in the thriller genre and has higher demand than 99.7% of all thriller titles in the United States.

By examining the top ten global markets where "Dragon Ball Z" is most in-demand over the last 30 days, executives can learn where they may want to focus their attention and market activity for the show. The United States is the number one market globally for "Dragon Ball Z," and France and Canada have outstanding audience demand as well. The audience demand in other countries such as Mexico, United Kingdom, and Brazil is also outstanding.

Parrot Analytics' performance dimensions can help executives understand how well "Dragon Ball Z" is doing, with dimensions including its worldwide audience demand, travelability, longevity, momentum, franchisability, and reach. Longevity, in particular, measures how well audience demand is maintained over time, and for "Dragon Ball Z," this is exceptional.

Executives can break this data further to help them understand how audiences received the different seasons and episodes of the show. The series had 291 episodes over 16 seasons, with most seasoned viewing happening between 1996-1998 and even getting better between 2001 and 2002.

Ultimately, the demand data for "Dragon Ball Z" offers executives insights to help them make more informed content, distribution, acquisition, and programming decisions. Whether looking at regional-specific audience demand data, quantifying the platform-specific marginal revenue contribution, or assessing a TV series' ability to drive subscriptions and reduce churn, the demand data is a vital tool in the decision-making process.

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