The figures from AA/Warc are in, and as expected, 2016 was a massive year for digital marketing -- particularly mobile marketing. It grew 45% last year, nearly four times the growth rate of Internet
advertising. Although the growth of mobile will be steady, it is still forecast to shoot up 30% this year and 20% next.
That's the headline, but lurking a little lower down we have the
demise of print. It's at this point that I know someone will comment about print's many attributes, and as a journalist from way before computer screens brought us news, I couldn't agree more. The
trouble is that the figures don't lie. I am not happy about it, and I don't welcome it, but print's demise will only continue, and will likely worsen. Here's why.
First the figures. National
newspaper advertising was down 10% last year, and it will be down 7% this year and 7% again the year after, AA/Warc reveals. Regional newspaper advertising was down 13% last year. Yes, there were modest single-digit increases for digital advertising -- up 5% for nationals in 2016 -- but in no
way do they plug the gap of larger declines in print. Put it this way -- a 10% drop in national print advertising is very roughly equivalent to a little over GBP100m. National newspaper digital
revenues for 2016 were only GBP230m, so a 5% increase would have been very roughly a little over GBP10m. That means, as a very rough calculation, that national print's losses were ten times the size
of any digital gain.
The situation is worse for regionals. In fact, their digital revenues are reported to have declined last year, as well as print. In magazines, there is a near 7% dip
last year and virtually no rise in digital. So in each case, there isn't even the consolation of rising revenues in digital to make up for print's decline.
Not only does the situation look
like it's not going to get better, there is a major argument for it getting worse. A lot worse.
A chart from eMarketer for
UK attention vs UK media spend makes grim reading for print. If you look at just one chart today and bookmark it, this should be the one. Scan down to print and you will see it gets around 3% of our
media attention, yet nearly 12% of spend. This percentage will narrow slightly over the next couple of years -- however, by 2019, print spending is still forecast to be three times the attention that
the medium gets.
By way of comparison, Internet and mobile ad spend is just a little over a 1:1 ration in favour of spend. Radio, on the other hand, achieves seven times more attention than ad
spend -- and tv fails to hit a 1:1 ration, with more a little more attention than budget.
The conclusion, then, isn't that traditional channels are doomed -- because it looks like
there's a good case for more tv and radio spending, particularly radio. However, when you look at the decline of print and then study how much of our media time is devoted to it and how much ad spend
it receives, you can only presume that the slide in revenue is going to steepen.
There's a good case for saying a newspaper is immersive and media time spent leafing through news and features
is more valuable, and more focussed than on other channels. But does that really mean a channel that we devote 3% of our media time to should get nearly 12% of ad spend?
It brings me no joy --
in fact, it only saddens me -- to come to the conclusion that print still hasn't seen its worst days and that today's tumbling revenues only stand to get worse if the channel gets nearer to the
equilibrium between consumption and ad spend.