Rahul Sachitanand
May 19, 2020

Not a g'day, mate: Australian digital adspend growth singed by wildfires, pandemic

For Q1, growth was just 3.8% as a traditional early year slump was accentuated by back-to-back disasters, according to IAB figures.

Not a g'day, mate: Australian digital adspend growth singed by wildfires, pandemic

In a quarter that began with sweeping wildfires and ended with the global COVID-19 pandemic, Australia's digital advertising landscape has taken a painful hit. For the period ending 31 March, adspend slipped 6.3% compared to Q4 of 2020 and crawled ahead barely 3.8% year-over-year as advertisers slashed their budgets, according to a report from IAB.


The report, compiled by PwC, found that the drop in expenditure traditionally experienced after the December holiday quarter was more pronounced this year, with the total advertising in Q1 reaching A$2.29 billion, down from A$2.44 billion in Q4, but ahead of the A$2.20 billion in Q1 of 2019.

While this report only captures of a couple of weeks of the brutal impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the country, Gai Le Roy, CEO of IAB Australia predicted even grimmer times ahead. “While this report captures the zeitgeist of the tough start to the year we experienced Australia-wide, it precedes the real impact of COVID-19," she said in a release. "There is no doubt that the current quarter will be tougher for all in the industry, but we are seeing shoots of hope in some sectors.”

Some of this strain is beginning to be seen across Australia's advertising landscape, even if a hint of adspend increase is being seen elsewhere, per this report. Expectedly, adspend by auto brands collapsed in the first quarter, with entertainment, retail and real estate making slight gains.

During this time, several campaigns, such as one featuring pop star Kylie Minogue for Tourism Australia have been cancelled and leaders criticised, even as regulators have pushed online giants such as Google and Facebook to share ad dollars with publishers. As advertising dried up, several media organisations, such as the Australian Associated Press, have run aground. 


In terms of category share, video's contribution grew by 18% year-on-year, even as infeed and standard display's contribution fell sharply. The skew toward programmatic advertising continued, with 43% of all advertising bought programmatically, versus 38% being bought from agencies using insertion orders (IOs). The percentage of inventory bought directly from advertisers increased to 19%. Some 56%, the bulk of content publisher’s video inventory, was bought programmatically in the March quarter.

This article is filed under...
Top of the Charts: Highlights of recent and relevant research

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

Alibaba pledges 'aggressive' AI investment, reports ...

Revenue jumped 8% as Alibaba's AI-driven strategy paid off. A surge in investor confidence has sent its share price soaring over 60% since the start of the year.

1 day ago

Five by Five Global to deliver AI-powered campaigns ...

Can creativity truly be compressed? Former Cheil Australia MD Mark Anderson, now at Five by Five Global, is betting big on AI with a new seven-hour sprint model to find out.

1 day ago

BBDO launches new global vision to focus on bolder ...

'Do Big Things' will empower brands to take risks, make noise, and tackle the world's biggest problems with bold solutions, says global CEO Nancy Reyes.

1 day ago

Is Elon Musk’s X winning back advertisers?

Social media platform X is reportedly in talks to raise money at its buying price valuation of $44 billion, despite user and advertiser losses since Elon Musk’s acquisition in 2022.