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Online Ads Growing Locally, But Not Fast Enough

By David Weir | Mar 17, 2009

The latest forecast for how local advertising dollars will be spent over the coming five years underscores just how dramatically and rapidly the transition to online advertising is becoming.

At the same time, the big picture for those existing on local ad revenue is bleak. According to the study, by BIA Advisory Services/Kelsey Group, overall local advertising spending will decline through 2013 — from  “$155.3 billion in 2008 to $144.4 billion in 2013, representing a negative 1.4 percent compound annual growth rate.”

That is not a media recession, that is a media depression.

As for the rest of the numbers, here is what BIA/Kelset projects: “… the interactive share of local ad spending will more than double from 9 percent in 2008 to 22.2 percent in 2013. According to the forecast, the interactive segment (encompassing mobile, Internet Yellow Pages, local search, online verticals and classifieds, voice search, e-mail marketing and other interactive revenues generated by traditional media players) will grow from $14 billion in 2008 to $32.1 billion in 2013 (at a CAGR of 18%), while the traditional segment (encompassing newspapers, direct mail, television, radio, print Yellow Pages, out of home (non-digital), cable television and magazines) will decrease from $141.3 billion in 2008 to $112.4 billion in 2013 (CAGR of -4.5%).

Of course, as we all know, five-year projections rarely work out (unless they are made and controlled by somebody like Chairman Mao), and there certainly are no shortages of opinions as to when and how robustly the economy will turnaround, which presumably will be the key determinative factor in all of this.

So, for me, the most salient takeaway for us in the media industry is that local online advertising, though today less than ten percent of traditional advertising revenue, will balloon to almost 30 percent of its offline cousin over the coming five years — and that’s good news.

But it will also be too little, too late for many media players, because it will still not be large enough (in volume or percentage) to underwrite the large-scale transition to online media for most local newspapers, TV and radio stations without significant cost cutting as well, which is why we can expect to continue seeing daily notices of more and more layoffs by those operations.

In fact, nothing envisioned in this report would cause that trend to let up — even if the economy bounces back more quickly than the analysts at BIA/Kelsey think, downsizing local media newsrooms (including their IT counterparts) will inevitably continue.

In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
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    MarketWatch - 19 days 18 hours 16 minutes ago

    CHICAGO (MarketWatch) -- Advertising revenue in local U.S. markets won't begin to rebound until 2012, and will do so only modestly when it does, according to a forecast issued Monday by a media advisory firm.The local ad market will generate a total of $144.9 billion in 2014, representing a compound annual growth rate of just 2.2% from 2009,...

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    eMarketer Today - 13 days 5 hours 28 minutes ago

    A deeper recession than expected in 2009, along with rapid structural changes to the local ad market, has caused BIA/Kelsey to lower expectations for local advertising spending, pushing the recovery curve out one year further than previously forecast. Last year, according to the firm’s “Annual US Local Media Forecast,” US local ad...

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  •  
    1

    bobbyp157

    03/17/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Online Ads Growing Locally, But Not Fast Enough

    There are only a few companies that provide any sort of software for local online advertising.

    www.acruxads.com provides both publishers and advertisers with a great model for purchasing ads on local blogs.

    google maps is a great source.

    yellow pages.com can be pricey but effective.

    It is still a shame newspapers could not adapt fast enough. On a bright side, their writers still will write, more blogs will be created and local content will still be produced.

  •  
    2

    hotweir

    03/17/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Online Ads Growing Locally, But Not Fast Enough

    I'm with you -- optimistic about the future of journalism if not newspapers...

  •  
    3

    markatty

    03/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Online Ads Growing Locally, But Not Fast Enough

    The problem with online advertising for local media is the advertising. Local businesses can see the results of their advertising, often because the owner who pays for the ad is behind the cash register and customers tell him or her what is working.

    Print ads in particular just don't generate the customers that they did 10 years ago. Their online versions usually just sit there, because the in-house ad people and local agencies think interactive advertising means a static ad you can click on to go to company's website. What about:

    - Point of sale cell phone coupons
    - Create your own discount coupons
    - Time-specific web advertising
    - Putting media content on keepsakes
    - Real-time advertiser control of ads
    - Sophisticated java effects
    - Online audio and video demos

    Among the many problems of trying do these type of things with old media is that:

    - they don't fit into today's local media structure
    - The technology that does exist is clunky if it exists at all
    - Ad sales people aren't well trained or well rewarded for this type of ad
    - Local businesses don't have the time or big enough budgets to do them as one-offs.

    But all is not lost, local media has local sales people who know their customers. Their customers can tell them what works and what doesn't. If something does work well it will spread rapidly, because of literally in-your-face local competition.

    At the present time, many local media websites are not very good and get little support from HQ on innovative ideas. The big media chains have major economies of scale to produce these sorts of local ads in national ad factories, but their structure is still stuck in the 20th Century.

    Creating national ad factories with not only graphics and copy writing, but also programmers, audio and video production teams, would give the local media the tool they need to compete in this new environment.

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