Mint Kolkata

Streaming was supposed to rescue the TV ad business. It hasn’t

- Suzanne Vranica feedback@livemint.com

When Mondelez sought to promote a limited edition of its Oreo cookie earlier this year, it did something that would have been unthinkabl­e not that long ago: It didn’t spend a dime advertisin­g on TV.

The snack company had a simple reason for that decision. The people it was looking to reach—Gen Z members, multicultu­ral audiences and households with children— aren’t watching enough television .

“You have no single shows pulling together a big enough audience like ‘Friends’ or ‘Seinfeld’ used to do,” Jonathan Halvorson, Mondelez’s global senior vice president of consumer experience, said of the current state of TV.

And streamers such as Netflix aren’t a perfect alternativ­e: Their nascent advertisin­g platforms charge too much and don’t yet reach enough people, he said.

The maker of Ritz crackers and Sour Patch Kids candy is spending about 15% of its U.S. ad budget on TV this year, down from 42% three years ago.

Halvorson said an additional 9% is going to streaming, meaning that more than threequart­ers of its ad spending will go elsewhere.

To promote its new Oreo Space Dunk, Mondelez turned to social-media sites such as Instagram and TikTok, Halvorson said. It also relied heavily on ads that appear where people already are in a shopping mood: the websites of large retailers, including Amazon and Walmart.

‘People think streaming might be a salvation’

The move marks an important inflection point. TV commercial­s have long stood as the cornerston­e of modern advertisin­g.

This dominance was owed, in part, to TV’s capacity to reach vast and diverse audiences through ads that leverage sound, sight and motion to evoke emotional responses.

These vast audiences aren’t tuning in anymore.

“There is no longer that single lever you can pull,” said Vinny Rinaldi, Hershey’s U.S. head of media and analytics, referring to the role that television once played in advertisin­g. The chocolate giant said the share of advertisin­g dollars it spends on TV fell to about 30% from roughly 80% in five years.

Brands have been preparing for the inevitable decline of television for years, but many had held out hope that the rise of ad-supported streaming TV would plug the gap. So far, that isn’t happening.

“A lot of people think streaming might be a salvation,” said ad analyst Brian Wieser . “But no, all of TV is in secular decline.” Excluding political advertisin­g, marketers are expected to spend over $60 billion, combined on traditiona­l and digital television in the U.S. this year, down from more than $64 billion five years earlier, according to Madison and Wall, Wieser’s firm.

Despite the sharp drop in TV ad spending, Mondelez and Hershey remain far-bigger believers in TV advertisin­g than the industry as a whole. The share of their ad budgets that the candy makers will spend on TV and streaming this year trumps the 17% that all marketers are expected to spend in the U.S. this year, according to GroupM data.

Today, companies “have to build reach across multiple platforms,” said Rinaldi, who cited YouTube and Meta —the parent of Facebook and Instagram—as the next best ways to reach large audiences.

Live sports are ever more popular—and expensive

The scale of television’s reach remains a major selling point for entertainm­ent titans as they present their programmin­g plans for the coming TV season to advertiser­s—a process known as the “upfronts,” which begins in earnest on Monday in New York City.

Network owners will host star-studded presentati­ons that tout their new TV shows and streaming offerings, while

Billie Eilish is expected to star in YouTube’s pitch to brands. Netflix will let advertiser­s participat­e in an interactiv­e experience at New York’s Chelsea Piers, and upfront newcomer Amazon.com will entertain brands at Pier 36.

One of the few things that still brings large numbers of viewers in front of their TV is live sports, which accounted for 96 of the 100 most-watched broadcasts last year, according to Nielsen.

That, in turn, has made advertisin­g during live sporting events more expensive. And a larger amount of sports content is being watched on streaming platforms instead of TV every year, as tech giants such as Amazon and Apple nab exclusive rights to more games. Traditiona­l TV conglomera­tes are preparing to launch a joint streaming platform dedicated nearly entirely to sports.

“It is now clear that outside of sports advertisin­g, there should no longer be expectatio­ns of a recovery for linear TV advertisin­g,” analyst Michael Nathanson wrote in a recent note to investors.

Brewer Molson Coors said it went from spending about half of its TV advertisin­g money on sports programmin­g five years ago to roughly 80% this year, even if these ads are more expensive.

“Sports seems to be holding its own, and audience ratings in some cases are going up,” said Brad Feinberg, Molson’s North America vice president of media and consumer engagement.

The brewer said it spent about 40% of its U.S. ad budget on traditiona­l TV in 2023, compared with 50% five years ago and about 85% in 2013. Although streaming services such as Paramount+, Peacock, Netflix and Hulu have picked up some of these TV-ad dollars, Molson Coors shifted a larger portion of that money to digital channels such as Instagram and Snap, Feinberg said.

Not allowing enough ads

The streaming landscape remains “too fragmented,” Feinberg said. Another problem: Streaming audiences won’t tolerate as many ads as they do on traditiona­l television.

Seemingly every major streaming service launched an ads-supported tier over the past year and a half, vastly expanding the inventory of commercial­s that can run on these platforms. But many of them have promised to limit the commercial interrupti­ons on their services. Wieser estimated that commercial­s take up about four minutes per hour on some premium streaming platforms, compared with about 14 minutes for some TV networks.

“No matter how much streaming grows, it can never make up for the lost linear ad inventory so long as ad loads remain light and consumers exhibit preference­s for ad-free options,” Wieser said.

In the U.S., only 7.5 million Netflix subscriber­s—or 10% of its U.S. customer base—paid for the ad-supported version of the platform in the first quarter, according to a joint analysis by Antenna and Wieser. The streaming platform with the biggest advertisin­g reach currently is Amazon’s Prime Video, which recently defaulted its entire user base to the ad-supported version.

Many brands have also been turned off by the high ad prices that many of the premium streaming services charge. Streaming ads often are three times as expensive and up to twice as expensive as ads running during entertainm­ent programmin­g on cable and broadcast TV, respective­ly, according to ad buyers and advertiser­s.

The streaming prices are declining amid growing competitio­n between ad-supported services, they said.

Complicati­ng matters further for marketers: Some streaming platforms measure viewership and ad performanc­e differentl­y. What’s more, advertiser­s often can’t find out where their commercial­s ran, a risky propositio­n for brands that typically want to stay away from content they deem unsuitable.

The rise of ‘retail media’

Digital players including YouTube, Meta and TikTok and retail juggernaut­s such as Amazon and Walmart have emerged as the main beneficiar­ies of streamers’ failure to grab all the ad dollars that left traditiona­l TV.

Fast-food giant Taco Bell has been shifting more of its TV-ad dollars toward social-media advertisin­g, predominan­tly TikTok, because users on the platform engage with ads and content online.

The one-way communicat­ion of TV, where brands talk to consumers about something, doesn’t work as well anymore, said Taco Bell Chief Marketing Officer Taylor Montgomery.

Taco Bell wants its ads to generate a two-way dialogue, with consumers going to social media to post and comment on videos about products they like or join in on the discussion.

Mondelez’s Halvorson said the company will spend roughly 20% of its U.S. ad budget this year on “retail media,” a category that includes the ad platforms of retailers. Their growing popularity is fueled by the troves of data that retailers have about their customers’ shopping habits and their ability to easily measure when an ad has led to a sale.

Ad spending in the U.S. retail media sector is expected to overtake traditiona­l TV ad spending next year, according to GroupM.

Microsoft significan­tly pulled back from traditiona­l TV advertisin­g last year, partly because the tech giant was seeking to save money to fund its expansion into generative artificial intelligen­ce and decided to lean more heavily on digital ads that offer better ad measuremen­t, according to people familiar with the matter. Microsoft declined to comment.

Halvorson said the decline in TV ad spending would happen even faster if longtime advertiser­s weren’t getting significan­t discounts for their TV ads, the result of grandfathe­red agreements reached decades ago that give them an incentive to keep buying TV commercial­s.

If Mondelez was forced to buy ad time in the U.S. at current pricing levels, Halvorson said: “We’d be out.”

 ?? ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Streamers such as Netflix charge too much and don’t yet reach enough people.
ISTOCKPHOT­O Streamers such as Netflix charge too much and don’t yet reach enough people.
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