With $7 million price tag per Super Bowl ad, brands are 'hacking' the system. Here's how.
This story is part of Digiday's annual coverage of the
There has always seemingly been two Super Bowls for brands to participate in: The game day broadcast with standard (and expensive) 30-second ads, or so-called hacking everything happening around that broadcast, from second screens to experiential events, to build buzz around the Big Game.
With a
For the last five years,
It's not a new strategy, per se. Skittles skipped the
"Advertising during the
"This is the first time where we're deliberately entering the
Meanwhile, Jif, which is owned by
"The importance of being around [the
Costs around the
"Live events are very strong hooks for us to sink our teeth into and we need mass reach," she said. "But we felt like the gamble of the buzz from one 30-second commercial was too big for us."
Notably, second screens like streaming ads or vertical video via TikTok, Instagram Reels or even YouTube Shorts, are becoming considerably more popular ad channels in general. Spend on streaming is expected to reach more than
"It opens the door for a lot of brands to be planning on the day that don't necessarily have the budget or able to buy the media," said
Today's ad marketplace is crowded and the
"The
Albeit, hacking the
Thew added, "The
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