advertising

The Advertising Recovery Will Be L-Shaped

Ad agency WPP's CEO believes that while ad spending will recover with an improving economy, it will never be the same as it was. One big reason for this is the transition from traditional media to the internet.

He explains that companies currently spend only 13% of their ad budget on web-based advertising, despite the fact that people now spend 20% of their time online. This alone implies that online advertising still has a long way to grow. If one imagines that we'll all spend increasing amounts of time online, and that ad budgets should track the amount of time we spend on any one type of media, then online advertising could easily double from where it is now. At least.

Still, WPP believes that the overall advertising environment will remain subdued for quite some time.

We describe the recession as L-shaped, which implies that it will never go back to where it was before. The forecast for levels of increase in ad spending, both traditional and nontraditional, are pretty anemic for the next two or three years.

Check out the full WSJ interview below.

House Considers Ending Tax Benefit on Rx Drug Advertising; Rangel Eyes $37 Bil. for Health Reform

House Ways and Means Committee chairman Charles Rangel said he wants to end the tax deduction on prescription drug advertising and by doing so raise $37 billion to pay for healthcare reform. The most curious thing about the report is the idea that drug companies spend $37 billion on ads. They don't.

From: 
BNET Pharma
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