
Price versus volume. It has always been a key
upfront conundrum.
What do you favor -- in this marketplace?
A year ago, David
Zaslav, president/chief executive officer of Warner Bros. Discovery, went with his gut feeling. He was going to hold out for better prices for the company's TV inventory.
The downside when
you want to lift or increase pricing more than your competitors, of course, is that you're going to sell less inventory -- which is what happened to Discovery.
Zaslav got low to mid-teen
price increases and nearly $6 billion in business.
But then the uncertain fourth-quarter scatter market came around -- after rumblings that the end of the third quarter wasn't so good.
The last quarter of 2022 then witnessed the scatter market crumble -- for every network group.
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So those that maxed out on upfront sales -- maybe 80% to 85% -- did better than those that
only sold say 60% to 65% of their upfront inventory.
Still, Zaslav said during his recent fourth-quarter earnings analyst phone call that he believed it was a good move -- that it brought
pricing nearer those big broadcast-focused higher CPMs for his cable TV inventory -- something he had always complained about.
For years, he and others complained about the price disparity
between a cable network and a broadcast network -- that cable network owners were getting the short end of the stick for what they felt was virtually identical linear TV inventory.
The net
result? Fourth-quarter ad revenues at Discovery's TV networks fell 14% to $2.2 billion -- a drop that turned out to be much lower than other network competitor groups.
Scatter-market weakness
could continue in this regard for at least the first if not the second-quarter period -- the latter being a key benchmark indicator for many for how the upcoming TV upfront advertising market should
be priced.
Who's betting that Zaslav will try the same tactic again?
Analysts and business professionals would like to believe a soft recessionary economy affecting the advertising
marketplace will be a short one.
It's rare that two year-over-year quarters for scatter will both be weak.
So we wait for another price and volume drama.