Welcome | View My Profile | Sign Out
MediaPost Home About MediaPost Privacy/Terms Media Kit Sitemap
Publications Home News
Online Media Daily Media Daily News Marketing Daily Mobile Marketing Daily Search Marketing Daily
Daily Feed> Email Daily Feed> Video Daily Feed> Social
Online Blogs
Online Spin Email Insider Search Insider Behavioral Insider Online Publishing Insider Mobile Insider Video Insider Gaming Insider Performance Insider Metrics Insider Social Media Insider Just An Online Minute Daily Online Examiner Raw Blog
Media Blogs
Research Brief Diane Mermigas:On Media TV Watch TV Board Magazine Rack Media Creativity Notes From the Digital Frontier Digital Outsider Mad Blog Red White and Blog
Marketing Blogs
Engage:Hispanics Engage:Kids 6-11 Engage:Moms Engage:Boomers Engage:Gen Y Engage:Teens Marketing:Green Marketing:Sports
Magazines
OMMA Magazine Media Magazine
Subscribe
Feedback Loop RSS Feeds Archives Subscribe
Dec 2 Search Insider Summit (Utah) Dec 6 Email Insider Summit (Utah) Jan 11 OMMA Agency of the Year (NYC) Jan 12 MEDIA Agency of the Year (NYC) Jan 26 OMMA Social (San Francisco) Jan 27 OMMA Performance (SF) Feb 24 OMMA Metrics Measurement (NYC) Feb 25 OMMA Behavioral (NYC) Mar 15 OMMA Global (San Francisco) Apr 14 Search Insider Summit (FL) Apr 18 Email Insider Summit (FL)
Recently Concluded Events
Nov 3 OMMA Adnets (NYC) Oct 30 OMMA Video (LA) Oct 29 OMMA Mobile (LA) Oct 29 OMMA Mobile & Video (LA) Sep 23 Creative Media Awards (NYC) Sep 23 The Future Of Media (NYC) Sep 22 Online All Stars (NYC) Sep 21 OMMA Awards (NYC) Sep 21 MediaPost Live at Advertising Week All-Access (NYC) Sep 21 OMMA Global New York (NYC)
All MediaPost/OMMA Events Event Blogging Past Event Videos
Industry Events Calendar
2010 OMMA Agency of the Year 2010 MEDIA Agency of the Year
2009 Creative Media Awards 2009 OMMA Awards 2009 Digital Out-of-Home Awards 2009 Media Agency of the Year 2009 OMMA Agency of the Year
All Awards
Employment Situations Wanted Services Offered Post a Job
Briefs Reports Online
MediaPost Directories
Mobile Insiders Group
People Finder Edit My Profile View My Profile My Contacts My Calendar
HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
On Media
Keep It Real: Pragmatic Media Predictions For 2009
by Diane Mermigas, Friday, December 19, 2008, 8:00 AM

SHARE

TOOLS

RELATED ARTICLES
TAGS:  Media Planning

MOST READ

Although 2009 is expected to be as difficult an economic year as companies and individuals have experienced, the continuing entrenchment and endearment of digital interactivity suggests a glass half-full future. Here is a list of predictions from a pragmatist seeking the upside:

Television broadcasters and newspapers have their moment of truth

Many individual and group TV and newspaper properties will collapse under the weight of an advertising recession and legacy costs. Their online and other digital revenues will fail to offset double-digit ad losses. Loan covenants and debt payments will be missed. Some will shut down; a few will sell off in a dismal deal market.

All media will hang on and gear up for post-recession consolidation

When asset values are reset and financing flows, every kind of rollup and startup will abound: TV and radio stations, newspapers, TV networks, production companies, agencies, and everything Internet.

There will be big media sellers

Sacked with thinly valued stock prices, declining revenues and earnings, and a long, painful recovery, many media properties will be sold. Majority shareholders and owners are under pressure to sell or merge assets, including Yahoo, CBS Corp., Time Warner's AOL, General Electric's NBC Universal, New York Times Co., bankrupt Tribune Co., book publishers such as CBS' Simon & Schuster, Take Two and Sirius XM.

There will be big media spenders

Media conglomerates with cash will fill strategic needs buying at attractive valuations. Prospective buyers include Time Warner, News Corp., Google, Microsoft, and Liberty Media. Most likely deals: Yahoo-AOL-Microsoft, NYT-News Corp., NBCU-Time Warner, Viacom-CBS, IAC's Home Shopping Network-Liberty's QVC, Take Two-Electronic Arts. Bank, private equity, venture capital and other capital outlets may begin to thaw by the end of 2009.

Legacy costs, structure and processes are history

The only way may be Chapter 11 bankruptcy for some bigger players. Going digital, going green, and infrastructure redo tech boom will be other ways that companies of all size will wrestle with their legacy demons.

The Long Tail gets squeezed

Only the niche enterprises with the strongest, most lucrative consumer and advertiser following will thrive in The Great Recession. Others may have to align with or be folded into a larger entity to survive. Online niche has not existed long enough to develop a recession-proof business model, but it will continue as a primary element in the connected digital universe.

Advertisers will spend even less than the worst-case decline forecast

More of what they spend will shift online and to other digital platforms, where overall growth could exceed single digits. Advertiser spending will noticeably decline in the broadcast network's upfront, which has its last big hurrah. Cable networks inch closer to ad-dollar parity, but suffer the same online competition pressures. Newspapers continue to tank, unless they participate in the massive contraction and consolidation of cross-platform news.

Major ad categories will never be the same

Major advertisers such as automotives, financial services, retail and real estate will not return any time soon; they will be diminished and different when they rebound a year from now. That is a disaster for local media, which could easily see more than half their ad revenue base wiped out in 2009. For instance, automotives generally have comprised 40% of local TV income.

Consumers continue to embrace and drive digital

Even in a recession, all age consumers will be discriminating spenders on the interactivity that best suits their needs and interests, mostly on devices and services they already own.

Local is the new social

Some local TV broadcasters and newspapers will begin to monetize enough to stay in business. Some Internet players will begin to dabble more in this huge void. Relevant local information, social sharing, retail coupons, school and community data, sports scores, car pools, etc. remain a big missed opportunity.It will be delivered to Internet-connected mobile devices, including smartphones. A new player will emerge and do for local content and services online what Craigslist did for regionalized classified advertising.

At least one broadcast network disappears

The CBS Broadcast TV Network is the most likely candidate to collapse or convert into a general entertainment cable network. It is a possibility whether CBS Corp. remains autonomous, is sold, or is reunited with Viacom, given Sumner Redstone's debt problems. NBC-TV, Fox-TV and ABC-TV also recognize the need to establish a solid second revenue stream that would come from converting their traditional broadcast networks into general entertainment cable hubs. However, cable advertisers and subscribers would probably only support two of the four.

Digital video growth continues

Established long-form TV and film producers will create more intriguing ways to entice consumers with abbreviated five-minute forms of their content for dispatch to all corners of the social-networked Web. Many Internet and media players, such as Time Warner, Google, Yahoo, NBC Universal and Walt Disney, will launch virtual video studios. They will use existing and strategic partner resources to produce original content that will attract new advertising dollars. Some user-generated video will be more enterprising, professional and commercially successful. Online and television video will become more mutually supportive in driving consumers and advertisers.

Refinement of online functions

Search, discovery, e-commerce, social networking and personal relevance become the focus of new value-creation efforts by companies waiting out the recession.

New media economics and business models

Personal relevance and engagement become forces as strong as any marketing brand; e-transactions become as important as advertising revenues and subscription fees.

More accountable, monetizable media metrics

Advertisers demand and get more ROI from interactive digital buys. A new metric that begins to take shape involves mutual monetizable connections that target consumers, advertisers and producers of goods and services. Measurement will extend to tracking what users do with advertising, data, content and connections in ways that generate revenues. Other devleoping new metrics will measure and value user engagement.

Mobile connectivity will become the core platform

The road to universal WiFi and WiMax may be bumpy, but anywhere, anything interactivity on smartphones, video-friendly PDAs and other wireless mobile devices will be the global screen of choice. Primary drivers will include interactive communications, location-based services and e-transactions.

Governments and gatekeepers seek digital cash

New York Gov. David Paterson is just the first to propose an iPod tax on digitally delivered entertainment services--one of nearly 90 new fees and taxes to help close the state's $15 billion budget gap. Other ailing states (including California and Illinois) and the federal government as well as distributors, such as cable system operators, will follow.

2 people recommend this article. 

2 comments on "Keep It Real: Pragmatic Media Predictions For 2009"

  1. Doug Poretz from Qorvis Communications
    commented on: December 22, 2008 at 9:45 PM
    I also posted this at Seeking Alpha, where your comments were also posted:

    I agree with much of your predictions. Here are two more:

    -- There will be at least one failure among the several multinational communications conglomerates built through earn-out acquisitions of ad agencies, pr firms, interactive and other related niche firms

    -- Whereas there will be a collapse in the amount of consumer-oriented "buy this" messengers hitting the American citizen, there will be a very noticeable increase in the amount of politically-driven messages due to the mission critical need special interest groups (corporations, associations, community groups, etc.) will have to defend the status quo that benefits them from being changed and to promulgate new proposals that could aid them. The increase in "supporterism" will be attributable to the ability of President Obama to sell his agenda to the American public for enactment by a majority Democrat Hill. This will gradually lead to a shift in cultural values in the nation.

  2. Richard Wakefield from Glennco Consulting Group, Inc.
    commented on: December 19, 2008 at 10:58 PM
    My forecast shows the newspapers included in the NAA Advertising Expenditures series down 16.4% in 2008 and another 19.9% in 2009. Yes, there will be reorgs next year.

Leave a Comment

You must be signed in to comment. Sign In
DIANE MERMIGAS



ARCHIVES

Recent MediaDailyNews Articles
Huffington Post Increases Advertising, Revenue Streams   
Arianna Huffington says she will not charge consumers for content, and that The Huffington Post will...
Publicis Chief: No Free Digital Media    
Advertising will not pay the freight for digital media, like it has for newspapers and television,...
Cable As Catalyst For Future Profits   
Cable networks are a sweet spot in a media industry struggling to find its financial footing....
AOL, Yahoo Could Be Smart Buys For Savvy Giant   
The unintended consequences of Yahoo and AOL repositioning themselves as online content companies and magnets for...
TV Futures: Charging For Online Shows   
Hulu's online video platform may be a success with the masses, but it will have to...
Broadcast Nets Should Program Digital Risks   
A case can be made just a month into the new TV season that the Big...
5 Factors That Will Determine Future Ad Spend   
Some optimistic ad forecasts have been made in a vacuum, without taking into account the headwinds...
Comcast-NBCU Merger Spells Big-Time Change Everywhere   
Comcast's bid to co-own NBC Universal is a grab for digital content dominance that will trigger...
Iger's Screen Test: Disney Film Goes Digital    
Walt Disney CEO Bob Iger is likely to couple the appointment of a new studio chief...
Wounded Peacock: GE Debates Selling, Spinning NBCU   
General Electric's pending decision to retain total or partial ownership of NBC Universal could hinge on...
>> MediaDailyNews Archives 
ABOUT MEDIAPOST • MASTHEAD • MEDIA KIT • RSS FEEDS • PRIVACY/TERMS & CONDITIONS
©2009 MediaPost Communications. All rights reserved.
1140 Broadway, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10001
tel. 212-204-2000, fax 212-204-2038, feedback@mediapost.com