Harvey Norman Holds Onto Position As Australia’s Top Advertiser With $250M Annual Spend, According To “Nielsen Ad Intel Portfolio 2018 Advertiser Report”

Harvey Norman Holds Onto Position As Australia’s Top Advertiser With $250M Annual Spend, According To “Nielsen Ad Intel Portfolio 2018 Advertiser Report”

Harvey Norman has held onto its position as Australia’s top advertiser with $250 million annual spend, according to Nielsen’s 2018 Advertiser Report.

The report provides a comprehensive summary of Australian advertising activity, by media type, over the past 12 months.

At an advertiser level, Harvey Norman led total spend, increasing their reported spend by 33 per cent compared to 2017. At an executional level, Mitsubishi had the highest largest single spend for an ad, followed by Westpac’s ‘We Could be Heroes’ campaign.

Screen Shot 2019-06-25 at 11.43.37 am

In terms of categories, the automotive industry (retail) led total spend for the sixth consecutive year with $497.4 million spent on advertising, followed by homewares retail ($449.8m).

Screen Shot 2019-06-25 at 11.44.12 am

It was also a big year of changes in ad spend. 2018 saw seven new sectors enter the Top 10 Rising Sectors Report when compared to the previous year.

Sector growth, however, has slowed dramatically with the lowest percentage increase being just 3 per cent, considerably lower than 2017’s tenth position which was telecommunications with an increase of 19 per cent.

One of the key themes to emerge among the growth categories in 2018 is digitisation: home
automation, fantasy sports and sports betting are all new entrants and all placed in the list’s top five.

In 2018 the sectors that recorded a decrease in ad spend ranged from -3 per cent to -35 per cent. There were seven new categories to enter the Shrinking Sectors list versus 2017.

One of the key themes uncovered by this list is a marked decline in spend in health and beauty categories such as fragrances (-35 per cent), cosmetics (-29 per cent), haircare (-21 per cent) and female skincare (-8 per cent). This trend could indicate a shift toward advertisers using more digital media, celebrities and influencers on social media to promote these brands.

You can contact Nielsen for the full report.




Please login with linkedin to comment

harvey norman Nielsen

Latest News

Cosmo Returns To Australia!
  • Media

Cosmo Returns To Australia!

Ever get the feeling we've weirdly warped back to 1988 at the moment? Confirm it with the relaunch of Cosmo in print.

Sydney Comedy Festival: Taking The City & Social Media By Storm
  • Media

Sydney Comedy Festival: Taking The City & Social Media By Storm

Sydney Comedy Festival 2024 is live and ready to rumble, showing the best of international and homegrown talent at a host of venues around town. As usual, it’s hot on the heels of its big sister, the giant that is the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, picking up some acts as they continue on their own […]

Global Marketers Descend For AANA’s RESET For Growth
  • Advertising

Global Marketers Descend For AANA’s RESET For Growth

The Australian Association of National Advertisers (AANA) has announced the final epic lineup of local and global marketing powerhouses for RESET for Growth 2024. Lead image: Josh Faulks, chief executive officer, AANA  Back in 2000, a woman with no business experience opened her first juice bar in Adelaide. The idea was brilliantly simple: make healthy […]