Media company Turner Broadcasting commissioned a study showing that shifting as little as 10% of promotional dollars to media advertising can result in big return on media investment results for
marketers.
The study -- conducted with IRI, the consumer products/healthcare marketing analytics company -- noted that consumer product marketers can spend as much as 66% of marketing dollars on
promotion. Shifting 10% of that money can return in return on investment (ROI) gains of 10% to 25%.
Turner/IRI research looked at three years of data, across 62 brands representing $20 billion
in sales and $3 billion in marketing spend across food, beverage, health care, beauty and home-care marketers.
The research indicates that the results are more dramatic when separating
short-term and long-term ROI versus overall promo spending. Short-term ROI of media “is comparable to standalone promotional efforts.” But long-term ROI media spend can be two to three
times that of promotion. Beverages, food and healthcare in particular can see major results.
For example, every dollar spent on short-term media advertising for a beverage marketer
produced an ROI of $1.21 -- comparable to promotion spending, which yielded $0.96. But this amount rose substantially when looking at long-term media spending, where for every dollar spent, it
produced $2.54 in ROI.
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