NEW YORK, July 2 /PRNewswire/ -- Republican Presidential Candidate Mitt Romney placed more local TV advertisements than all other candidates combined, with 4,549 ads, mostly on local broadcast television, through June 10 according to The Nielsen Company. Nielsen Monitor Plus, the leading provider of competitive advertising information, reported that traditional media started early this presidential campaign and that the local TV ad trend is anticipated to increase. Since the two weeks beginning June 11, both Chris Dodd and John Edwards have run half of their reported TV advertisements to date and Barack Obama began running TV ads in Iowa on June 27.
The presidential campaigns are using different combinations of new and traditional media to generate exposure during the early stages of the 2008 presidential race. Democrats are dominating new media with the online "buzz" tipping to Democrats 64.3% of the time, according to Nielsen BuzzMetrics. Meanwhile, Barack Obama's Website generated the greatest number of unique visitors of any candidate Website in April, according to Nielsen//NetRatings.
Traditional Media
Compared to the 2000 and 2004 elections, local TV ad spending for 2008, in general, started early, with seven candidates now running television spots. Republican Duncan Hunter was the first candidate to run a television spot, hitting televisions 625 days before the November 4, 2008 election, followed three days later by Republican challenger Mitt Romney. This early television presence, however, pales in comparison to the 2000 race when George W. Bush began running television spots 821 days (more than two years) before Election Day. Through June 2007, Mitt Romney had run the most campaign spots, with 4,549 in seven markets including Iowa and New Hampshire - more than all other candidates combined and more than double the number of Democrat Bill Richardson, who ran spots only in Iowa and New Hampshire.
Republican Rudolph Giuliani, taking a different approach to traditional media, has run hundreds of radio advertisements, twice as many Mitt Romney, the only other candidate with local radio ads. The Giuliani campaign has already run radio ads in most of the major U.S. media markets, focusing on Kansas City, Minneapolis-St. Paul, and Providence.
-- Mitt Romney had the most traditional ads with 53%, followed by Bill
Richardson with 26%, Chris Dodd with 19%, and John Edwards with 1%.
-- 82% of the local TV ads are in Iowa (64%) and New Hampshire (18%).
-- Duncan Hunters' 34 TV spots are asking people to join his campaign,
seeking volunteers and donations.
-- Giuliani has run 642 radio advertisements in every radio market that
Nielsen collects data; Romney has run 378 radio ads focusing on New
Hampshire and Central Florida.
2008 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN TELEVISION & RADIO SPOTS The Number of Television & Local Radio Ads (TV through-6/10/07, Radio 5/27/07)
Local
Candidate TV Nat'l Local TV IA NH VT SC FL GA MI DC CA
Total Cable Radio Total
Mitt
Romney(R) 4,549 297 378 4,252 2,036 788 572 386 319 96 55 - -
Bill
Richardson
(D) 2,232 - - 2,232 1,931 301 - - - - - - -
Chris
Dodd(D) 1,664 4 - 1,660 1,280 380 - - - - - - -
John
Edwards(D) 68 - - 68 45 - - - - - - 23 -
Duncan
Hunter(R) 34 - - 34 - - - 22 - - - 12
Rudolph
Giuliani(R) - - 642 - - - - - - - - - -
Total 8,547 301 1,020 8,246 5,292 1,469 572 408 319 96 55 23 12
*Source: Nielsen Monitor-Plus
Blog Activity
Democrats have the early lead in the blogosphere, generating more "Buzz," or online mentions in blogs and discussion, by nearly a 2-to-1 ratio, according to Nielsen BuzzMetrics. With no online advertisements, Senator Obama has created the greatest Buzz volume overall. Senator Hillary Clinton coming in a distant second, has used unique techniques to close the gap such as the recent online parody of the Soprano's series finale to generate additional Buzz.
John McCain is leading Republicans with online Buzz, potentially because of his heavy online ad spending in recent months. McCain's Buzz is followed relatively closely by Rudolph Giuliani and Mitt Romney, and distantly by Ron Paul. The Buzz for the Republican party overall is related to the heated discussion between Ron Paul and Rudolph Giuliani during the Republican debate in May 2007.
-- Obama had nearly double the amount of Buzz than Hillary Clinton (who is
ranked #2 in terms of Buzz volume).
-- The Democrats (Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, Bill
Richardson) significantly dominate online discussion compared with
Republicans (John McCain, Rudolph Giuliani, Mitt Romney, Ron Paul)
overall, with nearly double the amount of blog posts for the
trailing 12-month period.
-- Buzz for each political candidate peaked immediately after their
announcements for candidacy, then tends to level off.
2008 Presidential Campaign Political Buzz
Blog Post Analysis Democratic Party Republican Party
June 15, 2006-June Buzz Buzz
15, 2007 Candidate Share Candidate Share
Barack Obama 45.5 John McCain 37.9
Political Buzz Hillary Clinton 32.0 Rudolph Giuliani 25.1
Party Share
Democratic 64.3 John Edwards 17.5 Mitt Romney 22.7
Republican 35.7 Bill Richardson 4.9 Ron Paul 14.2
* Source: Nielsen BuzzMetrics
Data reflects % of messages within discussion of the above political candidates.
Websites and Internet Advertising
Republican Senator John McCain leads overall online paid advertising, followed by Republican Romney and Democrat Clinton. McCain had 12 times the exposure of other candidates as a result of online advertising in April, generating nearly 26 million unique impressions. However, McCain only placed fourth in the number of unique visitors to a candidate's Website in April.
Senator Clinton's campaign, which appears to have spent much less, generated the second most Website traffic, behind Democrat Senator Barack Obama. Obama, with no online advertisements, dominated the page views of all candidates, with the Obama' 08 Website generating nearly 4 million page views from almost 650,000 unique visitors in April.
-- Senator McCain generated over 40 million unique impressions utilizing
paid Internet advertisements in April and May from both image -- and
sponsored link based ads; followed by Mitt Romney with 5.8 million
unique impressions and Friends of Hillary generating just over 2
million impressions.
-- Senator McCain's nearly 26 million impressions in April generated the
fourth rank in online traffic to the a campaign Website, with Clinton's
1.4 million impressions contributing to second overall unique visitors
to a campaign site; and Romney's 877,000 unique impressions coming in a
distant sixth.
-- Senator Clinton scaled back online advertising significantly in May,
with under 1 million impressions compared to Senator McCain with nearly
15 million impressions and Romney with nearly 5 million.
2008 Presidential Campaign Websites for April 2007
Unique Page Active Sessions Time Per Visitor
Visitors Views Reach% Per (hh:mm:ss)
Website (000) (000) Visitor
Barack Obama for 647 3,797 0.45 1.41 0:06:21
President Website
Hillary Clinton for 498 1,616 0.34 1.17 0:04:16
President Website
John Edwards for 385 1,744 0.27 1.32 0:04:59
President Website
John McCain Presidential 212 766 0.15 1.20 0:04:09
Website
Tom Tancredo 142 454 0.10 1.10 0:03:58
Presidential Website
Mitt Romney Presidential 111 447 0.08 1.12 0:03:08
Website
Ron Paul Presidential 103 602 0.07 1.09 0:05:05
Website
Bill Richardson for 72 138 0.05 1.06 0:02:37
President Website
Dennis Kucinich for 70 329 0.05 1.56 0:04:57
President Website
Rudy Giuliani 65 562 0.04 1.17 0:02:43
Exploratory Website
Mike Gravel for N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
President Website
Joe Biden for President N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Website
Duncan Hunter for N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
President Website
Chris Dodd for President N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Website
Tommy Thompson N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Presidential Website
John Cox for President N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Website
Tom Vilsack for N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
President Website
*These Websites do not meet minimum sample size standards. Projected and average measures for these sites may exhibit large changes month-to-month as a result.
N/A indicates that these Websites have insufficient sample sizes for reliable projection of audience size.
2008 Presidential Campaign Online Political Advertising
Image-Based Advertising Sponsored Link Advertising
April 2007 May 2007 April 2007 May 2007
Impressions Impressions Impressions Impressions
(000) (000) (000) (000)
Candidate
John McCain 11,616 8,654 14,352 6,262
Friends of
Hillary 395 - 966 778
Romney for
President, Inc. - 3,437 877 1,438
*Source: Nielsen//NetRatings AdRelevance US
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