| New York, NY, February 4, 2009 –
TNS Media released its annual post-game analysis of Super Bowl advertising,
combining findings on this year’s brand face-offs, including
top advertisers, commercial ratings, as well as the online buzz and
traction generated by this year’s winners and losers.
“The Super Bowl is certainly a unique event because of its
ability to command nearly national attention at one time, but it
also demonstrates the impact that truly integrated advertising initiatives
can have,” says Dean DeBiase, CEO of TNS Media. “Marketers
work to ensure synergies between their traditional, online and in-store
promotional activities, but not to the extent seen in the Super
Bowl. The results seen here – from the ability of broadcast
advertising to drive traffic to sites, initiate online conversations
and have that emotional equity come full circle at retail –
should serve as a catalyst to encourage deeper integration across
all media platforms year round.”
A complete log of all commercials, their pod positions and actual
creatives are available at:
www.tns-mi.com/resources/creativeSuperBowl2009.htm
TNS Media Intelligence analysis: Advertising clutter, top
advertisers and categories
Record-setting Level of Ad Time
Super Bowl XLIII featured a record-tying amount of network commercial
time. Between the opening kickoff and the final whistle, NBC aired
45 minutes, 10 seconds of advertising messages. This includes paying
sponsors, messages from the NFL and promotional plugs from NBC for
its own programming. The past four games now occupy the top four
spots in terms of Super Bowl ad clutter.
Network Ad Time (mm:ss)
In The Super Bowl Game
|
| 2009 |
45:10:00 |
38:00:00 |
7:10 |
| 2008 |
44:30:00 |
36:35:00 |
7:55 |
| 2007 |
43:05:00 |
33:30:00 |
9:35 |
| 2006 |
44:15:00 |
36:55:00 |
7:20 |
| 2005 |
40:15:00 |
35:20:00 |
4:55 |
| 2004 |
41:55:00 |
34:00:00 |
7:55 |
|
Top Advertisers
A total of 32 different companies aired in-game spots for a total
of 84 commercials. The top four advertisers (excluding program promotions
aired by NBC) in terms of total ad time were Pepsico, Anheuser Busch
InBev, General Electric and Viacom. This elite group accounted for
40 percent of the total paid ad time.
Top Advertisers In 2009 Super Bowl Game
|
| Pepsico |
5:30 |
8 |
| Anheuser-Busch InBev |
4:30 |
7 |
| General Electric* |
2:30 |
4 |
| Viacom |
2:30 |
3 |
|
|
The softening ad market for 2009 Super Bowl spots led to speculation
that General Electric divisions might be required to step in and
buy unsold inventory to help out sister-company NBC. The movie studio
and theme park divisions of GE have regularly advertised in previous
Super Bowls on other networks, so it’s far-fetched to construe
their presence in the 2009 game as the outcome of an inventory fire-sale.
What’s a ‘normal’ level of in-house ad activity
for the Super Bowl broadcaster? The past four years have seen four
different networks air the game. During this cycle, the advertising
presence of the network’s owner has ranged from 30 seconds
to 4 ½ minutes. GE’s 2009 footprint of 2:30 is larger
than either News Corp in 2008 or National Amusements in 2007. However,
it lags the 4:30 of air time that Disney-owned entities had in the
2006 telecast on ABC.
“In-House” Super Bowl Ad Time Purchases
(excluding the network’s TV program promotions)
|
| 2009 |
NBC |
General Electric* |
2:30 |
| 2008 |
Fox |
News Corp |
0:30 |
| 2007 |
CBS |
National Amusements |
1:00 |
| 2006 |
ABC |
Disney |
4:30 |
|
|
Top Categories
Motion pictures continued to be the dominant Super Bowl ad category
as Hollywood studios attempted to build awareness for upcoming releases.
Nine different movies had in-game ads, a level on par with recent
years. However, this year the studios opted for longer-length units
as compared to 2008.
Non-alcoholic beverages also had a significant presence in the
game but the competitive battlefront was a bit narrower than 2008.
Pepsi and Coke again went head-to-head with their soda brands. But
unlike a year ago, Coke abstained from promoting its non-soda brand
lines and conceded that stage to Pepsi which ran spots for Gatorade
and Sobe Life.
Reflecting the current tenor of the auto market, car manufacturers
had a reduced presence with Audi, Hyundai and Toyota combining for
just 3 minutes of air time. Supplementing this was another 2:30
of ads from auto-related advertisers Bridgestone (tires), Cars.com
and Castrol (motor oil) to keep the total category even with last
year.
Leading Advertising Categories In 2009 Super Bowl Game
|
| Motion Pictures |
9 |
7:00 |
|
7 |
4:00 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Automotive |
8 |
5:30 |
|
7 |
5:30 |
| Auto Manufacturers |
5 |
3:00 |
|
5 |
4:00 |
| Other |
3 |
2:30 |
|
2 |
1:30 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Non-Alcoholic Beverages |
6 |
5:30 |
|
8 |
7:30 |
| Soft Drinks |
4 |
4:00 |
|
3 |
4:00 |
| Non-Soft Drinks |
2 |
1:30 |
|
5 |
3:30 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Beer |
3 |
4:30 |
|
2 |
4:00 |
|
TNS Cymfony Analysis: Movie studios’ TV investment
pays off with online buzz
Not only did the movie studios dominate TV ad time, they also dominated
the discussion in the first 36 hours following the game: five of
the ten most-discussed advertisers were movies. Almost half of the
discussion of Super Bowl ads took place on social media sites focused
on movies, video games, and entertainment news.
Most Talked About Advertisers
|
| Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen |
737 |
| Star Trek |
500 |
| Anheuser-Busch |
476 |
| GI Joe: Rise of Cobra |
455 |
| Doritos |
387 |
| Pepsi |
309 |
| Land of the Lost |
261 |
| Fast and Furious |
221 |
| Coca Cola |
215 |
| Hulu |
198 |
|
|
While Doritos may have won the Super Bowl ad voting on USAToday,
Anheuser-Busch bested all non-movie advertisers in the amount of
discussion generated by their ads. Four of their ads generated strong
positive discussion: Bud Light “Swedish”, Bud Light
“Meeting”, Clydesdale “Stick” and Clydesdale
“Circus”.
The advertisers that didn’t make the most-discussed list
are also interesting: E-Trade “Talking Baby” and Audi
“Chase” among them.
“This year, viewers engaged with ads about entertainment
and affordable indulgences,” noted Jim Nail, Chief Marketing
Officer of TNS Cymfony. “Financial services and automobiles
are not on consumers minds so their ads, which have been popular
in past years, didn’t resonate this year.”
TNS Cymfony’s analysis of traditional and social media showed
that the volume of pre-game online discussion nearly doubled while
media coverage increased 37%. “The spike in pre-game coverage
and discussions emphasizes that marketers need to blend social media,
traditional media, and buzz around the water cooler to maximize
the ROI of expensive Super Bowl ads,” said Jim Nail.
TNS Media Research Analysis: second-by-second ratings
TNS Media Research analyzed audience viewing behavior during the
game and the commercial breaks. The following highlights are based
on unique second-by-second clickstream data collected from over
300,000 Households (HH) in the Charter Communications Los Angeles
digital cable system:
- On average, 29.8% of HH’s tuned into the game itself.
The pre-game show averaged a 22% rating while over 23.4% of homes
viewed at least one second of the post-game award presentation.
- 5.3% of HH’s viewed the game on NBC-HD, representing
close to 11% of the total audience.
- As expected during the Super Bowl, few viewers tuned away
from the commercial breaks during the game with the spot-to-program
retention index averaging 100 (CVI). The highest commercial retention
score went to the promotional ad marketing various USA network programs,
which posted a 121 in the spot just after the game ended. During
the post-game as viewing dropped from a rating of 32.l% to 23.4%,
the commercial retention remained constant. The last pod, airing
prior to The Office, averaged a CVI retention score of 95.
- A second-by-second look at commercial avoidance reveals
that about 1% of commercial seconds were avoided by channel changing.
- Interestingly, the NBC-HD audience was even less likely
to tune away, with only 0.8% percent of those seconds being lost,
perhaps reflecting the fact that almost all of the Super Bowl advertising
was presented in high definition.
TNS Compete Analysis: Super Bowl advertisers’ online presence
Top Gaining Advertiser Web sites
|
| Dennys.com |
1679% |
| Cheetos.com |
313% |
| Budweiser.com |
148% |
| Gatorade.com |
143% |
| Budlight.com |
104% |
| Godaddy.com |
103% |
| Hyundaiusa.com |
78% |
| Hulu.com |
76% |
| Bridgestonetire.com |
69% |
| Teleflora.com |
65% |
|
|
Super Bowl advertisers ranged from those with strong, established
online presences to “up and comers” to digital neophytes.
- Anheuser-Busch – One of the Super Bowl’s top advertisers
and most talked about brands came in third in growth in daily reach
on Super Bowl Sunday. Budweiser.com, a site which has historically
ranked among the top 30,000 US Web sites, saw its reach nearly double
on Super Bowl Sunday.
- Hulu – Despite the prominence of entertainment in ad time,
this online video service (co-owned by NBC Universal, News Corp.
and Providence Equity Partners) ranked near the bottom. The “Alec
in Huluwood” ad, which did not present a clear call to action,
can be found on Hulu.com.
- Dennys – Denny’s free grand slam giveaway scored with
Super Bowl viewers. Visitors to Dennys.com were rewarded with a
reminder of the “Enjoy a Free Grand Slam” on the home
page along with a convenient Restaurant Locator.
“It is not surprising that we see some of the most talked
about advertisers at the top of the pack in terms of site traffic
on Super Bowl Sunday,” according to Matthew Pace, Director
Retail of TNS Compete. “It’s more evidence that a strong
call to action alone is not enough to engage consumers, you need
to have messaging that resonates with the consumers you are trying
to target, like a free breakfast.”
About TNS Media
Established in more than 30 countries, TNS Media explores all media
- print, radio, TV, Internet, social media, cinema and outdoor worldwide,
24 hours a day, seven days a week, and offers a full range of insights,
analyses and audience measurement services.
TNS Media combines the deepest expertise in the industry to provide
media and marketing intelligence including advertising expenditure
monitoring, advertising creation monitoring, audience measurement,
market influence analytics, online consumer behavior tracking, news
monitoring, sports sponsorship evaluation and more. The TNS Media
companies track more than 3 million brands and provide vital market
intelligence to 16,000 customers around the world. For further information,
please visit www.tnsmediagroup.com
About Kantar Group and TNS
The Kantar Group is one of the world's largest research, insight
and consultancy networks. By uniting the diverse talents of more
than 20 specialist companies – including the recently-acquired
TNS – the group aims to become the pre-eminent provider of
compelling and actionable insights for the global business community.
Its 26,500 employees work across 80 countries and across the whole
spectrum of research and consultancy disciplines, enabling the group
to offer clients business insights at each and every point of the
consumer cycle. The group’s services are employed by over
half of the Fortune Top 500 companies. For further information,
please visit www.kantargrouptns.com
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