There are so many moving parts in the advertising industry, it's become difficult for digital marketing agency head Nicole Newville to explain what direction the industry is heading.
Advances in technology have led to algorithms, not humans, deciding how and where advertisements are placed online, and she's one of many ad professionals concerned about the impact of artificial intelligence — plus there are still billboards, print and TV ads.
"The lines are becoming so blurry," said Newville, the founder and president of Kose, a Minneapolis-based digital marketing agency. "It used to be your highest reaching channel was television. You do that buy and do a cable buy and you've reached 90% of your audience. Now we have cord cutters, and we have people who have never had a cord."
The disruption has led to new marketing and ad agencies that concentrate more on digital opportunities and data — and a consolidation of traditional firms, which themselves have added units addressing the new reality. It also means a resurgence of billboards as a way to keep advertising messages in places people cannot avoid.
Upended by digital growth
Digital advertising is now taking the lead in marketing plans after years of slow growth, said Anton Friant, president of the Advertising Federation of Minnesota, a nonprofit professional trade association. Yet, that involves developing strategies that work with online algorithms so ads land in the right spots.
Through the first nine months of 2022, agencies spent $14.6 billion on digital video advertisements in the U.S., up from $14.5 billion in 2021 and far more than the $5.4 billion spent on digital ads in 2020, according to marketing research firm Nielsen.
It's a growing segment, and it's swelling profits of tech behemoths Facebook and Google. For its recent fourth quarter alone, Google generated $59 billion from its advertising business, in addition to $7.9 billion from ads on YouTube, which it owns.
Even though it was down from 2021, Meta, the parent company of Facebook, generated $31.2 billion in revenue for its 2022 fourth quarter.