Obama Beats Romney In Online Political Ad Spend

Barack Obama consistently spent more money for online advertising, compared with Mitt Romney, during the 2012 U.S. presidential campaign.
The Obama campaign increased the amount spent in online advertising in August 2011, and by September 2012 reached $2.51 million for the month, compared with Romney's $3.03 million for the month.
Obama's FEC filing reveals online advertising was the highest expense after media buys and payroll, according to Rise Interactive, a search marketing company.
Romney's filing indicated that online advertising spend went to direct mail consulting, digital consulting and four other expenses. It turns out that while Obama had a higher overall spend and prioritized online spending higher, Romney spent more for online advertising overall.
Rise analyzed paid-search spend, impressions and clicks for both candidates. Obama spent $1.18 million on paid search, compared with Romney's 0.24 million. The company said Obama gained 1.1 million clicks on 22.3 million impressions, compared with Romney's 0.23 million clicks on 4.5 million impressions. Click-through rates were 4.93% versus 5.11%, respectively.
Rise also looked at keyword bidding. Obama spent $146,000 in June and August, compared with Romney's $84,000 during the same time period.
Will the amount spent in online advertising and marketing have any real influence on the U.S. presidential elections?
WordStream Founder Larry Kim said it's difficult to say because some voters research candidates on search engines, such as Bing and Google.
"I think remarketing is really effective for, say, chasing people who visited a candidate's site yet didn't sign up or donate money to a campaign," Kim said. "So yes -- I think it may have some impact, not unlike other forms of advertising. The challenge is that you can jam more interesting content into a TV ad versus a banner ad or text link."
When it comes to display ads, the start-up Moat provides ad search technology and analytics that indexes the Internet and allows marketers to view the ads serving up on publishers' sites across the Internet. As campaigning comes to a close, searches on the engine reveal that 657 ads serve up about Obama versus 112 for Mitt Romney.
Recent Online Media Daily Articles
-
Weather.com Develops Real-Time Data Ad Targeting May 17, 5:12 p.m.
Weather.com has begun using audience segmentation data from Lotame to develop real-time ad targeting services based ... -
MetroPCS Drops Challenge To Neutrality Rules May 17, 4:44 p.m.
T-Mobile's newly acquired MetroPCS withdrew its challenge to the Federal Communications Commission's net neutrality rules on ... -
'Geo-Conquesting' Drives Higher Mobile Click Rates May 17, 3:56 p.m.
The practice of conquesting -- running advertising for a brand or product near editorial content about ... -
Cox-Backed, Skyword Raises $6.7 Million To Enhance Content Creation May 17, 3:34 p.m.
Internet services and utilities will rely more on content as the industry matures. Shereta Williams, vice ... -
Ford, Jeep, Chevy Top Digital Auto Brands May 17, 1:09 p.m.
On the digital proving track, Detroit is beating out the competition. Ford, Jeep and Chevrolet were ... -
Choosing Sides: VivaKi Backs comScore; ABC Throws In With Nielsen May 17, 9:52 a.m.
In a battle to control the future of the ad industry’s currency, Nielsen and comScore each ... -
Yahoo Adds Tweets To News Feed May 16, 6:18 p.m.
Yahoo will incorporate selected tweets into the news feed on its redesigned home page through a ... -
Mozilla Puts Cookie-Blocking On Hold May 16, 6:16 p.m.
Mozilla is putting the brakes on plans to block third-party cookies by default in the upcoming ... -
Mobile Ad Results In Line With Rich Media May 16, 5:39 p.m.
Mobile display ads perform roughly on par with rich media ads in terms of click-through and ... -
Google Plans To Transition Brands Into Content-Driven Advertising May 16, 4:30 p.m.
Google wants technology to "step out of the way" as developers integrate it into everyday life. ...


1 comment on "Obama Beats Romney In Online Political Ad Spend".
Leave a Comment