Recently in Market Facts Category
RESEARCH BRIEF
FROM THE CENTER FOR MEDIA RESEARCH
Thursday, December 18, 2008
According to a recent Bloomberg report by Tim Mullaney, the deepening
Zenith said that ad spending will slip 0.2 percent to $490.5 billion in 2009, led by a 6.2 percent drop in the
The
Bruce Goerlich, head of
"The biggest hit in TV is the spot market," Goerlich said, referring to ads sold shortly before airing, and not during the annual up-front market. "What saved spot this year was the election... "
Robert Coen of Interpublic's Magna unit said he expected a 0.3 percent drop in global ad spending next year, including a 4.5 percent decline in the
The WPP Group M unit forecast a 0.2 percent global decline, including a 3.2 percent drop in the
And according to a recent forecast from Borrell Associates, overall 2009 spending on traditional, offline media will decline 1.4%, and spending on interactive will increase 7.2% but says that these figures do not tell the whole story.
A slow-to-no growth forecast in the
The spending levels by local advertisers, which grew at a 47% rate this year, are expected to slow to 8% in 2009
|
Local Interactive Ad Spending | |
|
Year |
Local Ad Spend (Billion $) |
|
2007 |
$8.7 |
|
2008 |
12.9 |
|
2009 Fcst. |
13.9 |
|
Source: Borrell Associates, 3Q, December 2008 | |
Future dollars are likely to be spent on other forms of interactive advertising, such as email, paid search and streaming video - which is expected to see the biggest spending growth, according to Borrell.
Finally, eMarketer has revised its projections for
eMarketer senior analyst Debra Aho Williamson, said "Marketers should not write off social networks completely... with a relatively small investment, companies can use social networks to cultivate relationships with customers who have... already expressed interest in their brand or product."
|
| ||
|
Year |
Ad Spend $ |
Percent Change |
|
2008 |
$1,175 |
33.8% |
|
2009 |
1,295 |
10.2 |
|
2010 |
1,335 |
3.1 |
|
2011 |
1,420 |
6.3 |
|
2012 |
1,515 |
6.7 |
|
2013 |
1,640 |
8.3 |
|
Source: eMarketer, December 2008 | ||
In addition, slower-than-expected revenue growth at MySpace is one of the reasons for the lowered forecast.
|
US Online Social Network Advertising Spending, by Venue (million $ and % of total) | ||||
|
Venue |
2008 |
2008 % of Total |
2009 |
2009 % of Total |
|
MySpace |
$585 |
50.0% |
$630 |
48.7 |
|
Facebook |
210 |
18.0 |
2230 |
17.7 |
|
Other destination social networks |
340 |
29.0 |
365 |
28.2 |
|
Widgets and applications |
40 |
3.0 |
70 |
5.4 |
|
Total |
$1,175 |
100 |
$1,295 |
100 |
|
Source: eMarketer, December 2008 | ||||
Although the outlook for ad spending is challenging, there are still many benefits to using social networks and they remain a viable marketing venue. Monitoring social network discussions about a brand or product and interacting with consumers in a community are still valuable-and probably essential-activities.
For the Borrell report executive summary, please visit here. To read the Bloomberg report, please visit here.
To review the eMarketer article, please visit here.
For more information visit www.mediapost.com


