That’s the word from MediaVest, which has issued
new research to clients predicting that ad inventory during the upcoming
political year will be tighter than ever, given the record dollars that
politicians will raise and spend next year in their bids to get elected. The
research was generated from the agency’s Civic Observatory unit, an ongoing
tracking study that draws on a pool of 1,500 consumer respondents. The biggest
crunch will come at the local level. In 2008, roughly 85% of measured media
advertising placed for the November general election was in local TV, where
political ads take precedence over those from regular marketers.
The Publicis
media shop estimates that political spending next year will be up roughly 30%
from four years earlier and could reach $4 billion. Plus, it’s not just the
local TV airwaves that will be jammed, per the MediaVest research. “Increased
fundraising in 2012 will drive broader tactical use of more media,” the agency
reports. “It will impact marketers across all categories." The agency also
projects that political campaigns and outside interest groups, with their fatter
wallets, will spend more broadly across national broadcast and cable television
and digital satellite services. It’s also clear that there will be broader use
of social media, which the Obama campaign used to great effect in 2008. “In
fact, the elections in 2012 could be won or lost on the success of
get-out-the-vote efforts being led by social media,” the agency asserted.
Next
year, the political noise will be loud at all levels. With 435 congressional
elections, 33 senate races, 11 gubernatorial contests and countless other state
and local races joining the presidential contenders, the battle for voter
attention will be intense. Much like politicians, marketers are going to have to
adjust their media strategies on the fly. “Marketers must be prepared for
in-flight changes as strategic moves from politicians can play a big role in ad
markets,” per the MediaVest research.
Shifts in both public opinion and
fund-raising abilities during campaigns “converge to expand or restrict a
candidate’s reach. If politicians move out of a market pricing for marketers may
improve as a result. The opposite is also true.” Advertisers that can predict
where such shifts will occur will have a leg up on the rest of the marketplace,
MediaVest stated. While it’s hard to know with certainty when and where such
changes will occur, agencies can guide clients on where such fluctuations are
likely to occur and how to predict them.
There is ample competitive activity to
monitor. The MediaVest research forecasts tight races and higher-than-normal
spending in nearly half (23) of the states next year, including Florida , Pennsylvania ,
Virginia and Michigan .
Source: Media Daily News
Source: Media Daily News