Marketing budgets are spread across a wide array of media today, and figuring out digital ad spending means knowing where the market is mov
Investors and analysts are consumed with fear that online advertising is melting down. The outlook is not as bad as it seems. Let me explain.
According to a report last week from Axios, one of the most successful channels on YouTube is seeking $150 million in investment capital, at a $1.5 billion valuation. The goal is to build a new business.
Digital advertising is changing, and it’s a big new opportunity for Shopify (SHOP).
Executives at Snap (SNAP), Meta Platforms (META), and even Alphabet (GOOGL) the parent of YouTube, have recently announced that ad sales are contracting. They say big brands are reducing overall advertising spend on their platforms amid tough macroeconomic headwinds. In the case of Meta and Alphabet, by far the biggest players online, it’s the first ever year-over-year spend decline. Investors see the end of an era and they are freaking out.
However, overall digital ad spending is not contracting, according to research from analysts at McKinsey and Co. Money is simply being diverted away from the biggest players as new ad platforms emerge. One of these is TikTok, a China-based social media platform that has been the most downloaded mobile application in the United States for the past two years. And investors should not sleep on emergent platforms from Apple (AAPL), Walmart (WMT), Target (TGT), and Amazon.com (AMZN), where ad sales grew in the third quarter to $9.5 billion, up 25% year-over-year.
Advertisers are diverting resources to digital platforms where ad impressions can be more closely linked to sales, and online privacy is a nonfactor.
Mr. Beast may not be a name that immediately comes to mind when investors think about online advertising. The YouTube channel founded was Jimmy Donaldson, a 24-year-old North Carolinian who has been dreaming about online stardom since reaching puberty.
Donaldson posted his first videos to YouTube at 13, yet even then he was taking steps to become one of the platform’s biggest stars. The teen iterated tirelessly to figure out how videos on the platform become popular. Then a stunt video posted in 2017 went viral. The grainy feed was simply Donaldson methodically counting to 100,000. Audiences tuned in to watch 40 hours of self-inflicted mental torture. Subscribers followed.
Today the main Mr. Beast channel has 110 million subscribers, the fifth largest globally. Spin-off channels include MrBeast Gaming (29.1 million followers), Beast Reacts (19.8 million followers), and MrBeast Shorts (16.2 million followers).
Those channels have been leveraged into ancillary businesses that make hamburgers, chocolate bars, and provide food delivery. It’s a legitimate digital empire that Axios notes is worth an estimated $54 million annually.
Mr. Beast Burger is a virtual restaurant with more than 1,000 locations in North America and Europe. Customers order burgers, fries and sodas on a mobile app, and their orders are paired with locally contracted restaurants.
Donaldson posted in July that the two-year-old business had shared $100 million in sales with restaurants across America. Feastables, the candy bar division, has hooked up with Walmart for distribution. Revenues jumped to $10 million in the first three months, according to a Business Insider story.
Mr Beast Burgers and Feastables are creating a goldmine of digital data. That information can be mined by advertisers without the privacy concerns that have tripped up Meta and Alphabet. Private equity investors are intrigued.
Shopify is best known for its cutting edge e-commerce back end. The Ottawa, Canada-based company has partnerships with Meta and Alphabet, TikTok, Walmart and other large platforms to provide plug and play e-commerce solutions.
Digital ads are a no-brainer for Shopify. With its more than 1 million online retailers, and its ShopPay payment processor, the company has perfect knowledge of sales conversions. This data could be used to build an ad network that buys digital inventory at scale on behalf of advertisers.
The stock in 2022 has been a train wreck, skidding 76.6% year-to-date. However, at a share price of $32.15, Shopify trades at 7.6x sales for a modest market capitalization of $39.8 billion.Longer-term investors should consider the shares into further weakness.
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Deputy Editor
Features and account management. 3 years media experience. Previously covered features for online and print editions.
Email Adam@MarkMeets.com
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