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Research shows brands must spend millions more in media to achieve the same market effect as interesting campaigns. The biggest business risk isn't being provocative; it's being ignorable and paying the price in media inefficiency.

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IPA database analysis reveals a stark truth: budget size is the single most important marketing decision. Effectiveness is overwhelmingly determined by spend (90%), with creative and media efficiency accounting for only 10%. The biggest lever you can pull is the budget itself.

For years, marketers could succeed with mediocre creative by optimizing media buys. As platforms automate targeting, creative excellence is now the primary lever for success. An organization that doesn't respect and elevate creativity across the entire marketing function is destined to underperform.

Stop guessing on creative in boardrooms. Test all content organically first and only amplify what has already demonstrated relevance with an audience, thereby eliminating wasted ad spend and de-risking media budgets.

According to analysis by strategist Peter Field, the industry's reliance on cheap, low-attention media forces the creation of dull creative. To improve creative effectiveness, marketers must first address the foundational problem of their media strategy before attempting to fix the creative work itself.

Companies often over-invest in safe, committee-approved ideas that yield minimal results. The real financial danger lies in the missed opportunity of bolder, seemingly riskier campaigns that are more likely to capture consumer attention and drive growth.

If your creative assets aren't culturally relevant, you're forced to overspend on media to achieve impact. Truly resonant content generates organic reach and makes paid amplification more efficient, a key argument for CFOs on the value of creative investment.

With Meta's Andromeda algorithm automating audience targeting, the primary reason for poor ad performance is no longer incorrect targeting settings. Wasted money is now almost exclusively a result of insufficient or non-diverse creative, making creative strategy the most critical component of a successful campaign.

Corporate marketing often rewards media agencies for efficiency (low CPMs), but this is a false economy. Cheaper media is often low-quality, poorly placed, and unseen. The focus must shift from efficiency to effectiveness—paying for actual impact.

In mature ad markets, creative quality is the biggest variable for success, not media spend. High-performing companies now shift budget away from platforms like Meta and Google and reinvest it into producing more content. This superior creative makes the remaining, smaller media spend far more effective.

Global ad spend has increased by 33%, but its impact on purchase intent has declined by 20%. This widening gap, identified in Shutterstock's research, proves that simply increasing budgets is an ineffective strategy, demanding a shift towards more resonant and culturally aware creative.

Brands Waste Millions in Media Spend to Compensate for 'Dull' Creative | RiffOn