Brands Still Treat YouTube Like Second-Rate TV Ad Buy
The article discusses how advertising budgets on YouTube, despite it being a highly watched platform, often trail the amounts brands still allocate to traditional television. It highlights a disconnect between YouTube’s audience scale and the level of ad spending it attracts from marketers.
Key Takeaways
- YouTube ranks among the most-watched platforms but routinely trails linear TV in marketer spending — a structural mismatch between reach and investment.
- Drivers include inconsistent cross-platform measurement, brand-safety/quality perceptions, limited premium inventory, and incumbent agency/buyer habits favoring TV.
- Opportunity for platforms and ad tech: unify measurement, productize premium formats and guaranteed outcomes, and sell cross-screen reach to reclaim TV dollars.
Why It Matters
Ad budgets shape content economics, creator revenue, and platform negotiating power. If marketers underinvest in YouTube relative to its audience, AVOD creators and streaming ad ecosystems lose monetization potential while legacy TV retains influence. That gap is an opening — not just a problem — for any platform, measurement vendor, or publisher that can prove comparable brand impact and offer guaranteed, premium inventory. For executives and investors, the narrative matters: budget inertia creates risk for platforms that don’t close trust and measurement gaps, and creates upside for those who can deliver measurable brand outcomes at scale.
Read full article at wsj.com