Is advertising at the crossroads?

posted by Steve13th, 2008

Some interesting statistics in the current issue of Business Week point out that advertising has become a smaller part of our economy since it peaked in 2000. Internet advertising is rapidly growing -over 25 percent higher this year than 2006, which translates to $21 billion.

…but ad agencies are still relying heavily on :30 TV spots for their income. With the explosion of new media advertising in recent years, the traditional production model catering to advertisers simply no longer works. Each passing month clients spend less money on television spots -(budgets are down 1.5 percent from last year, to 46 billion), want their TV ads to tie into larger marketing campaigns or even turn completely to the Internet to get their message out.

This is going to be an interesting situation for the very high-end ($600+/hr.) post-production houses, as pretty much everything they do can be emulated in a tricked-out desktop computer. How are they going to compete with the $150/hour post houses, anyway? The word “dinosaur” comes to mind…

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!



-->