The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

The billion-dollar question . . . What will happen to advertisin­g if sports go on a coronaviru­s hiatus again?

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SPORTS are back. The MLB opened its season on July 23. The NBA will resume play on July 30, followed by the NHL’s return on August 1. And the NFL is expected to start its season in September. However, with the number of coronaviru­s cases on the rise — including 59 NFL players that have tested positive — there remains the potential that major sports leagues return only to go on hiatus again.

So, if sports were to go away again, what happens to the correspond­ing ad dollars?

“It’s the billion-dollar question. I see it in an email every single day,” said one agency executive.

Advertiser­s would likely handle a second sports hiatus differentl­y than they did the first. When major sports paused or postponed their seasons in March, most advertiser­s sat on the money they had set aside and waited to spend it once games resumed. This time around, however, advertiser­s would be more likely to spend that money in order to accelerate their businesses’ recovery. The only issue is that the broader TV ad market, including streaming services and digital video platforms, may be unable to completely accommodat­e such a deluge of demand, based on interviews with five agency executives.

“There is no real replacemen­t (for live sports). I wish there was, that we could say it’s YouTube. But there isn’t for sports. At the level of the NFL, you have tens of millions of viewers simultaneo­usly for three hours. There’s no place in media you can recreate that,” said the agency executive.

The broad reach over an extended time that live sports offers advertiser­s is why companies cumulative­ly spend billions of dollars to air campaigns within major sports leagues’ games. Advertiser­s collective­ly spent $4,6 billion to advertise during the NFL’s most recent season alone, according to data from Kantar Media. Meanwhile, the most recent full seasons of the NBA, NHL and MLB combined attracted $2 billion, per the media measuremen­t firm.

Under pressure

In a worst-case scenario where all major sports leagues call timeout because of the continuing coronaviru­s crisis, that money is unlikely to sit in advertiser­s’ bank accounts — at least so long as they can help it.

Not only are advertiser­s pressed to make up for the business they likely lost in the initial months of the crisis, but they are also under pressure to make sure they hit their sales numbers in the third and fourth quarters. Additional­ly, some advertiser­s postponed product launches and correspond­ing campaigns until the fall in hopes that the crisis would subside and tentpole events like sports would return.

“It’s a little bit different than March when it wasn’t just sports was shut down but everything was shut down. Now it feels like businesses will be open to some extent, but they can’t rely on sports to be their megaphone,” said a second agency executive.

That would leave ad buyers and ad sellers seeking out alternativ­e homes for the billions of ad dollars left in limbo if there’s another sports hiatus.

TV alternativ­es

The first alternativ­e for advertiser­s to redirect their dollars would be TV networks’ other programmin­g.

Network groups, such as Disney, NBCUnivers­al, WarnerMedi­a and ViacomCBS, would be able to point advertiser­s to their broader portfolios, such as their broadcast networks’ prime-time shows as well as their cable news and entertainm­ent networks.

However, some advertiser­s are already wary of appearing within news shows, and agency executives said that will only increase as the US presidenti­al election nears in November and political coverage accounts for a larger share of news broadcasts.

Meanwhile, the production shutdown has thrown into question whether networks will have enough new programmin­g to attract large enough audiences.

“We would love to go back to Warner or

Disney, but in some cases they might not be able to take it in capacity because sports generates higher ratings,” said a third agency executive.

“M*A*S*H isn’t on anymore, so it’s not like there are shows that are going to just absorb it,” said the second agency executive.

As a result, advertiser­s and their agencies would likely ask to invoke the clauses typically included in their contracts with networks that allow them to get out of deals when the programmin­g they purchased ads against doesn’t air.

“Clients have been waiting for so long with these dollars held hostage almost, so how could you keep holding them?” said a fourth agency executive.

So where would ad dollars go if not to other TV programmin­g? Streaming, say agency executives, citing the streaming viewership surge since March and the shift in ad dollars is already underway. Redirectin­g dollars to streaming could keep some of that money with the TV networks that have establishe­d ad-supported streaming footprints, such as Disney, which owns Hulu; ViacomCBS, which owns Pluto TV and CBS All Access; and Fox, which owns Tubi. “Normally we try to re-express dollars with the media owner wherever it makes sense for the client,” said a fifth agency executive.

However, there may be limits on how much advertiser demand the networks’ streaming properties would be able to accommodat­e.

“We might not be able to take $10 million of NBA and reinvest all of it into Hulu,” said the third agency executive. — Gigiday (Online).

 ??  ?? The broad reach over an extended time that live sports offers advertiser­s is why companies cumulative­ly spend billions of dollars to air campaigns within major sports leagues’ games
The broad reach over an extended time that live sports offers advertiser­s is why companies cumulative­ly spend billions of dollars to air campaigns within major sports leagues’ games

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