Direct-to-consumer brands splurge on TV ads, sell more stuff
Direct-to-consumer (DTC) brands spent more than $3.8bn on TV advertising in the U.S. last year, adding $1.4bn to the TV ad marketplace (AdAge).
Key points:
- DTC brands reporting massive increase in website hits and sales after upping TV spend, according to research by the Video Advertising Bureau (VAB)
- 125 DTC brands spent $3.8bn on TV ads in 2018, finds the VAB, +60% YoY
- TV networks creating formats and measurement capabilities geared around DTC brands, as well as making buying ads more like buying on digital platforms
- VAB found ‘most’ emerging DTC brands gained triple digit search query and non-paid video view increases driven by TV advertising, and 84% increase in web hits in the month after commercials aired
- A sample of five DTC brands that bought TV ads for the first time in 2018 recorded YoY revenue increases of 25% to 800%
There’s an irony in digitally native start-ups blowing their ad budgets on TV, and finding, lo and behold, it works. Part of the reason is due to increased clutter, competition and cost on social media: As Dollar Shave Club's executive creative director Matt Knapp told Mi3 last month, what worked for DTC brands five years ago, is now much harder. “The cost to run ads [on social media] is much more expensive and more competitive and because you've [acquired] a certain amount of the market, the growth you had initially starts to plateau.” As a result, he said, “a lot of brands that were doing strictly online, Facebook-type stuff, are … coming out with big brand outdoor campaigns and TV”.
Credit's also due to the TV networks that have invested in formats and technology to woo DTC brands. $3.8bn is only 5% of the U.S. TV market – but that’s 5% growth direct from the platforms that have plundered traditional media revenues, a growth shoot local TV bosses would give their eye teeth for.