Recent television advertising articles
Advertising spend was hard hit in 2009 – down 1.6 percent compared to 2008, according to Nielsen’s Global AdView Pulse, which reports advertising across 27 markets in Asia, North America, Europe and Africa.
[read more]Nielsen today released “C3″ ratings data for television viewing in the first week of the 2009-2010 TV season.
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When it comes to making television programs available online, many companies are testing the consumer adoption of different business models and the technology required for each.
[read more]U.S. ad spending fell 15.4% in the first half of 2009, according to data released today by The Nielsen Company. A total of $56.9 billion was spent on advertising in the first six months of the year, more than $10.3 billion less than the same time period in 2008.
[read more]The Nielsen Company reported today that U.S. advertising for the first quarter 2009 was down 12% compared to the first quarter 2008. Preliminary figures show that U.S. ad expenditures declined $3.8 billion to a total spend of $27.9 billion in the first quarter.
All measured media showed negative growth in this difficult economy, ranging from Spanish-Language Cable TV (-1.1%) to Local Sunday Supplements (-37.7%).
“These first quarter results will hardly come as a surprise to an advertising industry that’s struggling just like many other areas of the American economy,” said Annie Touliatos, …
[read more]A product placement within the show “Survivor” for Charmin topped the Nielsen IAG chart of Most Recalled In-Program Placements for a reality series on the broadcast networks. Similarly, a “hybrid” ad (where sponsor messaging is combined with program or entertainment content) for Dr Pepper during “Top Chef,” was the most-recalled ad of its type. Ads for these top 10 lists were show between February 16 and March 15, 2009.
[read more]Nielsen’s final look at ad buys by the 2008 Presidential candidates proved one famous mantra: politics really are local.
President-elect Barack Obama placed one-and-a-half times as many spot TV ads than John McCain during the general election season (6/08 to 11/08), and almost twice as many ads dating back to the beginning of January when the primaries were just heating up.
SPOT TV ADS: June-Nov 2008
Barack Obama
419,667
John McCain
269,992
The local numbers show a much bigger discrepancy than those for national cable and network buys. Sen. McCain kept pace w/ President-elect Obama in those …
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