Internet advertising overtakes TV in the UK

Posted by jameswdcrawford on September 30, 2009 under Media, Online, PR | 6 Comments to Read

The shift in power which now makes internet advertising a bigger revenue stream than from broadcast media has come quicker than I thought.

 

The report seems very credible. Although I am always sceptical of ‘data’ from Newspaper Society and the Internet Advertising Bureau, this report seems to be an accurate picture.  

 

The fact that Britain is the first country to reach this tipping point is encouraging too.  It is not that often one feels like the UK is blazing a trail.

 

Full story is below.

 

Internet overtakes television to become biggest advertising sector in the UK
Record £1.75bn online spend makes UK first major economy to spend more on web ads than TV, says IAB

 

The UK has become the first major economy where advertisers spend more on internet advertising than on television advertising, with a record £1.75bn online spend in the first six months of the year.

The milestone marks a watershed for the embattled TV industry, the leading ad medium in the UK for almost half a century. It has taken the internet little more than a decade to become the biggest advertising sector in the UK.

UK advertisers spent £1.75bn on internet advertising in the six months to the end of June, a 4.6% year-on-year increase, according to a report by the Internet Advertising Bureau and PricewaterhouseCoopers. To put this in perspective, in 1998, when the IAB first measured internet advertising, just £19.4m was spent online.

The internet now accounts for 23.5% of all advertising money spent in the UK, while TV ad spend accounts for 21.9% of marketing budgets.

The IAB originally predicted that internet ad spend would overtake TV at the end of 2009; however, the crippling advertising recession accelerated this by six months. TV advertising fell about 17% year on year in the first half, to about £1.6bn, according to the report.

The IAB’s figures show that of the total of £1.75bn spent on internet advertising, £1.05bn, or 60%, was spent on search advertising on websites including Google, up 6.8% year on year.

Online classified advertising grew by 10.6% year on year to £385m, about 22% of total internet ad spend. But online display advertising, such as banners on websites, fell by 5.2% year on year, to £316.5m. This was an 18% share of all internet ad spend.

The ray of light within the online display ad sector was the nascent, but rapidly growing, online video advertising sector. The IAB estimated that this sector grew by close to 300% year on year, to almost £12m.

Thinkbox, the UK TV marketing body, has taken exception to the IAB’s figures, arguing that the internet is now mature and diverse and it is inaccurate to collate all the figures as if it is one single medium.

“It is interesting but meaningless to sweep all the money spent on every aspect of online marketing into one big figure and celebrate it,” said Lindsey Clay, marketing director at Thinkbox. “Online marketing spend is made up of many things, including email, classified ads, display ads (including online TV advertising) and, overwhelmingly, search marketing. They should be judged individually.”

Guy Phillipson, the chief executive of the IAB, reckoned that there is still significant growth potential left in the internet ad market.

“We could absolutely see it grow to being a 30% medium [of share of ad spend], to go past £4bn to even £5bn annually,” he said. “Online display advertising has plenty of room for growth.”

Despite the seemingly inexorable rise of internet ad spend, a closer examination of the IAB’s figures show that the recession has had an impact. In the first quarter £920m was spent on online advertising, representing 8.6% year-on-year growth. However, in the second quarter, spend fell almost £100m to £832m, representing only a 1.1% increase on the amount spent in the same period last year.

Adam Smith, futures director at WPP’s combined media operation Group M, argued that the internet’s share of total UK ad spend could be close to its peak.

Smith cited factors such as the increasing share of time that users spend on social networking websites, which have not attracted huge advertising spend, and the increasing saturation of internet penetration in the UK as potential limiting factors. “This day was bound to arrive, as the internet has been attracting a huge long tail of advertisers that have not advertised before doing completely new things,” he said. “It is a memorable event. However, it is a bit simplistic to make this comparison [and] it is always possible that internet’s share [of total UK ad spend] could go backwards if TV has a good year.”

The UK is not the first country where internet ad spend has overtaken TV spend, Denmark reached the milestone about six months ago. But it is the first major economy to do so

Posted via email from jamescrawford’s posterous

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What is online coverage worth in £££?

Posted by jameswdcrawford on September 11, 2009 under Media, PR | Be the First to Comment

Precise have the answer apparently.  See the press release at the end of this post.

Most PR agencies have been trying to devise their own one-size-fits-all measurement system for online coverage.  

In the remarkably measurable world of the internet, putting a cash value on coverage has been nigh on impossible to do consistently, quickly and easily.  This has been for a multitude of very boring reasons.  

The upshot was that without having a back office system so complicated that only a polymath could operate it, most agencies either gave up or offered clients wildly inaccurate figures.

We have our own system, which is jolly good of course, but now Precise tell us they have cracked the system.  Seeing they are evaluation experts I would say their system is better than ours, so I want to find out more…

So I read this press release with interest.  So far so good apart from the press release doesn’t tell us what the system is or how it works.  I guess that is so PR agencies don’t steel it and pass it off as their own.

Come on Precise, spill the beans!

P.s I am not even going to get into the debate about whether AVE is an appropriate measure… 

 

 

 
   
 
pdf What is online coverage worth in £££?
Download now or preview on posterous

launch-online-pr-social-media-measurement.pdf (44 KB)

Posted via email from jamescrawford’s posterous

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The customer is always right

Posted by jameswdcrawford on September 7, 2009 under PR | Be the First to Comment

The Daily Telegraph, 5th Sept: Currys and PC World staff to be investigated after abusing customers on Facebook
Around 3,000 people have become members of the Facebook discussion group in which past and present employees post messages about customers. Some of the discussion boards were titled “A******* customers!”, “Really Stupid Customers!” and “Some customers are really really stupid” in which customers are branded “retards” and “t****”. Other discussion boards had names such as “Chatting up customers” and “The sale of goods act (as amended by customers)” and included posts which said customers deserved a “punch” and asked whether staff should be allowed to “cattle prod” customers. DSG International, the shops’ parent company, is understood to have launched an investigation into the abuse after some staff posted messages under their real names. 

Posted via email from jamescrawford’s posterous

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We are having a baby!! Check out the little dude. He is waving at you.

Posted by jameswdcrawford on under PR | Read the First Comment

IMG00016 20090901 1016.jpg.scaled.500 We are having a baby!!  Check out the little dude.  He is waving at you.

This is a three month scan.

Posted via email from jamescrawford’s posterous

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Andy Crane and Gordon Burns to fight it out on Twitter

Posted by jameswdcrawford on September 1, 2009 under Social Media | 2 Comments to Read

Andy Crane, presenter of Channel M news, (Manchester’s TV station) has competition for his crown as the North West media’s premier Twitter user.  Gordon Burns, who most Brits of a certain age will forever remember as THE host of the Krypton Factor, now anchors North West Tonight and today launched his Twitter feed with much fanfare.

 

Andy (with over 2,000 followers) and Gordon (300 followers odd in one day of use) are now going to face off in a Twitter duel.  A duel that, admittedly, I have just made up and is a figment of my sometimes overactive, fertile imagination. 

 

OK, so the two big men of Manchester media are not going to fight it out, and I am guessing in our cosy media community here in Manchester that Andy and Gordon are probably good friends, and meet at Sam’s Chop House to compare Weather Girls… 

 

What this silly construct gave me was a chance to create a neat link into a (very) short discourse on hyper local PR, which might have been too boring for you to read other wise…

 

It seems to me that people like Gordon Burns and Andy Crane are leading the way into an era of untold media access; if Twitter is breaking news in the regional media then it really is now a part of the mainstream. 

 

I think it is great to see two journalists leading the way who “have been there and done it” on national media platforms.   My mum will be on Twitter soon, asking Andy and Gordon questions, finding out what is on the show and other minutiae which will get keep her and their other viewers hooked.   

 

Now when I get a DM from my Mum demanding that I visit her soon I will know that Twitter has “done a Facebook” and made the mainstream.  I don’t think that time is very far away now. 

 

Gents I salute you! (@andycrane64 and @gordonburnsnwt)

 

© James Crawford’s PR and Media Blog 2009

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