Spending $3 million on a Super Bowl ad -- and then releasing it early on YouTube?
Someone is losing "content" exclusivity on the commercial.
In a continual effort to monetize the entire Super Bowl marketing experience, a number of advertisers again released
their TV commercials in advance of the Super Bowl itself. What was going on here?
Talking babies, frisky chimpanzees, men being hit in their private parts with an assortment of objects, hot
women, associations with pop culture icons like Darth Vader, spy-theme messaging, and fast cars: We have all seen it before -- so why not earlier?
In recent years, to extend their big Super
Bowl media and creative spending, marketers have continued to
stretch out their campaigns with contests and the like.
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The trend started five years ago when Frito-Lay pushed its Doritos brand with consumer-generated TV commercials starting in
September -- six months before the Super Bowl. This year sister brand Pepsi Max joined the mix. Before the game itself, potential winning commercials from both brands were available on digital
platforms.
Now, other marketers -- movie companies, in particular
-- have also released their Super Bowl spots early. A Paramount spot for "Cowboys & Aliens" was released early Sunday, for example. Movie marketing executives, of course, have long
practiced advance buzz/spin, to help drive anticipation of new films weeks before their release. The game itself featured 14 commercials previewing new titles.
Non-movie brands getting
into the commercial pre-release act this year included Volkswagen's "Kid Vader" spot -- spinning off the Darth Vader "Star Wars" character -- that was on YouTube for some time
before the game. It's received and some 13 million Internet views. And Careerbuilder's "Parking Lot" ad -- featuring the brand's continued focus on monkeys -- received more than
200,000 views.
Surely, pre-Super Bowl viewing numbers of 200,000, and even 13 million, don't come close to the more than 106 estimated million viewers from the Super Bowl's TV
exposure. But you can see where this is headed.
Growing media platforms look at movie commercials and TV promos as "content," but was't someone getting hurt here? Fox, which
broadcast this year's big game, wasn't too worried about losing exclusivity. While average consumers do have big interest in checking out Super Bowl commercials, the dominant reason to watch
the Super Bowl remains the football action.
Still, you have to wonder -- way down the road -- if this may become an issue. If advertisers release all 60-odd TV commercials before the game,
will TV networks still be able to command $3 million or so for a 30-second commercial?
Historically, TV networks have always ceded to the wishes of their advertisers in deciding on their
marketing plans -- including how and when they release their messaging materials.
With the release of content from Super Bowl marketers changing radically, future TV networks might need to
address this activity -- or, perhaps, capitalize on it.