Advertising spending in U.S. measured media is expected to increase almost 4 percent in 2008 compared with 2007, when spending is expected to increase 3 percent, according to a new study from GroupM, MarketingCharts reports. Worldwide spending is expected to go up 7 percent in 2008, after an anticipated 6 percent increase in 2007.
The study, “This Year, Next Year,” is part of GroupM’s media and marketing forecasting series drawn from data supplied by holding company WPP’s resources in advertising, public relations, market research, and specialist communications.
U.S. advertising spending is expected to increase 3.7 percent, to $168.6 billion, in 2008. Spending in 2007 is expected to come in at 2.8 percent higher than in 2006. Worldwide spending is expected to go up 6.8 percent - to some $479 billion: See table of global ad spend in measured media, by region, 2005-2008.
Television and the internet are the primary engines of global ad growth, with 50 percent and 30 percent, respectively, of additional new investment in 2008, according to GroupM Futures Director Adam Smith, who oversees “This Year, Next Year” reports.
He also said spending on marketing services, such as sponsorships and public relations, is growing at a faster rate than for traditional advertising.
Smith reported that 5 percent of global ad investment is expected to shift from developed to emerging economies in 2008 - the largest such shift ever recorded:
“This eastward shift is a form of ‘advertising arbitrage’ in which traditional media dollars are moving to the place where they can do the most good,” Smith said.
Also according to the GroupM report:
See coverage of GroupM’s previous forecast: “GroupM Global Ad Forecast: $433B in ‘07, $462B in ‘08“
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