
Ad spending plummeted 28% across the major Anglo media
markets -- the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia and New Zealand -- during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a unique analysis released today by Standard Media Index.
The
analysis, which compares the year-over-year change in ad spending for March through May 2020 vs. the same period in 2019, happens to be representative of the major markets SMI has already rolled out
in.
It also reveals that despite talk about the relative flexibility of digital advertising buys, big advertisers handled by the major agency holding companies were quick to put the brakes on
their TV ad spending in the U.S., and much less so in the U.K.
The data also reveals that Canadian advertisers were most aggressive in disrupting their digital ad spending vs. TV.
Canada
also faced the most severe overall ad cuts, falling 36.2% over the three-month period.
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The U.K.,conversely, was the most stable of the major Anglo nations, with total ad spending falling
21.9%.
While SMI did not release discrete category-level data, the company said the pharma category was the only major one to show significant ad spending increases in the U.S.,
and travel was down most severely across all the nations tracked.
SMI also indicated that U.S. ad demand is may
have bottomed out, with ad spending in June "falling just 20%," though it also did not release precise figures for that month yet.