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State of the Screens

Midterm TV spending to rival last presidential election

By October 3, 2018No Comments

Political TV spend according to Magna:
1)
2014 — $2.4B
2)
2018 — $2.9B (↑ 21%)

Competitive races according to The Cook Political Report:
1)
House — 95
2)
Senate — 8

YoY growth for local TV spend:
1)
Including political — ↑ 9%
2)
Excluding political — ↓ 5%

Political advertising revenue for E.W. Scripps:
1)
2014 — $75M
2)
2016 — $101M
3)
2018P — $112M

Digital is the fastest growing platform in politics but still trails TV spend.

2018 spend share according to Kantar CMAG:
1)
Local broadcast — 62%
2)
Local cable — 22%
3)
Digital (all types) — 16%

2018 spending growth compared to 2014:
1)
Digital (all types) — ↑ 140%
2)
Local cable — ↑ 42%
3)
Local broadcast — ↑ 14%
4)
Total — ↑ 31%

Flashback #1: Pew Research Center: Local TV News Fact Sheet

Local broadcast station revenue by year (TV only):
1) 2010 — $19.4b
2) 2011 — $17.9b
3) 2012 — $20.3b
4) 2013 — $18.4b
5) 2014 — $20.0b
6) 2015 — $18.5b
7) 2016 — $20.6b
8) 2017 — $19.8b*
9) 2018 — $21.1b*

Politics is the trailblazer in targeted TV and digital advertising.

Key quote from Vincent Letang — EVP, Global Market Intelligence @ Magna:
“Political campaigns have been pioneering those new capabilities within the industry, because they are incentivized to take advantage of as much niche targeting as possible.”

Flashback #2: Big Data Portends Big Changes To Spot Buys

Quote from Brent McGoldrick — CEO @ Deep Root Analytics.
“Political campaigns will always know more about the audience they’re trying to target than the broadcasters do. In the data arms race between buyers and sellers, the sellers have to catch up.”

Quick math:
1) 80% of adults are registered to vote
2) 50% of registered voters will vote this fall
3) ≈ 10–20% of voters are persuadable
4)4–8% of adults in battleground districts are persuadable and will vote this fall

Get smart fast: Sign up for Sara Fischer’s must-read newsletter(Axios Media Trends) here!!!

More #1: Viral Videos Are Replacing Pricey Political Ads. They’re Cheaper, and They Work.

More #2: Democrats Won’t Stop, Can’t Stop, Spending Big Bucks on Television Ads

More #3: Politicians Turn To Ad Supported OTT For Better Targeting, Brand Safety and Bigness.

Michael Beach

Michael Beach is the Chief Executive Officer of Cross Screen Media, a media analytics and software company that enables marketers to plan, activate, and measure CTV and linear TV at the local level. Michael is also the founder and editor of State of the Screens, a weekly newsletter focused on video advertising that is a must-read for thought leaders in the advertising industry. He has appeared in such publications as PBS Frontline, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Axios, CNBC and Bloomberg, and on NPR’s Planet Money podcast.