Total ad bookings in the market rose by +15% in October, boosted by robust television ad sales which helped almost all parts of the TV sector grow in the double-digit range and kick off the 2015-16 broadcast year with a bang.
A hefty jump in national TV advertising was responsible for the sector’s growth in the past month. Cable (+9%) and broadcast (+12%) ad revenues rose markedly in a year-over-year comparison thanks to higher upfront pricing, a vibrant scatter market and a strong start to the football season.
In tandem with TV’s positive results, SMI’s data showed digital media (+34%), out of home (+19%) and newspaper (+6%) spending also spiked to round out the month.
SMI October Ad Market Highlights
- Reporting on 80% of national ad spending from global agencies, total television bookings were up +10% for October, but remain down -3% for the overall calendar year-to-date.
- SMI’s data recorded a stellar month for upfront ad spending. The market increased by +11%, signaling a strong result off the back of this year’s upfront negotiations. Broadcast was up +10% and cable grew by 12%.
- The scatter market delivered a 19% YOY gain for broadcast but was flat for cable.
- All four major networks saw ad sales growth in October 2015. CBS, ABC and NBC – helped by its broadcast of the 2015 Presidents Cup – all showed double-digit rises thanks to the rising popularity of new fall TV programming.
- Spanish-language networks Univision and Telemundo both saw healthy growth in October.
- Cable networks ESPN, MTV, HGTV and ABC Family attracted significant double-digit percentage increases in October.
- Ad spend volumes across digital media jumped by +34% for October. Social media websites (+129%), video sites (+70%) and internet radio (+47%) beefed up growth for the sector. The digital market holds a 31% share of the total advertising pie.
- In the print market, newspaper spending heated up with +6% YoY growth in October however the magazine market was flat.
- Radio ad revenues took a -11% dive when compared to the same time last year.
No comments:
Post a Comment