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Advertising’s Empire: Super Bowl

The Super Bowl is a monumental event that draws over 150 million U.S. viewers each year. This one event continues as THE television advertising juggernaut. Of the top 30 most viewed television programs of all time, the Super Bowl accounts for 24.  This is the reason advertisers flock to the event – the biggest day of the year for advertising – and why Super Bowl ad spending has reached $1.7 billion. After all, where else can advertisers be guaranteed to reach over 150 million U.S. viewers in one day?

In 2010, a 30-second advertising spot cost $2,700,000 – a 10% decrease from the 2009 rate of $3 million (even the Super Bowl isn’t completely immune to the recession). In 2011, the Fox Network set commercial rates between $2.8 to $3 million per 30-second spot and aired 46 minutes network ads. This year, a 30-second ad will cost approximately $3.5 million.

Does this incredible advertising investment pay off?

The Super Bowl advertising phenomenon is usually credited to Anheuser-Busch, who, in 1989, introduced a promotion call the Bud Bowl – a series of commercials featuring tiny beer bottles playing football. The result: Budweiser sales soared by 17% the month following the commercial. That year, 1989, “the king of beers” crowned Super Bowl as the television advertisement empire, and it grows stronger every year.

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Sources:
Super Bowl XLV Breaks Viewing Record, Averages 111 Million Viewers
Top 100 Rated TV Shows Of All Time
Super Bowl Ad Spend Totaled $1.84B over 20 Years, Rates Quadrupled
Super Bowl Advertising Statistics: An Overview
5 Super Bowl Side Effects
Super Bowl advertisers seek buzz on social media
2011 Super Bowl Consumer Survey Results: Shopping, Spending,
Commercial Viewing

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