October 21, 2021
WARC analysis of advertising spending forecasts for 100 markets worldwide, and the results of a survey by GWI of more than 715,000 consumers, show that advertiser spend on TV and social media is highly inflated in relation to daily consumption.
These findings are by WARC, the international marketing intelligence service, as part of its new WARC Data Premium suite.
The analysis finds that, as of the first quarter of 2021, social media now attracts more investment from advertisers than linear TV for the first time, however both media draw far more of advertising budgets than the average consumer spends with these channels each day.
Social media, for example, is forecast to account for 39.1 per cent of 2022 adspend among the eight media studied in the report – linear TV, online video, social media, print press, online press, podcasts, broadcast radio and online audio – but has a 21.4 per cent share of daily media consumption, a discrepancy of 17.7 percentage points (pp) equivalent in value to $94.3 billion.
Socially devoted
Social media has accounted for over two hours of daily media consumption since Q2 2016, per GWI monitoring, and WARC Data Premium’s latest forecasts expect daily social time to reach 2:30 during the second half of next year.
Notably, all demographics measured in the report are set to spend twice as long with social media as they are with online press next year, despite ongoing trust issues – less than one-half of adults say advertising on social media is ‘somewhat’ or ‘very’ trustworthy, falling to 28 per cent in China, 19 per cent in the US and just 10 per cent in the UK.
Despite this, the largest gaps between social consumption and adspend can be found in China (where advertiser spend is 3.3x consumption), the UK (2.2x) and the US (2.0x). Conversely, in Australia (0.9x), India (0.4x) and Russia (0.5x), social’s share of daily media consumption is higher than its share of advertising budgets – a potential indicator of opportunity for brands.
Linear TV adspend is 2x daily consumption, but online video investment is balanced
Linear TV is forecast to account for a 31.5 per cent share of advertising spend next year among the eight media studied, compared to a 16.1 per cent share of daily media consumption. This would equate to an investment gap of $86.9 billion worldwide next year.
An overspend in relation to consumption does not translate directly into waste, and proportions vary by size of budget. Successful high-budget campaigns spending over $10m, for example, typically allocate 60 per cent of their budgets to TV, while successful alcoholic drinks campaigns typically allocate 44 per cent.
While linear TV spend is inflated in relation to its consumption, online video is now close to parity after years of underinvestment. It is worth noting that the world’s largest online video platform – Netflix – is predominantly ad free, while platforms such as YouTube are prone to ad blocking on desktop and mobile devices.
Still, advertisers are forecast to spend $71.9 billion on online video this year, a 13.6 per cent share of the eight studies media which compares to a 12.9 per cent of media consumption, or one hour 37 minutes.
Audio and online press heavily undervalued
Data show that audio media appear highly undervalued – a trend that was recently highlighted by WARC in the US.
Perhaps most notably, podcasts are found to be undervalued by $40 billion, with the greatest opportunities for advertisers among audiences aged 16–24, middle earners, and those educated until the age of 16.
One in three internet users now listens to a podcast each month, but a cost per thousand (CPM) of $23.55 is higher than even TV. Spotify has quickly gained ground on Apple to become the largest app for podcast streaming as of March this year.
Online press also appears to be another heavy undervalued medium: advertisers would need to spend $58 billion on online press ads globally next year to achieve parity with consumption levels. Instead, forecast spend is just $12.8 billion.
Business models in the publishing sector have been diversifying to counter the shortfall in advertising revenue; 76 per cent of publishers are prioritising subscriptions this year.
James McDonald, Managing Editor, WARC Data, and author of the report, said: “The study shines a light on divergences between media investment and consumption, two metrics which are rarely seen to be in lockstep with one another. In some cases, particularly for undervalued audio formats such as podcasts, this presents a good opportunity for canny practitioners to reach audiences with comparatively little competition. For industry stalwarts like linear TV, the seemingly inflated investment gap actually speaks more to the enduring power of the medium – its vast reach combined with attentive audiences and the heightened impact of audiovisual creative. These traits allow it to command a premium in the media mix, one which is likely to sustain even as social media further grows its share of budgets.”
Latest Market Intel on WARC Data Premium
Americas
- 53 per cent of US advertisers expect to spend more on OTT/CTV
- US podcast adspend up 24 per cent as more advertisers join
- Over 40 per cent of Americans say they’re not fully represented in advertising
Asia Pacific
- TikTok growing rapidly in Japan and South Korea, but YouTube still leads
- Commerce and video streaming are most important trends for APAC marketers
- 44 per cent of Southeast Asian consumers play video games while watching TV
Europe, Middle East and Africa
- Gen Z consumers are twice as likely to buy from a brand with a sonic identity
- Direct mail campaigns more likely to successfully use personalisation
- Consumers in Poland, Spain and the UK most likely to always accept websi
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October 21, 2021 at 06:59PM
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