Online Ad Spend To Gain 17.5% In 2011

Streaming video advertising will see continued big growth -- increasing more than 60% to $5.6 billion next year.

The Williamsburg, Va.- based media researcher, Borrell Associates, says one of the keys to this continuing strong growth is less-expensive video tools, which can be used by small advertisers. It says two of every five video ad dollars will come from local advertisers next year, according to one report. Overall, online advertising will continue to outpace the U.S. ad market as a whole. Borrell says local online ad spending will gain 14% in 2011, to $51.9 billion from $45.6 billion this year. Targeted display advertising is expected to see a 60% increase to $10.9 billion overall. U.S. advertising spending will inch up less than 5% in 2011 to $238.6 billion. Just looking at local online spending, Borrell projects a gain in 2011 of 17.5%, to $16.1 billion from $13.7 billion in 2010. It says run-of-site display spending will decline nearly 14% to $8.2 billion next year for both local and national. Local run-of-site ads are estimated to decrease only 3% next year. National paid-search spending will sink 11% -- due to lower pricing and churn. On the other hand, local advertisers will increase paid-search revenues by 10%. Email ad revenues will grow 9% to $16.0 billion for national and local advertisers. National email marketers are contributing a major part of this growth. Online couponing will contribute strongly to online promotions, growing 10% of 2010 totals to land $24 billion next year. Online couponing will climb 14% to $9.1 billion in 2011.

The Expanding Pie

All media types can and should co-exist to enable an expanding, not shrinking, marketing pie

The conventional mass media investment model is well known. Produce great creative, develop a media plan, spend the vast majority of your budget on media and hope for the best. In the world of digital media 2.0, the audience engages the media, passing it along to friends and colleagues, ostensibly obliterating the need for big media budgets. Thus, there's the potential for marketing budgets to shrink as advertisers spend less on media and more on content that will engage users. R/GA CEO Bob Greenberg and evp Barry Wacksman highlighted this shifting media model in an insightful Adweek opinion piece titled "The Shrinking Pie." But while the new "owned and earned" user-generated media referenced by Greenberg and Wacksman will change the mix of one's marketing portfolio, I don't feel it's likely to kill mass media budgets.  In fact, if managed appropriately, all these media types can and should co-exist to enable an expanding, not shrinking, marketing pie. Here's why. Depending on users to spread a marketing message is risky business. Yes, there are examples of wonderful campaigns that have caught fire and reached a mass audience, but these successes are hard to replicate. The audience is fickle, there's massive competition for their attention, no proven path to success and the impact can be fleeting. Moreover, widespread viral awareness may not meet your ultimate sales goal. Which leads me to the second and most critical reason why traditional mass media is not dead: It works. But it could work better. The ultimate goal of marketing is to drive sales. Whether an advertiser is using mass media to drive awareness at the top of the marketing funnel, developing content they hope will engage users in the middle or running performance marketing programs that enable them to pay for actions close to sales at the bottom, the goal is to invest in marketing that has a demonstrable ROI. Online performance marketing provides marketers with a variety of opportunities to generate definitive and measurable marketing returns. Pay-per-click search, search engine optimization, data acquisition, etc., can all be measured and optimized to provide advertisers proven returns.
 
Online performance marketing is about engagement and efficiency. It involves a continuous process of measurement and improvement spanning multiple channels. When positive ROI flows back from a campaign, marketers can reinvest these earnings to drive additional growth of sales and profits, ignoring traditional budget constraints. To illustrate this point, let's say I offer to sell you $10 bills for $5 each. Would you buy as many as you could or would you budget your spend? What if someone else was also willing to sell you $10 bills for $6 each? The majority of those given this opportunity would choose to blow the budget and buy as many $10 bills as both providers had to sell. Of course, this illustration is an oversimplification, but the premise is sound. If marketers can build programs of continuous improvement, where the return on marketing investments is reliable and repeatable, the marketing pie, including mass media, should expand, not shrink. Where mass media falls short is in the advertiser's ability to measure and optimize campaigns. At present, conventional advertisers seem reluctant to learn from digital optimization best practices. As Greenberg and Wacksman correctly pointed out, this apparent unwillingness to adapt has left traditional mass media on shaky ground.

As media models evolve, advertisers will shift investments to marketing they believe is cost-effective. If the value of traditional mass media cannot be reliably measured, it will suffer in comparison to highly quantifiable online performance marketing and sexy new formats such as YouTube and Twitter with limited investment requirements. While a recent State of Marketing survey published by the Chief Marketing Officers Council found that senior marketing experts are anticipating a significant shift away from traditional toward digital advertising, we should not dismiss conventional media too quickly. The right answer is not one media model versus the other, but careful integration of the various media opportunities that maximizes sales. For all the gloom and doom, the traditional marketing powers-that-be seem to slowly be heeding the warning bells. Recently, for instance, Wheat Thins teamed up with Twitter for a series of TV spots that promoted the brand while integrating consumer tweets, an interesting spin on user engagement .If more traditional advertising embraced the measurement and optimization practices of digital, conventional media campaigns would be seen as an important part of a media portfolio, integrating and optimizing mass media, online performance marketing and emerging user engagement models. More importantly, by quantifying the results of these integrated efforts and demonstrating positive returns on the marketing investment, mass media and marketing budgets in general would grow. As long as it is generating visible results, the marketing pie should expand. The marketing winners of tomorrow will be the organizations that can measure and optimize the results of all their advertising, mass media, user-engaged content and performance marketing. By creating demonstrable positive returns on all their media investments, winning marketers will expand the marketing pie and likely capture an increasing slice of market share.

The Marketing-Mix

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MarketingMix.pdf (2.7 MB)
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Interactive Advertising and the Optimal Marketing Mix helps marketers make better decisions on investing advertising dollars. The ground-breaking study, developed by MarketShare Partners, analyzes three brand scenarios in three different verticals—consumer packaged goods, financial services and automotive. Each example illustrates a distinct opportunity for optimizing marketing spend, specifically in the area of interactive media.

Online Ad Spend Resumes Rapid Growth...

Online advertising spending will resume double-digit growth in 2010, reaching $61.8 billion worldwide, according to eMarketer
Unlike other major media, online advertising spending increased in 2009, growing 2 percent to $55.2 billion, the research firm reported.
By 2014, eMarketer estimates online spending will leap to $96.8 billion worldwide, growing at an 11.9 percent compound annual rate, despite the slow, uneven and fragile global economic recovery.

Meanwhile, the Internet's share of total media ad spending worldwide will jump from just under 12 percent in 2009 to 17.2 percent in 2014.

"In some ways, the recession has propelled online advertising by forcing marketers with limited budgets to make every dollar count," said Jared Jenks, an analyst at eMarketer.
"Marketers now see online as more measurable, more effective and where people are increasingly spending their time."

Online Takes Lead in UK !

After outpacing TV, online ads also overtake print

Overall, UK advertising spending suffered a double-digit drop in 2009, according to several sources. But the Internet defied this downward trend. UK advertisers spent £3.54 billion ($5.56 billion) online in 2009—5.7% more than in 2008. Online spending growth will speed up in 2010 to 7% before moderating in 2011. The London Olympics in 2012 will also provide a boost in spending increases. “On the whole, digital marketers in the UK rose to the challenge of budget restraint with sound strategies and imagination,” said Karin von Abrams, eMarketer senior analyst and author of the new report “UK Online Advertising: Spending and Trends.” “Because Internet ad spending continued to grow during the economic downturn, online marketers are also well placed to capitalize on the recovery, whether this is slow and halting, or steady and more rapid.”

UK Online Advertising Spending, 2009-2014 (billions and % change)

The Web already claimed a larger share of UK ad revenues than TV in 2009, according to MAGNA and ZenithOptimedia, and will consolidate this dominance over the next five years.

Both these sources separate newspapers and magazines when calculating print ad revenues. But taken together, print ad spending estimates by MAGNA will reach £3.78 billion this year, just under eMarketer’s forecast of UK online ad spending.

Several other estimates of UK online ad spending for 2010 are more conservative.

Comparative Estimates: UK Online Advertising Spending, 2009-2014 (billions)

Much of the variation between sources derives from different methodologies, but all firms agree on significant gains to online spending this year. “The Web has emerged from the recession with impressive momentum,” said Ms. von Abrams. “The Internet’s reputation for delivering ROI is intact, even enhanced. Digital, in all its forms, is increasingly central to all marketing activities and consumer behavior.”