Posted on 01/31/2020 1:34:09 PM PST by nickcarraway
Even if there are still slots available, his buys will make ads much more expensive for everyone else.
Michael Bloombergs presidential campaign has been buying ads at a voracious pacemore than a quarter billion dollars worth in barely three months of campaigningbut his nearly limitless appetite doesnt just threaten to overwhelm his opponents with his message. It could change the ad markets themselves.
Even online, advertising space is not unlimited, and Bloombergs deluge of spending threatens to swamp all other potential advertiserspolitical or notand drive up the price of buying an ad. That could prevent other candidates with smaller war chests from getting their messages out, and it could really put a dent in advertising from super-PACs and other outside spending groups that will likely see the ad rates they pay skyrocket.
Its a supply-and-demand business, says Steve Passwaiter, general manager of CMAG, the political advertising division of ad-tracking firm Kantar Media. Theres only so much inventory, and when its gone its gone. Obviously, as the inventory disappears, the cost goes up and up and up.
Of course, Bloomberg isnt alone in his big spending. Democratic candidate Tom Steyer has been aggressively shelling out since he jumped into the race last August, and President Donald Trump has pledged to spend upward of $1 billion on his reelection campaign. (Although Trump partially self-funded his campaign in 2016, he is not doing so this year.) But Bloomberg has dropped an unprecedented amount of money in a very short period of time, racking up expenditures on a scale thats usually not seen until the closing months of the general election. Unlike Bloombergs apparent ad buy budget, the amount of ad space available for purchase is actually strictly limitedcandidates want their ads to run at very specific times and on very specific television stations. Some early voting states, like New Hampshire, have only one in-state television network, putting a real premium on the ad time available on that station.
Weve never seen spending like Bloombergs this early in a race, Passwaiter says, noting that both Bloomberg and Trump have bought ads on national networks, as opposed to just specific local markets. Nationwide advertising doesnt usually happen until late in the election, and Passwaiter has never seen a political candidate buying national airtime during the Super Bowl, as both Trump and Bloomberg have done.
The Super Bowl ads arent going to box other candidates out of any marketsBernie Sanders and Amy Klobuchar were unlikely to drop $5 million or more on a Super Bowl spotbut the high volume of ad buys in smaller markets could, especially come Super Tuesday.
Its a supply-and-demand business. Theres only so much inventory, and when its gone its gone. Bloomberg has opted to skip the four early voting states. Instead, hes buying heavily in the states that vote on Super Tuesday, March 3. Thats when his rivals could really find themselves crowded out of ad markets, particularly in smaller Super Tuesday states like Maine and Oklahoma.
At some point, a subset of the current group of candidates is going to emerge from those first four states, and then they will likely have to run into the buzzsaw that is Michael Bloomberg, Passwaiter says.
There will be intense competition for ad time in Super Tuesday states. Even if the inventory of available ads doesnt run out, ad rates will begin rising, since they go up as ads are purchased. That could pinch campaigns with less deep pockets than Bloombergs. But it could really hamper other would-be advertisers. Thats because candidates for office are charged the lowest available rate for a particular block of ad time. Everyone else will see their rates skyrocket. Passwaiter predicts that all the political spending will begin crowding out traditional advertisersbusinesses like car dealerships and furniture stores. According to a CMAG report, the number of car ads dipped dramatically in the weeks before the last election, and in key battleground states, political ads accounted for almost half of the ads run during nightly news broadcasts.
Ironically, the ad buying of three big-spending billionaires could actually dilute some of the effects of the Supreme Courts Citizens United decisionwhich ushered in a flood of outside spending on political campaignsby making it much more expensive for super-PACs to buy airtime. As candidates spend more, the rate super-PACs have to pay will jump, potentially limiting their effective buying power.
Theres one clear winner from the media blitz by Bloomberg and his billionaire rivals: TV networks. If you own a television station in one of the Super Tuesday states, Id say everyone is ordering filet mignon for lunch, Passwaiter says.
Bloomberg isnt just flooding the airwaves, though. Hes also purchased a barrage of digital adsabout $45 million worth, almost twice as much as the next biggest Democratic spender, Steyer, according to digital ad tracking site Acronym. The market for digital ads may be more flexible, but it is not unlimited. Ken Dawson, president of digital advertising firm Eleventy Marketing, which worked with Ben Carsons campaign in 2016, says that platforms like Facebook will eventually choke off the number of political ads showing up on peoples feeds.
All the platforms do the same, Dawson says. They do a good job of balancing the consumer experience. There is a finite amount of inventory, and no doubt they flex into demand, but they do cap it. Theyre only going to give you so much.
Unlike with television ads, which will be viewed by anyone watching a specific program at a specific time, with online ads campaigns can target specific types of Facebook or Instagram users, and the market for those particular eyeballs is even more limited, Dawson says. Trumps campaign wont be targeting the same users as Bloombergs, and its unlikely that a campaign could buy up all the ads, Dawson says, but big spends can certainly can drive up the price to an unreasonable level for specific audiences. And unlike with television, which gives campaigns the advantage of paying the lowest available rate, everyone gets thrown into an open auction to buy space online. Big Bloomberg buys make it much more expensive for everyone, Dawson says, including rival campaigns.
Bloomberg is also buying a different kind of digital ad. Candidates tend to mix their online ads with fundraising appeals. Even Steyer, whose campaign doesnt need the money, was forced to because the Democratic debates have required participants to show they have certain numbers of individual donors. Bloomberg isnt even doing that, instead focusing purely on his message, and attacks on Trump. (Hes opted not to take part in the debates.) But Dawson says this creates a bit of a mystery. Digital advertising allows a campaign to closely track supporters level of interest; traditionally, nothing has been as good of a sign of serious interest as when an ad can goad a supporter into donating. Bloombergs strategy prevents him from getting that information.
How do you justify the spending of any marketing dollar without that feedback loop? Dawson asks. I can go buy eyeballs all day long, but how do I measure the success of my campaign if I dont understand if people are willing to jump in? You can spend a quarter billion on Facebook in this cycle, and show all these engagement numbers, but Im not sure its indicative of true support when it comes time to cast a vote.
In recent decades, the candidate who raises the most money almost always wins. And self-funded candidates lose far more often than they win. Spending lots of your own money is not necessarily a key to success, says Sheila Krumholz, executive director of the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.
Democratic candidates have increasingly eschewed help from super-PACs and corporate PACs. That does create a unique opening for self-funded candidates, Krumholz says. But as disruptive as Bloombergs spending might be, shes not sure it represents a long-term change in campaign finance, even after seeing Trumps partially self-funded success in 2016. She points to Steyer as an example.
Steyer has had to pay so much to get where he is, she says, which is still, you know, back of the pack. She adds, It still seems to me you need to have a lot of money and also the right characteristics.
If Bloomberg is going to spend so much on ads this early, will it even have an impact in November.
From the Democrat perspective, at best Bloomberg's ad spending will have no impact, at worst, it could hurt them.
he is a pig.
he is a pig.
A short pig but still a pig.
The dude is wasting his money.
Bloomberg is so smug his saturation point will be reached in no time at all.
“advertising space is not unlimited”
Horseshiite.
Modern ad targeting can get so granular to actually make virtually limitless space.
want to runs ads in CA? County? Zip Code? Gender? Income? Race? Device Specific? and on and on and on . . .
Let Bloomie spend his money.
Boosting the Trump Boom even more!
Roll MAGA, Roll!
(Buying) Elections have consequences.
WTG Bloomie!
Bloomy & Steyer are dropping a billion dollars of dark money into the race on schedule.
This was all planned out...they are not running to win anything. This was the best & quickest way to dump big money on Trump’s head and circumventing any campaign laws.
True. But not sure it will mean anything.
I saw a Mike commercial for the first time last evening
It showed repeated views of Trump swinging a golf club deep in the weeds.
It was downright funny to declare Trump to be playing out in the severe rough
Bloomberg's rabid anti-Trump war chest and campaign monies
may just assure a Trump victory.
He is single-handedly squeezing out other viable candidates,
and is proving that 'big money', whether individual or corporate sourced,
can affect election results.
Fortunately, he has much baggage,that when known to the electorate,
should signal his election demise.
He represents the NYC elite, that Fredo's older brother thinks should rule the State.
Little wonder why 30- 40 miles out of NYC proper, the mood of the State is Conservative,
and resents the NYC metropolitan political monopoly.
At that point, I am sure he will pour in an equal amount of money
towards anyone the DNC Selects.
Bloomy is trying to outdo Yeb! as the most expensive failed nomination seeker.
Like Brewster’s millions?
Bloomberg only has to beat demented and angry Democratic opponents.
He won in NYC.
I never watch TV. Mrs. R2 does. The Voice, Chicago Fire and stuff like that.
She asked me the other day who Bloomberg is. His TV commercials are everywhere. Here in Red State Texas.
Dirt Eating Beto had a better chance of winning!
I gave her the data... Liberal Jewish Billionaire from NYC.
Yeb?
You sure? Hillary spent $700 MILLION in 2016. And lost.
Oh. Sorry. You said NOMINATION.
Good point.
most expensive failed nomination seeker.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hillary won her nomination.
Yeb! failed.
Thhis raises a curious situation. Many on the Left rate money in politics as the #1 issue, even more important than Climate Change, Gun Control, any ism. That is because it is money that is preventing the progressive agenda.
They blamed Koch Bros. Some are still blaming the Koch Bros for Trump. Never mind the facts. The facts are that big money loses as often as it wins. Hillary far out spent Trump. In Senate and House races, it has become quite difficult to buy a seat.
Currently in divisive GA GOP primary the candidate willing to spend 20 million is projected to lose to a relative pauper.
Biden has raised and spent the least of the top 10 candidates. Yet he is doing quite well.
But watch for hypocrisy to raise its ugly head.
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