Friday, October 23, 2020

Competition Forces Streaming Services To Spend Heavily on Marketing

Most advertisers have pulled back their spending this year, but streaming services are marketing themselves as heavily as ever, according to eMarketer.

In H1 2020, streaming services ran an estimated $1 billion worth of TV advertising, according to TV ad measurement company iSpot.tv. For comparison, in H1 2019, streaming services ran $328 million on TV ads. Between January and August 2020, video streaming services increased their TV ad spending more than any other category that iSpot.tv tracked.

Amazon was the largest ad spender, investing $169.8 million on TV ads for Amazon Prime Video during H1 2020. Several other streaming services relied on TV house ads to promote themselves. Disney-owned networks like ABC, FX, and ESPN used billions of ad impressions to promote Disney+ and Hulu. And NBC used the same tactic for Peacock.

Netflix, which wasn’t among the top 10 streaming services in terms of TV ad spending, pulled back its TV spending by 17.6% in H1 2020, compared with the same time frame a year ago, according to an iSpot.tv spokesperson. But Netflix is marketing itself in other ways. One tactic Netflix has tested is making certain movies and shows available for free. In August, Netflix offered about a dozen of its shows for free to nonsubscribers. While movies were wholly available, series were limited to a few episodes. Netflix is trying to use free content to hook in people who aren’t already paying for the service.

Streaming services are also using podcasts for marketing. In July, NBCUniversal was the largest podcast advertiser in the US, according to data from podcast analytics company Magellan AI cited by trade publication Inside Radio. Most of NBCU’s podcast ad spending was used to promote its streaming service, Peacock. Other streamers spending heavily on podcast ads included Quibi and Hulu, which were the sixth- and 12th-largest podcast ad spenders, respectively.

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