The Economics of a Super Bowl Ad

ro.co

21 points by nnmg 2 days ago


AnimalMuppet - 2 days ago

This has always bugged me. $7 million for a 30-second-long ad. What do they get out of it? Well, presumably, a change in peoples' concrete behaviors that is more than $7 million. They expect that (otherwise they wouldn't buy the ad in the first place).

At the same time, we're told that all the sex and violence on TV doesn't matter, because it doesn't change peoples' behavior.

So, which is it? Does what we watch on TV change our behavior, in concrete ways, or doesn't it? I suspect that it does change our behavior, that the advertisers are right. (They're betting a lot of money on their position; I'd expect them to have some basis for doing so before committing that kind of coin.) But if so, then the rest of what we watch also changes our behavior.

And, obviously, so does our social media feed...

upmind - 35 minutes ago

I find the US commercialisation and dopamine inducing activities quite annoying. Compared to European sports, it's so different.

fairity - an hour ago

The author keeps saying, over and over, that the reason this is a good bet is because "the downside is capped and the upside is asymmetric" as if that's some ground-breaking realization.

Sorry, but obviously the downside is capped. The downside of virtually any marketing investment is capped at the cost of the media buy...And, the upside being "asymmetric" isn't some saving grace. What matters is the likelihood that you actually realize that asymmetric upside. And, nowhere in the article does he talk about Ro's estimated success likelihoods or actual outcomes.

In short, he's basically saying:

- I made a bet

- It costs me something ("capped downside")

- There's a potential payout ("asymmetric upside")

- I have no idea whether this is positive expected value