U.S. advertising expenditures dropped in the first quarter, as
budgets declined among eight of the ten biggest-spending industries,
according to a new report from advertising tracker Kantar Media.
Total U.S. ad spending fell 4% in the first quarter versus last year
to $37.4 billion. Excluding the impact of special advertising events
like 2014′s Sochi Olympics, spending was down 2%, Kantar Media said.
The report comes as many big companies reevaluate their advertising spending and agency structure in
an effort to cut costs and navigate the complexities of the digital ad
market. Spending by the top 10 ad-spending companies dropped 10.6% in
the first quarter, according to Kantar Media. Marketers like Procter
& Gamble Co., General Motors Corp. and AT&T Inc. were among
those that cut back, though many big brands did spend on TV ads for the
Olympics in 2014, which exacerbated the declines.
The report tracks spending in traditional media like television,
newspapers and magazines. While the report includes digital display and
search ads, it omits digital video and mobile ad formats, which are
increasingly important categories for advertisers.
According to Kantar Media, spending on cable networks grew 4.1%,
largely due to the fact that networks are packing in more ad time into
their programming to make up for ratings declines. In some cases,
networks have even sped up shows
or reduced the amount of time they spend promoting their own programs.
Excluding the Olympics, spending on broadcast television was flat.
Spending on newspapers fell 15.4% while magazines fell 8.7%.
No comments:
Post a Comment