NewsMay 26, 2010 |
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KANTAR MEDIA REPORTS U.S. ADVERTISING EXPENDITURES New York, NY, May 26, 2010 – Total advertising expenditures in the first quarter of 2010 rose 5.1 percent from a year ago and finished the period at $31.3 billion, according to data released today by Kantar Media, the leading provider of strategic advertising and marketing information. This marks the first increase in quarterly ad spending since Q1 2008 and the largest gain since Q1 2006, as the ad market finally experienced a long-awaited rebound. “With the economy turning from recession towards growth, marketers appear to be more confident about a pickup in consumer activity and have increased ad budgets to support their brands,” said Jon Swallen, SVP Research at Kantar Media. “While the rising tide has thus far benefitted some media sectors more than others, Q1 spending hikes were broadly distributed across advertisers and categories and that’s an encouraging signal for the market going forward.” Measured Ad Spending By Media Other television media types also performed strongly. Network TV expenditures received a boost from the Winter Olympics and finished the period up 11.6 percent. Cable TV (+8.2 percent) and Spanish Language TV (+7.2 percent) each benefitted from selling more ad time and strengthened demand among across a broad range of package goods and retail advertisers. After a three year slump, radio ad expenditures finally had a turnaround. National Spot Radio advanced 19.0 percent and was paced by higher spending from the telecom, financial service and auto categories. Local Radio (+4.6 percent) and Network Radio (+3.0 percent) were also up. Print media, on the whole, continued to lag the overall ad market. Consumer Magazine spending fell 3.9 percent from a year ago while Local Newspapers dropped 5.6 percent. There was improvement in some narrow segments as Sunday Magazine expenditures jumped 13.7 percent and National Newspapers increased 9.1 percent, primarily from gains at the Wall Street Journal. Percent Change in Measured Ad Spending1 |
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Source: Kantar Media Measured Ad Spending by Advertiser Procter & Gamble kept its position as the largest advertiser with $772.6 million in spending, an increase of 17.7 percent versus a year ago. The company continued to shift budgets towards magazines and away from television. AT&T rose to the second spot with spending of $576.4 million, up 26.7 percent, behind a large television ad buy in the Winter Olympics. Rival Verizon Communications reduced its total expenditures by 9.1 percent, to $517.2 million. Both telecom companies continued to allocate more resources to promote their TV service products as they try to win subscribers from cable and satellite operators. Pfizer posted the highest growth rate with expenditures up 46.2 percent to $396.4 million as the company maintained aggressive marketing support for Lipitor prior to the brand going off patent in 2011. With auto industry sales picking up, General Motors accelerated its spending by 28.5 percent to $533.7 million and accounted for more than one-fourth of all ad dollars spent by auto manufacturers. Top Ten Advertisers Of Q1 20101 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: Kantar Media Measured Ad Spending by Category Automotive was the leading category by dollar volume and also had the highest growth rate among the Top Ten as spending soared 18.6 percent to $3,016.8 million, ending a streak of 18 consecutive quarterly declines. Manufacturers and dealerships reacted quickly to an improving sales environment by ramping up marketing efforts with TV, magazines and radio being the main beneficiaries. Telecom was the second largest category as expenditures reached $2,276.5 million, an increase of 10.6 percent. Financial Services also experienced a revival with outlays up 10.1 percent to $2,028.7 million. Sharply higher spending from marketers of credit cards and loan products offset continued weakness within the consumer banking segment. Packaged goods categories, where advertisers took advantage of soft ad pricing in 2009 to bolster their media weight, were undaunted by rising ad prices in the first quarter of 2010. Spending from Food & Candy was up 7.3 percent to $1,600.0 million and expenditures for Personal Care Products increased by 5.5 percent to $1,311.5 million. Restaurant category spending also turned around with modest growth of 3.1 percent, to $1.454.5 million. A major contributor to the gain was McDonald’s television sponsorship of the Winter Olympics. Top Ten Advertising Categories Of Q1 20101 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: Kantar Media Branded Entertainment In the first quarter of 2010, an average hour of monitored prime time network programming contained ten minutes, fifty five seconds (10:55) of in-show Brand Appearances and 14:20 of network commercial messages. The combined total of 25:15 of marketing content represents 42 percent of a prime-time hour. Unscripted reality programming had an average of 19:42 per hour of Brand Appearances as compared to just 6:59 per hour for scripted programs such as sitcoms and dramas. Late night network talk shows had an average of 11:58 per hour. The combined load of Brand Appearances and network ad messages in these late night shows was 28:21 per hour, or 47 percent of total content time. Brand Appearances vs. Advertising: Q1 2010 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: Kantar Media The top five brands ranked by total amount of Brand Appearance time were Coca-Cola, Asics, 24 Hour Fitness Center, Brita Water Purifiers and Yamaha Music Equipment. About Kantar Media | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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