Republican Presidential Candidate Mitt Romney has placed more political ads than any other two presidential candidates combined - he has placed 10,893 political ads from January 1 to October 10, compared with 5,975 for Bill Richardson and 4,293 for Barack Obama, the two runners-up - The Nielsen Company reported (via MarketingCharts).
Nielsen also reported:
Traditional Media: Democrats Outpace GOP
The Online Race
Over the past several months, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have been vying for the most popular presidential campaign website (see table):
Despite low web traffic, John McCain continues to lead the presidential contenders in online advertising, with 4.3 million sponsored link impressions in August (see table).
Dennis Kucinich ranked No. 2 with 1.8 million sponsored links, followed by Mitt Romney and Hillary Clinton with 1.7 million and 522,000 sponsored link impressions, respectively.
Buzz-Worthy Candidates
Nielsen measures television and radio advertisements through Nielsen Monitor-Plus, internet advertising through Nielsen/NetRatings, and blog and other consumer-generated media activity through Nielsen BuzzMetrics.
Hyper-conservative Rush Limbaugh - heard weekly by nearly 20 million listeners on about 600 radio stations nationwide - renewed his contract with Premiere Radio Networks and Clear Channel Radio, continuing syndication of The Rush Limbaugh Show.
The deal also includes…
WSJ.com’s traffic soared an impressive 94 percent in June compared to the same month last year, according to the company’s internal traffic numbers.
Total page views ballooned 45 percent, to 150 million, compared to the same month last year, writes Mediaweek.…
Kozy Shack, maker of rice and chocolate pudding, is sponsoring the New York Mets, with tubs of the pudding being sold individually at Shea Stadium as well as being included in children’s meals. And the snacks are selling so well…
Though U.K. advertiser investment committed for 2008 is staying put, discretionary spending is becoming shorter-term, at or slightly short of budget; still, WPP’s GroupM forecasts 4 percent growth in 2008 and 3 percent in 2009 for the U.K., thanks to internet…
Email is the most popular form of direct response marketing, with 35 percent of companies using it - compared to 25 percent that use traditional direct mail - according to a new survey conducted by Direct Partners (via Adweek).
The survey…
Without spam protection, the average web user can expect to get 70 spam messages each day, according to a survey by McAfee, the BBC reports (via MarketingVOX).
For the McAfee spam test, 50 people worldwide were asked to web-surf without a spam…