Advertising’s Recovery: Not all Media Created Equal
Wednesday, May 26th, 2010By Patricia Wilson
Overall, optimism is growing in the advertising industry. However, not all media are created equal in projections for U.S. advertising spending in 2010 and beyond. It remains a difficult time for print, while television seems to be holding its own. Digital advertising continues to grow, and may have even benefited from the recession.

(See related blog: Advertising Spending Looks Up in 2010.)
“The rise of the Internet continued uninterrupted during the downturn — in fact, the downturn probably accelerated the shift of budgets from traditional media by focusing advertisers’ minds on the importance of measurable return on investment,” said ZenithOptimedia, in a press release forecasting ad spending for 2010 and beyond.
Television suffered less than other media, ZenithOptimedia noted, while “newspapers and magazines have clearly suffered the most from the downturn.”
Ad Predictions by Media Type
ZenithOptimedia predicts the following for 2010 global advertising spending by media:
- TV: Up 4.36 percent with 40.3 percent market share.
- Newspapers: Down 3.8 percent with 21.7 percent market share.
- Internet: Up 12.9 percent with 13.9 percent market share.
- Magazines: Down 4.4 percent with 9.6 percent market share.
- Radio: Down 0.5 percent with 7.5 percent market share.
- Outdoor: Up 1.72 percent with 6.5 percent market share.
- Cinema: Up 3.07 percent with 0.5 percent market share.
Communications firm Carat, as reported by MarketingProfs, expects the United States — in specific — to follow a similar ad-spending pattern:
- TV: Up 4 percent.
- Newspapers: Down 8.3 percent
- Online: Up 10 percent.
- Radio: Up 2.5 percent.
- Magazines: Down 5 percent.
Last, but not least, in its April revised forecast (via MediaBuyerPlanner), MAGNA raised its 2010 expectations, predicting a 3 percent rise in U.S. ad spending, including revenues from the Olympics and spending on elections, to 3 percent. This is MAGNA’s second correction of 2010, including a January forecast predicting flat growth for U.S. ad spending.
MAGNA’s U.S. outlook is bullish for the Internet and TV, but bearish for print:
- Search: Up 16.8 percent.
- Local TV: Up 16.2 percent.
- Internet: Up 12.8 percent.
- National TV: Up 10.2 percent.
- Magazines: Down 6.9 percent.
- Local Newspapers: Down 10 percent.
- National Newspapers: Down 11 percent.
Industry revenues will rise from $40.5 billion in the first quarter of 2009 to $41.3 billion during the first quarter of 2010, according to a MAGNA press release.
“Among the various sectors, television remains the largest advertising platform in the United States,” MAGNA said. “The $56.0 billion dollar segment will grow by 9.8% during 2010, slightly higher than our prior 8.5% expectation. This growth will erase 2009′s losses and return the sector to levels observed between 2006 and 2008.”
What Media Executives are Saying about the Future
Overall, ad spending is expected to grow an average of 3 percent in 2010, while interactive ad spending is expected to grow 10 percent, according to an AdMedia Partners online survey of global senior business executives in advertising, marketing services, digital marketing and related industries.
The majority of media executives (65 percent) said that online revenue will account for more than 50 percent of total revenue within the next five years at business-to-business publications. For newspapers, 44 percent said online revenue will outstrip print within five years and 38 percent said that it is likely to take 5-10 years.
Mobile and social media marketing are also projected to grow.
“These evolving media and service offerings are considered to be important growth opportunities increasingly requested by content owners and advertisers,” according to the AdMedia Partners report. “Just like the early days of the Internet, media companies are experimenting with various business models to monetize these opportunities.”
Patricia Wilson is the founder of BrandCottage, a media marketing company with offices in New York, Atlanta and Washington, D.C.
