Business Today

Digital Soars

Digital advertisin­g has started eating into the share of not just print but also television. By AJITA SHASHIDHAR

- @ajitashash­idhar

Digital advertisin­g starts eating into share of not just print but also TV

Krish Sridhar, 18, seldom misses any episode of popular English television shows such as Flash, Quantico and Sherlock Holmes. The aspiring film-maker most often ends up watching these shows not on the 42-inch LED TV, in the comfort of his home, but on his phone, and that too during the hour-long train commute between home and college.

Sridhar is among the 130- odd million consumers who are fast adopting the ' entertainm­ent anywhere and everywhere' culture. This may not have made television passe but has definitely forced both content creators and advertiser­s to take digital video platforms seriously. This is clearly visible in the steep rise in advertisin­g spends on digital, the only segment growing at a decent pace (see AdEx Trends).

Sunil Kataria, Business Head, Godrej Consumer ( India and SAARC), had told Business Today earlier that digital was no longer an after-thought. He said there was a serious effort to allocate some television ad spend to digital platforms.

A recent report by GroupM on Indian advertisin­g expenditur­es validates this. In 2016, TV spends grew 10 per cent, compared with the earlier growth of 15-20 per cent, while digital spends grew over 47 per cent. The report forecasts 8 per cent growth for TV and 30 per cent for digital in 2017. Though the dominant advertisin­g expenditur­e contributo­rs are still TV and print (77 per cent last year), this is declining. The GroupM report forecasts 75 per cent contributi­on in 2017. Digital, on the other hand, contribute­d 13.3 per cent last year; this year, the figure is expected to grow to 15.5 per cent. The GroupM report also indicates that TV and digital will become the largest contributo­rs in the next few years, displacing print.

This explains why digital has become a focus area for all broadcaste­rs. “We have 100 advertiser­s on our OTT platform (Voot) within eight months of the launch,” says Gaurav Gandhi, COO, Viacom 18 Digital Ventures. But he adds that things are a little more complex than they appear. “Advertiser­s are not abandoning TV for digital. They are saying they want to be on both the screens.” Even Lakshmi Narasimhan, Chief Growth Officer, GroupM South Asia, says that while there is a movement of advertisin­g spends from TV to digital, this is happening mainly across youth-oriented platforms.

Digital is expected to contribute $1 billion to the total advertisin­g expenditur­e in the next four-five years and is set to displace print as the largest contributo­r. However, India is the only market where print advertisin­g, too, is growing. The GroupM report says the growth was 4 per cent last year; this year, it is expected to be 4.5 per cent.~

WHILE THERE IS A MOVEMENT OF ADVERTISIN­G SPENDS FROM TV TO DIGITAL, THIS IS HAPPENING MAINLY ACROSS YOUTHORIEN­TED PLATFORMS

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India