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Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Super Bowl Ads Becoming the Corporate Jet of Marketing?


This year Super Bowl ads ran a whopping $3 million dollars per 30-second spot. Although ads have run more than $3 million per spot in the past, this year marks the highest starting price to date. The question becomes, in an economy like this, does this kind of marketing convey stability and positive Branding or are Super Bowl ads becoming the corporate jet of marketing?

If you missed the game, check out JDM's Top 10 Super Bowl Ads of 2009.

Few would argue the game this year was more exciting than the commercials, but at such a hefty price tag, consumer cynicism must be on marketer's minds. It's simply naive to think consumers won't find businesses spending this kind of money on ads after massive layoffs shameful.

As the corporate jet was a symbol of corporate success, power and influence in the 80's and 90's, so too were Super Bowl ads. They have astonished audiences every year for decades. Today, however, those times are over. The corporate jet is now a symbol of corporate greed, mismanagement and misplaced priorities. Perhaps it's time marketers understood that $3 million dollar super bowl ads will soon position their Brands in a similar light as the super corporate jet.

Miller's ads prior to the game say it all. "$3 Millions Dollars per 30 Seconds?! That's $100,000 a second! Our ads should be 1-second long and just say 'Yeah!'"

Well said, beer delivery man!

3 comments:

  1. Loved the commercials, especially the HR ones.
    ReplyDelete
  2. Super Bowl commercials are great.

    Question is, do they send the right message when the very businesses paying for the ads are laying off huge numbers of people?
    ReplyDelete
  3. you bring up a good point about perception. i think you could argue a lot of companies making layoffs are because of poor business decisions (granted, like spending $5million on a superbowl spot or $400 mill on stadium naming rights)... in those cases, i think more than just the marketing expenditures could/should be frowned upon.

    but in this down economy, now is the perfect time to advertise.

    ad revenue is down across the board... whether it be print, radio, tv, online .... whatever. marketing dollars are either being slashed or non-existent for a lot of companies. naturally, those who do have the funds are going to spend them.

    the best time to act is when the competitive landscape is somewhat scarce.... now is that time for a lot of companies.
    ReplyDelete

 
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