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Super Bowl Prices Up, Ad Inventory Almost Out

It’s the time of year when major marketers turn their minds to the Super Bowl and its ads.
Sources say that CBS has sold approximately 80 percent of its ad inventory for the Feb. 4, 2007 Super Bowl. Ads are going for a bit more than $2.6 million a pop, writes Adweek. CBS won’t confirm the report, but did say that the first half was virtually sold out. It added that there were some spots left, mostly in the fourth quarter of the game.

Automaker GM has said it will be back to sponsor the game this year, as has Anheuser-Busch, CareerBuilder.com, Federal Express, PepsiCo, Frito-Lay (whose ad will be created by consumers) and GoDaddy.com.

Criminal Minds will get the coveted lead-out slot of the game.

Super Bowl-related programming will begin at noon. Ads start at $100,000 per 30 seconds and get increasingly more expensive leading up to kick-off. Last year, Super Bowl ads went for an average of about $2.4 million. While some advertisers are paying $2.6 million for slots this year, it is difficult to say what the average price will be, with spots still left to sell.

Some advertisers pay less per spot because of the quantity they purchase. Anheuser-Busch, for example, will pay about $2 million per spot for the 10 spots it will purchase.
The NFL ad market has remained robust this year. Ratings are up for regular season games, and so is pricing, by high single digits, to more than $300,000 per 30-second spot for games on CBS, according to John Bogusz, evp, sports sales at CBS.

Last year, the Super Bowl scored record prices for ads. Ratings for the game were up half a point from the previous year.

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Dunkin’ Donuts Bows $100MM “You Kin’ Do It!” Campaign

Dunkin’ Donuts on Monday bowed a $100+ million integrated advertising campaign that offers a new rallying cry for consumers hard hit by the economy: “You Kin’ Do It!”

The “You Kin’ Do It” national campaign broke with three television spots airing during…

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‘Chicago Tribune’ on Redesign: We Didn’t Get Everything Right

In a note to readers wrapped around the Chicago Tribune’s A section today (Thursday), editor Gerould W. Kern acknowledged that the redesign the paper unveiled several months ago was unsuccessful to some extent.

The paper will be going back to its…

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eMarketer: Top 10 Predictions for 2009

The advertising outlook for 2009 remains relatively upbeat for certain types of online media and marketing - including search, video and multicultural initiatives - but traditional media and some social networks will face serious difficulties, according to predictions released by…

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Super Bowl Advertisers Expected to Integrate Campaigns around Big Game

Super Bowl advertisers - including Monster.com, which is returning after a four-year hiatus - are making the most of their $3 million ad buy by creating integrated follow-up campaigns, says Kellogg School of Management professor Tim Calkins.

Calkins, co-leader of…

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Verizon Taps Microsoft for Exclusive Search, Ad Deal

Yesterday at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer announced the development of a coveted liaison with Verizon Wireless.

The five-year contract makes Microsoft the default search provider to Verizon’s sizable user base. It will also…

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Meredith Zaps ‘Country Home,’ Cuts 250

The latest casualty in the shrinking shelter category is Meredith’s Country Home. The magazine’s March 2009 issue will be its last.

The company, which is also slashing its workforce by 250 people, cited a soft economy for the demise of…

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