Fox Selling 30-Second Super Bowl Spots for up to $5.6 Million in Accelerated Market
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For the past several years, Super Bowl ad inventory has been available for brands looking to swoop in at the last minute and grab a spot. But that isn’t likely to occur for Super Bowl LIV, as Fox has already sold 78% of its in-game inventory and expects to be sold out “well before” the Feb. 2 game in Miami.
Fox Sports is receiving as much as $5.6 million per 30-second spot, said Seth Winter, evp, sports sales for Fox Sports, which is a new Super Bowl record. Other than one long-term deal that was transacted “years ago” for below $5 million, “everything we’ve done this year has been north of $5.2 million,” said Winter.
(Typically, advertisers who only buy a single Super Bowl spot would be charged that higher rate; those who purchase multiple spots in the game or as part of a larger Fox Sports media buy would receive a discounted rate.)
During Fox Corp.’s earning call last week, CEO Lachlan Murdoch said of Super Bowl ad sales, “we are very confident that pricing … will certainly be the highest cost per 30-second ad in a Super Bowl to date.” Last year, CBS secured between $5.1 million and $5.3 million per 30-second spot for its Super Bowl ads.
Only 17 ads are still up for grabs of Fox’s 77 in-game spots, said Winter, representing a 78% sellout.
Winter was tapped last January to oversee Fox Sports ad sales for the new Fox Corp. He had stepped down in October 2016 as NBC Sports Group ad sales, overseeing three Super Bowls for NBC in that role, and remained with the company in an advisory role through 2018, where he helped contribute to sales for Super Bowl LII.
During his retirement, Winter noticed that “the Super Bowl market moved more slowly than it had in the past. There was a lot of sideline sitting until the very end of the process, which I felt created a disadvantage for those of us that sell the Super Bowl.”
After joining Fox in January, he worked to speed up the process, first by working with the NFL to reduce the number of ad breaks in each quarter, from five to four. The move consolidated inventory into fewer pods, which created fewer A and Z positions (the first and last of each pod), leading to a contraction of premium inventory. As a result, Fox sold out of all its Super Bowl A positions within the last several weeks.
Additionally, Winter made clear that he would be “consistent” with his Super Bowl ad rates. The market knows “we were never going to go into a fire sale mode [for Super Bowl] because we need to protect those people that invest with us early on,” he said. “People may lie in wait, hoping there are units that they can pick off for something less than that which we’re charging. I would never do that.”
The contraction of premium inventory and consistent pricing helped create “urgency” in the market to transact earlier, said Winter.
While the exec isn’t able to reveal which brands will appear in this year’s game (some, like Pop-Tarts, have already confirmed they have purchased spots), he said the strongest categories include automotive, technology, beverages, CPG, retail and telco.
The telecast will also featured a couple brands that don’t traditionally advertise on network TV, said Winter. “A couple ‘a-ha’ advertisers, that people are going to say, ‘I didn’t expect to see that.’”
As linear ratings have fallen across the board in TV, even for popular live events like award shows, “the Super Bowl has really been impervious to ratings attrition,” said Winter, which has brought more advertisers to the game and the NFL that hadn’t traditionally appeared there.
https://www.adweek.com/tv-video/fox-selling-30-second-super-bowl-spots-for-up-to-5-6-million-in-accelerated-market/