GroupM’s global ad forecast stays optimistic, but gets a bit darker for U.S. growth

As retail media growth continues to spread and grow, not unlike the Canadian wildfires that have blanketed parts of the United States in smoke, GroupM’s latest ad forecast shows that some of that growth is coming out of the granddaddy of commerce media, Amazon. 

Kate Scott-Dawkins, who was promoted to global president of business intelligence after Brian Wieser left that job a few months ago, pointed out this shift in the latest Global Mid-Year Forecast report. 

While noting that retail media is expected to grow just under 10% globally in 2023 to hit $125.7 billion, Scott-Dawkins predicted that it will account for 15.4% of total revenue by 2028. The segment is dominated by consumer packaged goods advertisers — whose products are sold on the shelves of the retailers — but she noticed a shift in their spend.

“We’ve seen, especially among CPG advertisers, that share that goes to Amazon within retail media. actually start to come down a bit over the last several years,” she said. “This idea of the value of customer data and shopping data, pairing that with content, is something that we’re going to continue to see develop over the next several years and be a really big element of this.”

Other data points to note in GroupM’s forecast include: 

Global advertising growth remained unchanged, at an expected 5.9% growth to hit $874.5 billion (although after adjusting for inflation, it’s a slight negative). The main reason global growth remains steady is the quick recovery of China, which had spent a good part of 2022 in Covid-related lockdowns that negatively affected its economy. China is forecast to grow 7.9% in 2023 to $150.6 billion, which is up from last December’s prediction of 6.3% growth. Other markets expected to show growth include Brazil (up from 3.8 % in December to 6.6%) and Middle East/North Africa (from 4.2% to 6.2%)

The U.S. market, having suffered a worse-than-expected first half of 2023, is now seen to grow only 5.7%, down from December’s forecast of 7.1%. GroupM’s report cited “the brinkmanship surrounding the deal to raise the U.S. debt ceiling, the challenges facing America’s regional banks and persistent consumer price inflation” as factors that “weighed on advertisers.”

While digital’s global growth rate has decelerated considerably (it remains at a healthy 8.4%), that’s largely because it’s already the single largest medium of choice for advertisers. In fact, Scott-Dawkins predicted that digital dollars will account for 74.4% of all media spend by 2028. 

In terms of global TV spend, connected TV is predicted to grow 13.2% but overall TV (not counting political ad spend) is expected to decline 1.2%. 

Interestingly, user generated content’s share of attracting ad dollars across TV and digital has grown considerably. Scott-Dawkins noted that, UGC’s share grew from 10% of all ad dollars drawn to content in 2016 to 26% this year, while professionally produced content’s share dropped from 60% to 35%.

https://digiday.com/?p=507007

More in Media Buying

Google’s antitrust trial spotlights search ads on the final day of closing arguments

Ads took center stage today in Google’s antitrust trial, as the U.S. Dept. of Justice sought to show the search giant as the only player in a game with rising prices.

How CTV and DOOH are growing this political season for smaller agencies

Connected TV and digital out-of-home are playing a bigger role in upcoming elections and politics – especially for smaller agencies looking to place clients’ dollars.

How companies can avoid creating an accidental manager: The Return podcast, season 3, episode 2

Just because you are good at a particular skill doesn’t mean that you would make a good manager. So, why is that the standard career path?