Snap Dangles Thousands in Free Ad Spend As Potential TikTok Ban Deadline Nears

  Rassegna Stampa, Social
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Snap is offering advertisers money off ad campaigns as the U.S. inches closer to a third potential TikTok ban deadline, according to three media buyers who have been directly pitched these deals.

In recent weeks, Snap has pitched buyers several different ad credit packages, including offering the equivalent of an additional $10,000 in ad spend on the platform when they spend $50,000 on a campaign, according to one buyer. Another buyer was offered the $10,000 in ad credits if they spent an additional $100,000 on the platform. Another offer included a 20% credit to spend on Snap ads if the buyer moved $100,000 in campaign budget from other platforms.

One ad buyer said their Snap rep directly framed the incentive as a play to win dollars planned for TikTok.

“Snap is pretty aggressively trying to position itself as the biggest benefactor if something were to happen to TikTok,” another buyer said. 

All buyers, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to preserve industry relationships, said Snap has been more “aggressive” in offering ad credits tied to minimum spend commitments starting at $50,000. They added that this push underscores Snap’s efforts to carve out a bigger share of mobile video ad budgets, even as Meta and YouTube remain the dominant beneficiaries of TikTok’s regulatory uncertainty.

All three advertisers currently run ad campaigns on Snap. None are currently taking advantage of these offers, nor have increased budget with the platform, or moved budget from TikTok as a result of these offers.

Snap did not answer direct questions on whether it is offering ad credits or whether this push is to capture budgets earmarked for TikTok.

Spend going to Snap is growing

Snap is actively courting a share of the reallocated budgets, even though it historically commands a smaller portion of ad dollars, according to all buyers.

Analytics platform MikMak, which works with 2,000 brands and tracks $3 billion in U.S. digital ad spend, found that brands increased Snap spending by 33% from Q1 to Q2. Still, the platform accounts for less than 1% of overall spend compared to larger rivals, according to Tony Sloan, MikMak’s brand marketing lead.

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