Global consumer experiential marketing, including event sponsorships and live event marketing, grew 8.2% in 2021 to $67.63 billion, following an unprecedented 25.7% plunge in 2020, as the economic blowback from COVID-19 dealt a punishing blow to one of the most consistently growing media segments for two decades prior to the pandemic, according to a new research report by PQ Media.
Global experiential marketing is on pace to grow at an accelerated 11.1% to $75.16 billion in 2022 as one of the media industry’s largest segments continues to recover from the deep impact of the pandemic and the weight of emergency restrictions, such as business and home lockdowns and social distancing worldwide, according to PQ Media’s Global Experiential Marketing Forecast 2022-2026. Ultimately, the pandemic wrought massive damage on the consumer event sector – more than any other media industry segment – in such a brief period that it was unparalleled in the history of advertising and marketing.
Despite the global pandemic upending the consumer event markets in 2020, secular trends driving brand marketer investments in experiential marketing for decades are expected to accelerate in the years ahead, as branded entertainment and marketing have increasingly become more important components of successful cross-channel marketing campaigns.
This year’s edition of the Forecast includes the most detailed data breakouts and analysis by the two major experiential marketing channels – consumer event sponsorships and live event marketing – and within those two major channels the first deep-dive data on 11 key experiential marketing categories, including within the consumer event sponsorship channel: sports; entertainment, tours & attractions; causes; arts; festivals, fairs & other events; and associations. covered in the live events channel are: sports & entertainment; virtual events & mobile road shows; grass roots; college campuses; and mall & nightlife.
Consumer event sponsorships was the larger of the two major channels at $35.82 billion in 2021, with sports being the largest category at $23.63 billion, a 66% market share. Live consumer events was the faster growing overall channel, up 9.5%, with sports & entertainment being the largest category at $11.56 billion, a 36.3% market share.
Among the hardest hit consumer event markets in 2020 was the US, the world’s largest market, where no experiential segment was spared the deep impact of COVID-19. However, US experiential marketing spend grew 12% in 2021 to $31.36 billion, with event sponsorships being the largest channel at $16.08 billion and while sports the largest category at $11.40 billion, a 70.9% market share. Meanwhile, live events was the faster growing overall experiential channel, up 13.5%, with sports & entertainment its largest category at $5.15 billion, a 33.7% share, according to the Global Experiential Marketing Forecast 2022-2026
Going forward, US experiential marketing spend is on pace to rise 13.7% in 2022 to $35.65 billion, as it continues to rebound and PQ Media believes opportunities abound for those event marketers, sponsors, developers and back-end designers who capitalize on a more open playing field in America and other major markets, due to key competitors either having been weakened or forced to shutter business entirely.
“Experiential marketing has steadily become more important to brands over the past decade because live experiences, such as major music festivals and global sporting events, provide excellent opportunities to engage more elusive and fickle younger demographics. We expect to see more brands using advanced smart tech marketing, tracking, and analysis going forward to create interactive experiences that bridge the physical, digital and virtual worlds,” said PQ Media CEO Patrick Quinn. “Several instances of these evolving tactics emerged in the past two years, including music events that went virtual through online videogame platforms, such as Roblox and Fortnite; NASCAR races that took place in e-sports leagues; hybrid media experiences at the Beijing Winter Olympics; and the return of lucrative political fundraising events.”