New Research Sheds Light on Daily Ad Exposures

A new study of media usage and ad exposure by Media Dynamics, Inc. reveals that while a typical adult’s daily media consumption has grown from 5.2 hours in 1945 to 9.8 hours (or 590 minutes) currently, this has not been reflected in a huge spike in ad exposure.

Although commercial clutter on TV has risen steadily, today’s viewer has more avoidance options like remote controls and DVRs, and many more channels to choose from. As a result, the study summarizes the number of ads that adults are now exposed to across all five media (TV, radio, Internet, newspapers and magazines) is about 360 per day; of these, only 150-155 are even noted, and far fewer make a strong enough impact to be recalled, make an impression, and ultimately, make a sale.

The chart below reflects MDI’s projections of the average adult’s daily media usage for 1945, 1985 and 2014. It shows the huge increase in total time spent, but the relative stability in terms of ad exposure and noting. This is a solid indication that time spent with the various media of course is not an indicator of ad impact.

Daily Media and Ad Exposure

This study begs the question and somewhat challenges the prior Yankelovich estimates that a person 30 years ago saw up to 2,000 ad messages a day, compared with up to 5,000 or more exposures today.

So just how many marketing messages do we see in a day? In addition to the Yankelovich study (later quoted by the NY Times), depending on what’s included, other studies support that message and brand “exposure” can range from 3,000 to 20,000. Those higher numbers not only include ads, but also include every time you pass by a label in a grocery store, all the ads in your mailbox whether you see them or not, the label on everything you wear, the condiments in your fringe, the cars on the highway, etc.

The fact that you and the message or a brand name or logo are in the same proximity for you to see it doesn’t mean you saw it. No one can really process that many exposures. We can’t notice, absorb, or even judge the personal merit of 3,000 visual/audio exposures per day, let alone 20,000.

Advertising doesn’t just offer the right product to the right consumer at the right time. It gets them emotionally motivated to investigate and ultimately to buy the advertised product or service. That’s why engagement has become so important. So integrating this new research with the accepted number of 5,000 exposures per day, along with other proprietary research, this is how we look at it:

  • Average number of advertisement and brand exposures per day per person: 5,000+
  • Average number of “ads only” exposures per day: 362
  • Average number of “ads only” noted per day: 153
  • Average number of “ads only” that we have some awareness of per day: 86
  • Average number of “ads only” that made an impression (engagement): 12

Bottom-line, increasing engagement will help advertising break through the clutter of not only the hundreds of ad exposures per day, but of the thousands of ad and brand exposures per day.

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Posted in Ad Exposures, Branding, Media Exposures, Research
472 comments on “New Research Sheds Light on Daily Ad Exposures
  1. […] have shown that consumers encounter up to 20,000 brands every day, only 12 of which leave an impression. If you have any hope of being among those 12, […]

  2. […] Johnson, Sheree. “New Research Sheds Light on Daily Ad Exposures.” SJ Insights LLC. 29 Sept. 2014. Web. 17 Dec. 2015. <https://sjinsights.net/2014/09/29/new-research-sheds-light-on-daily-ad-exposures/&gt;. […]

  3. […] they have plenty of things to do. Then their attention is grabbed over 150 times a day by advertisements, 150 times a day for smart phone notifications, and then there’s your email! Even if your […]

  4. […] people (and not robots) are purchasing from you. With the average person stumbling across 5,000 advertisements and brand messages per day, it’s crucial for your brand to stand out – in a positive light. One of the best ways (if not […]

  5. […] customers are bombarded with advertising. According to a study by Media Dynamics, the average person sees 360 ads per […]

  6. […] are there may have been too many to track. Although the research varies, a Media Dynamics study estimates you were probably exposed to over 300 ads via your mobile phone or television on any […]

  7. […] expenditure in 2015, up six percent from 2014. The $600 billion makes sense when you factor in that the average person is exposed to 5,000 ads a day – companies pay money hoping their ads will lead us to purchase whatever it is they’re […]

  8. […] expenditure in 2015, up six percent from 2014. The $600 billion makes sense when you factor in that the average person is exposed to 5,000 ads a day – companies pay money hoping their ads will lead us to purchase whatever it is they’re […]

  9. […] It has totally absorbed us. Our heads are buried in our screens. We’re bombarded with way more media minutes now than we’ve ever been. We’ve not only developed banner blindness, but immunity to all […]

  10. […] to a new study done last year by Media Dynamics Inc, the average adult population is exposed to approximately 360 […]

  11. […] to sjinsights.net, the reason ad exposure has not increased over the last 70 years is because we have greater control […]

  12. […] suggests, “a person 30 years ago saw up to 2,000 ad messages a day, compared with up to 5,000 or more exposures today.” As a consumer, you are no longer just browsing your social media sites, seeing what […]

  13. […] Research suggests, “a person 30 years ago saw up to 2,000 ad messages a day, compared with up to 5,000 or more exposures today.” As a consumer, you are no longer just browsing your social media sites, seeing what people […]

  14. […] to each day.  Some studies say we exposed to over 5000 ads each day.  Others say we only are paying attention to less than 200 true ads. That last study I linked to says only 12 ads make an impression on us each […]

  15. […] average, consumers are exposed to more than 5000 advertisements per day. Among those 5000-plus advertisements, only about 12 will make an impression on the average […]

  16. […] example, I recently read an article where Media Dynamics, Inc. did a new study on media usage and ad exposure in 2014 comparing it to 1945 and 1985, and the results are insane. I mean, look at the chart from […]

  17. […] buy buy!” It seems to be that that is the mantra of the century. All the 153 adds you notice everyday are intended for you to do precisely that. And it’s not only the adds, […]

  18. […] growth, we’ve become more exposed than ever to new products/services everyday. In 2014, a study made by Media Dynamics, Inc. reveals that a typical adult is exposed to an average of 360 ads per day. That’s a […]

  19. […] in 20,000 message and brand exposures each day. Not surprisingly, of those only an average of 86 ads per day hit consumers’ awareness. A mere 7% of ads consumers are aware of actually make an […]

  20. […] impression upon you, and that you are able to recall from memory. I found these numbers from an article from SJ Insights, a company that specializes in market intelligence, research, and media […]

  21. […] our daily lives, be it online, in print, on billboards or through our television screens. In fact, research suggests we are exposed to, on average, 362 ads per day (not including brand exposures) but only 3 per cent […]

  22. […] hard to find definitive statistics about the number of media messages we are exposed to per day (estimates are in the 5000+ range) a study into advertising and persuasive intent indicated that children in the UK in 2002 were […]

  23. […] average person is bombarded with about 360 advertisements per day from TV, radio, Internet, and print media alone. In such a saturated marketing landscape, […]

  24. […] The study states “As a result, the number of ads that adults are now exposed to across all five media (TV, radio, Internet, newspapers and magazines) is about 360 per day; of these, only 150-155 are even noted, and far fewer make a strong enough impact to be recalled, make an impression, and ultimately, make a sale.” […]

  25. […] dominance of graphic design culture — researchers now estimate we’re exposed to5,000 ads per day, and the number of graphic designers in Canada has increased rapidly over the last few years — […]

  26. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  27. […] get exposed to over 5000 messages from companies through advertising everyday. This means that as an advertiser you must master the […]

  28. […] to a study by Media Dynamics, Inc a typical adult sees about 360 marketing messages a day with only 150-155 […]

  29. Spending says:

    […] As of September 2014, an adult male in the United States is said to be exposed to 360 ads per day (SJ insights, 2014). Although very few of those ads make a sale, we have to agree that without ads, spending […]

  30. […] can be easily exposed to over 5,000 advertisements a day. No wonder branding is more important than ever before. How else can you break through the sea of […]

  31. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  32. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  33. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  34. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it's no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  35. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  36. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  37. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  38. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  39. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  40. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  41. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  42. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  43. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  44. […] average, consumers are exposed to more than 5000 advertisements per day. Among those 5000-plus advertisements, only about 12 will make an impression on the average […]

  45. […] factor in the absurd amount of ad exposure we encounter everyday, and it’s no wonder why so many businesses are struggling to get their […]

  46. […] average, consumers are exposed to more than 5000 advertisements per day. Among those 5000-plus advertisements, only about 12 will make an impression on the average […]

  47. […] average, consumers are exposed to more than 5000 advertisements per day. Among those 5000-plus advertisements, only about 12 will make an impression on the average […]

  48. […] data that we call the Internet. In terms of marketing alone, it’s estimated that people are exposed to 362 advertisements each day. That’s about one every 4 […]

  49. […] by the number of visual impressions we receive daily. Just taking advertising into account, we are bombarded with so many audible and visual messages that many simply don’t register with us, as seen […]

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