Advertising specialties more cost-effective than TV, radio or print advertising
Advertising Specialty Institute®, the largest media and marketing organization serving the advertising specialty industry, revealed in a groundbreaking new study that advertising specialties beat out all forms of TV, radio and print advertising as the most cost-effective advertising medium available. Among key findings, results indicate that:
- 84% of people remember the advertiser on a product they receive.
- 42% have a more favorable impression of an advertiser after receiving an advertising specialty.
- Nearly one quarter, or 24%, indicate that they are more likely to do business with an advertiser on items they receive.
- Most respondents (62%) have done business with the advertiser on a product after receiving it.
- Writing instruments are the most commonly-owned advertising specialty, with 54% of respondents owning them, followed by shirts, caps and bags.
- The majority (81%) of promotional products were kept because they were considered useful.
- More than three-quarters of respondents have had their items for about seven months.
- Among wearables, bags were reported to be used most frequently, with respondents indicating that they use their bags on average nine times per month.
- Bags deliver the most impressions, with 1,038 impressions per month on average.
- The average cost-per-impression of an advertising specialty item is $0.004, making it less expensive per impression than nearly any other media. (According to Nielsen Media data, the CPI for a national magazine ad is $0.033; a newspaper ad is $0.0129; a prime time TV ad is $0.019; a cable TV ad is $0.007; a syndicated TV ad is $0.006; and a spot radio ad is $0.005)
These statistics conclude that marketers get a more favorable return on investment from advertising specialties than almost any other popular media, with a very low cost-per-impression, high recall among those who receive ad specialty items, and increased intent among recipients to make purchases from the advertiser. For all results of the Advertising Specialties Effectiveness Study from ASI, visit www.asicentral.com/study.
Research provided by the Advertising Specialty Institute, Copyright c2008, All Rights Reserved.