All that high-profile, pomp and social media around Super Bowl advertising -- does anyone remember any of it? New research suggests just a little.
Research from GlobalWebIndex says
only 21% of those who recall Super Bowl ads with celebrities considered making a purchase.
Just a few of those Super Bowl spots did well: Lil Nas X, Billy Ray Cyrus and Sam Elliot in a
Doritos spot posted the highest recall -- 39% of Super Bowl viewers. An Amazon Alexa spot was next, with Ellen DeGeneres and Portia De Rossi, at 38%.
Additionally, just 16% of Super Bowl
viewers recall brands committed to “purpose-driven” goals --
those who talked up charitable donations, product sustainability and volunteer work. Spots here came from Michelob Ultra, Verizon, Olay and Saucony.
Overall, 50% of those who recalled an ad
say their opinion of the brand didn’t change.
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GlobalWebIndex’s study was of 2,210 U.S. internet users ages 16-64, 1,363 of them watched Super Bowl LIV.
For years, some
Super Bowl messaging/advertising seemed to be much more for marketers. They don't want to be excluded from the ad discussions in the consumer press when it comes to polls over best Super Bowl TV
commercials.
But what about actual TV attribution, the return on specific media investment in the Super Bowl tracked to actual engagement, such as website visits, in-store traffic -- and the
goal standard of ROI -- actual sales of products and services?
Only a week or so after the big game, the jury is still out.
For years, especially with the Super Bowl, marketing
executives always believed TV advertising worked -- even if they didn’t exactly know why.
So, is that worth the $5.5 million for a 30-second spot in the big game played earlier this month, as well as including whatever
millions went into production of those TV commercials?
As big as the out-of-pocket TV advertising expense is for the Super Bowl, the CPM -- the cost per thousand viewers -- continues to be
somewhat reasonable, according to media buyers.
And, of course, there’s the attraction of the Super Bowl’s massive TV audience.
Big brand advertisers will continue to buy;
and we’ll continue to watch. But a moment or so after the big game, I’ll forget how anyone was trying to sell beer, car insurance, or a smart-home device.
But Bill Murray working
with critters while driving around in a spot riffing on his 1983 movie “Groundhog Day”? Can’t forget that! The marketer? It was for some SUV, right?