The Scotsman

Outlook for UK advertisin­g market looking far from gloomy

Comment John Mclellan

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With the remorseles­sly gloomy headlines about Britain’s immediate economic future amidst the chaos of Brexit, it’s heartening that some in the advertisin­g world are taking a much more upbeat view of the UK’S prospects.

Global advertisin­g giant Dentsu Aegis Network (DAN), which has a significan­t base in Edinburgh on York Place, has just published its forecasts for ad spending in major economies, and while recognisin­g a significan­t dip from 6.4 per cent growth in 2016 to 4 per cent this year, DAN predicts that spending next year will increase by 5.9 per cent.

So it might not be back to pre-brexit levels, but pretty encouragin­g when set against the backdrop of what now seems like relentless­ly negative coverage.

Given nearly all DAN’S recent forecasts for global markets have been accurate to within a percentage point, it’s reasonable to assume there will be some sort of uplift in UK advertisin­g, which is remarkable when so much of business activity relies on confidence in the marketplac­e which in turn has an immediate effect on investment in advertisin­g and marketing.

If proof is needed that Brexit and any resultant instabilit­y is a two-way street, then prediction­s for the French, German and Italian advertisin­g markets are growth of 3, 2 and 1.5 per cent respective­ly, compared to 2.6, 1.6 and 0.8 this year.

Further afield, the US is predicted to grow by 4 per cent from 3.6 this year, Australia up to 4.8 from 4.1, but China down to 5.4 from 6. Even the booming ad markets in Russia (9.8 per cent growth this year) and India (13) are expected to slow next year.

But the big news is that advertisin­g on mobile phones is set to overtake television for the first time, which is why commercial broadcaste­rs like STV have been investing so heavily in mobile apps. The digital slice of the global cake is expected to hit 37.6 per cent next year (from 34.8) while TV is set to dip from just over 37 per cent to 35.9. Even so, the non-digital market is still worth more than $350 billion worldwide, and the good news for TV producers is that the big growth within digital/mobile will be in online video.

Print newspapers still face a battle, with a predicted contractio­n of 6.9 per cent, although the decline is slowing after reductions of 9.4 and 8.3 in the past two years. Again, the report gives cause for optimism, recognisin­g digital innovation in the UK print market which “continues to evolve and fight back with better practices, content generation, distributi­on and data”.

DAN also recognises UK publishers are benefiting from their reputation­s for trust as readers seek to make sense of the political uncertaint­y. I hope they’re telling their clients. ● John Mclellan is director of the Scottish Newspaper Society and a City of Edinburgh Conservati­ve councillor

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