Maybe you’ve been buying print advertisements for years and you are trying to decide how much budget to allocate this year. Or perhaps you have seen your competitors running print advertisements and wonder whether you should try it. Both are common in the industrial marketing space.
In recent research, we found that for 2017, 46% of all engineering marketers plan to dedicate zero budget to print.
In this post, we'll provide some data to help you with your decision on whether to use print advertising. The data comes from:
We'll also unveil a critical piece of information courtesy of the top performing engineering marketers.
In repeated surveys over the past three years, engineering marketers reported they will be reducing their investments in print advertising. In 2017, 47% of these marketers say that their budget for print advertising is now zero.
Of those marketers who do advertise in print media:
While engineering marketers have been reporting a decline in their print budgets, their overall marketing budgets have been going up. (Every year that this survey has run, the share of marketers with increasing budgets is larger than the share with smaller budgets.)
The chart shows that people are spending 4% of their total media time reading print publications (yellow column), while advertisers are spending 16% of their budgets on print (blue column).
This misalignment in the industry portends downwards pressure on print revenues. After all, the advertisers will eventually realign their budgets to go where their audience is. But this macro trend is not the whole story.
In 2016, we surveyed 1,003 engineers to understand how they got their information. We asked whether they preferred print or digital, mobile, text, or videos. The answers are probably no surprise by now — engineers of every age preferred digital media.
It’s only for the much older or much younger engineers for whom digital is less appealing. Even so, digital consumption is preferred by more than half of all engineers, even at either end of the age spectrum.
But if your target market is decision makers, and those decision makers are older, say in their 50s or 60s, then there is an argument for print media. You can see from the chart that while less than 30% of engineers aged 35 and younger read print trade publications, that number expands to 54% for those over age 65.
This research shows that the number of older engineers reading print is still smaller than the percentage who read digital publications, but in your industry, it’s possible that print is the only way to reach certain segments of your target audience.
We then broke the slower-growing companies into a group we called “Laggards” and the faster growing companies into a group called “Top Performers.”
We then analyzed how much each group invested in print media. The results are pretty shocking.
Of the top performing group, only 22% had more than 10% of their budget allocated to print advertising in 2017. Almost three times as many of the laggards, on the other hand, devoted more than 10% of their budgets to print.
While we can’t tell you how to allocate your budget, this is good evidence that the best marketers have moved on from print and the performance of their companies are better for it.
To understand how industrial marketers rate their success with print, we asked: “Please rate how effective each of the following marketing activities is in generating revenue for your company on the following scale of 'not effective at all' to 'highly effective.'"
Of those who use print media (remember that 47% said that they have no budget), 23% said that it was “not at all effective.” (This does make one wonder why they use print media.) The majority, at 68% said that it was anywhere from moderately to fairly effective, while 9% said that it was “highly effective.”
Now why would those 9% find print media to be highly effective at generating revenue? Is it because they have an outstanding print publication in their industry? Or because their target audience is an older generation who rely on print? Or have they found some magic in creating truly compelling print advertisements?
We don’t know the answers; however, the trend data is clear, and it shows that fewer and fewer marketers are able to justify a large budget for print.
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