[opendtv] The Election Channel
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 22 Apr 2008 09:49:10 -0400
That ATSC tuner in your TV is helping to pay for this...
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA6553085.html?industryid=47171
Political TV Ads Uneven, Back-Loaded
Stations Await $3B Windfall from Pols, But When?
By Robert Marich -- Broadcasting & Cable, 4/19/2008 11:29:00 AM
All ships are not rising with the tide of political TV advertising.
The reason: Election-cycle spending is uneven so far. The entire TV
medium is still in line to be awash with $3 billion in 2008 political
advertising, up from $2.4 billion in 2006 and $1.7 billion in 2004,
according to political-ad-spend researcher TNS CMAG (the latter
acronym is for Campaign Media Analysis Group).
But behind that happy 2008 total are two unsettling wrinkles for TV
stations: Geographic distribution is uneven and the big spending may
arrive weeks later than the traditional midsummer.
This election season's quirks stem from the unprecedented lengthy
race between Sens. Barack Obama (Ill.) and Hillary Clinton (N.Y.) for
the Democratic Party presidential nomination. In past presidential
races, the two main party nominees emerged weeks earlier.
The uncertainty obviously holds back ad spending in the presidential
race because even the Republicans that have a presumptive nominee
aren't sure which Democrat to target. More significant, there's other
political spending for Congress, state, local and advocacy groups,
which take their cues from the two party standard bears. "We're
seeing a lot of political advertising just sitting on the sidelines
that we would have expected to start being deployed around this
time," one TV-station sales executive said.
Any late arrival of political ads -- meaning a back-loading
phenomenon -- looks to hurt TV stations because the real economic bon
is tightening up commercial inventory, which indirectly drives up TV
ad prices for other classes of advertisers. Federal Election
Commission rules guarantee candidates the lowest unit price for
airtime, so candidate ads alone aren't gushers. If the political ads
are late in arriving, the general tightening of TV-commercial
inventory will be limited.
What's happened so far on a geographic basis is that certain
battleground states get heavy ad spending, but others simply get a
fleeting burst. All 24 states in the Feb. 5 Super Tuesday primaries
-- including New York, California, Illinois and Massachusetts -- got
"only a dusting of advertising," said Evan Tracey, chief operating
officer of TNS-CMAG. "Yes, there was political spending, but just for
a couple of weeks."
Reflecting the feast-or-famine climate, upcoming primarily states
Pennsylvania, Indiana and North Carolina are enjoying heavy ad spend,
according to TNS-CMAG. Also doing well were earlier primary states
Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Texas and Ohio.
Tracey cautioned that political ad spend is never evenly spread and
is always difficult to predict, but so far this election season,
geographic imbalance is significant and a back-loading phenomenon
seems likely.
"The advertising will come, but there is the possibility of inventory
issues in some places," Tracey added. "There could be some states
where there is more money available than time to buy" if political TV
spending arrives late in the election season.
Tracey said one conspicuous bright spot is the Obama campaign's
ability to raise vast amounts of money. In yet another wrinkle in
political-ad deployment, the Obama campaign is funneling an unusually
large 40% portion of its ad spend into primetime -- compared with a
more traditional 18% by rival Clinton -- buying less TV news that is
usually the mainstay of political spending.
For the overall TV-station economic outlook, media analysts are
predicting healthy TV-ad-spending gains in 2008 on the order of
8%-10% due to the anticipated political injection, but the play out
so far puts that rosy forecast at risk. If the tsunami of political
advertising arrives late, then the second quarter ending June 30
might be a dud for many TV stations and TV-station industry revenue
forecasts for this year could be scaled back.
Indications are that the first quarter ended March 31 proved
disappointing for TV-station revenue. NBC-owned TV stations suffered
an 11% drop in first quarter local advertising, which parent General
Electric attributed to poor conditions in the overall economy. Media
General reported Thursday that its network-affiliated TV stations
experienced a 1.2% revenue decline in the first quarter, which even
sharply increased political ads could not push into positive
territory.
To date, TNS-CMAG counted $388 million in 2008 political TV
advertising so far. That's $150 million spent by candidates
themselves, $114 million for ballot initiatives and $124 million in
issue and policy-advocacy ads.
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