Procter & Gamble released Q4 earnings results today that beat analysts’ expectations, in part because the company cut a chunk of its digital ad spending. And throughout its
fiscal year (which ended June 30), it also cut ad production costs and agency fees.
In other words, the company is walking the walk that its top marketing officer, Mark Pritchard,
has been talking about all year—cleaning up the waste and inefficiencies in the ad sector, particularly in the digital space.
Sources tell me the firm probably whacked $200 million out of
its ad expenses in the just ended fiscal year, much of it coming in Q4 and most of it coming from the digital side.
On a call with analysts and investors earlier today, company CFO
Jon Moeller said the Q4 marketing cuts were mostly related to spending on the digital side, and “was a choice to cut spending where it was ineffective. Where we were serving bots as opposed to
human beings.”
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Importantly, Moeller stressed, the cuts did not result in “a reduction in the growth rate” of company revenues. “And what that tells me is that
spending that we cut was largely ineffective.”
The good news for Adland is that P&G doesn’t necessarily see the reduced spending as permanent, if inefficiencies can
be eliminated from the digital ecosystem.
“What we'd love to do, and what we're working with our media partners to do,” added Moeller, “is create a very efficient supply chain
that helps us build our brands. And we'd love to invest more in doing just that.”
Hard to argue with that, right Adland?