TBPN, a media company, ran a Super Bowl ad not to sell a product, but as a gesture to its community, featuring guests and partners. This counterintuitive marketing spend builds brand affinity and can be justified as being done "purely for fun."
The Super Bowl captures mass attention, making it a powerful marketing opportunity for all brands, not just consumer ones. By incorporating relevant themes, even "boring" B2B companies can significantly boost engagement because the topic is top-of-mind for their audience.
The widely reported $10M price for a Super Bowl ad slot is only one-third of the true cost. The other two-thirds are spent on production/talent and, crucially, the post-game 'drag factor'—a follow-up marketing campaign to convert initial awareness into actual sales.
Wix's CMO views expensive brand activities like Super Bowl ads through a dual lens. While building the brand is key, the investment must also generate a measurable spike in relevant user traffic to be considered successful. All marketing, regardless of type, must be treated as an investment.
Despite an $8M+ price tag, a Super Bowl ad's cost-per-thousand-impressions (CPM) of $60-$80 is comparable to LinkedIn's $35-$80 range. Given the Super Bowl's high engagement and cultural impact versus passive scrolling on social media, the relative value can be a strategic bargain for large brands.
Brand love is often less about the product and more about what it symbolizes about the consumer. In an era of 'hyper-identity,' brands become signals people use to communicate their personal values and nuances. Marketing should focus on what the brand says about its user.
Delta's most effective Olympic advertising wasn't its commercials, but its sponsorship of the medal ceremony. The emotional connection viewers felt during that moment, associated with the Delta brand, drove more impact than a standard ad spot, highlighting the power of integrated marketing.
To sell leadership on brand initiatives with indirect ROI, translate organic performance into paid media equivalents. Calculate what the millions of impressions from a viral video would have cost via paid channels. Frame it as a cost-effective way to build brand and lower overall CAC.
The Super Bowl is a massive cultural moment. Even 'boring' B2B marketers can capitalize on this by incorporating relevant themes and language into their campaigns, regardless of industry. This taps into audience top-of-mind awareness and can lead to a significant lift in engagement.
For products valuable only when others use them (like credit cards or social apps), Super Bowl ads are uniquely effective. The value isn't just reaching many eyeballs, but ensuring those eyeballs know *other* eyeballs are also watching, solving the chicken-and-egg adoption problem.
A core brand-building strategy is to "do for one what you wish you could do for many." By creating deeply meaningful experiences for individual fans, such as supporting a grieving family, they generate powerful stories that define the brand's character and create an emotional connection that mass marketing cannot replicate.