More Marketers To Pull Back On X (Twitter) Ad Spend Than Ever Before – Kantar
…YouTube emerges as marketers’ favourite ad platform for 2024, Amazon and TikTok come out top among consumers and Netflix revealed as an advertising darling
Kantar, the world’s leading marketing insights and analytics company, has found that marketer confidence in X (formerly known as Twitter) declined significantly in the past year, driven by brand safety concerns and poor perceptions around innovation and trust. The findings are included in Kantar’s Media Reactions 2024 report, an annual study exploring the evolving media landscape. The study, based on interviews with c.18,000 consumers in 27 markets and 1,000 senior marketers globally, also reports that YouTube remains the ad platform marketers most prefer, while, for consumers, Amazon and TikTok share the top spot.
The fall of X: a shift in confidence Kantar’s findings reveal that a net 26% of marketers have reported plans to reduce ad spend on X in 2025, the biggest recorded pullback from any major global ad platform. Marketers’ trust in adverts on X, historically low, has decreased further under Elon Musk’s leadership, from 22% in 2022 to 12% in 2024. Only 4% of marketers think adverts on X provide brand safety (in contrast to Google, which comes top for brand safety at 39%). X scores outside of the global top ten for trust and for the perception of how innovative advertising on the platform is. This contrasts with TikTok, the most innovative advertising publisher for the fifth consecutive year, and YouTube, the most trusted.
Gonca Bubani, Global Thought Leadership Director – Media at Kantar, comments: “Advertisers have been moving their marketing spend away from X for several years. The stark acceleration of this trend in the past 12 months means a turnaround currently seems unlikely. Marketers are brand custodians and need to trust the platforms they use. X has changed so much in recent years and can be unpredictable from one day to the next – it’s difficult to feel confident about your brand safety in that environment. Ironically, decreasing spend by marketers on X will make consumers happier with the platform as they come face to face with fewer ads.”
Top-ranking digital media brands, by preference (brackets denote change in ranking)
Consumers | Marketers |
Point of sale ads (+3) | Digital out of home ads (+2) |
Cinema ads (-) | Sponsored events (-) |
Sponsored events (-2) | Online video ads (-2) |
Newspaper ads (+3) | Out of home ads (+7) |
Out of home ads (-2) | Ecommerce ads (+1) |
Other key findings
Kantar’s Media Reactions 2024 survey offers a comprehensive view of the evolving attitudes of marketers and consumers in response to the changing media landscape:
- Mixed attitudes towards GenAI: 62% of consumers and 68% of marketers are positive about GenAI more broadly, but the same feeling doesn’t yet extend to AI-generated advertising. While most marketers (71%) are not bothered by AI-generated ads consumers are not so sure yet: two in five (41%) say AI-generated ads bother them.
- Good news for advertisers as consumer receptivity grows: Ad receptivity among consumers has been growing for the past decade as marketers find the sweet spot for nascent formats through trial and error and consumers are normalised to seeing ads on more channels. Almost half of consumers (47%) are now receptive to adverts, up from only 24% in 2020. The increase of 9 percentage points on last year (38%) is the highest change since 2020.
- Generational stereotypes are a myth: The brands most preferred by consumers vary significantly and there are some surprises: Gen Z prefers ads on Amazon, Facebook and Google, and among millennials and Gen X, Snapchat comes out on top. Older generations also welcome ads on TikTok, which appears in the top three among both Gen X and boomers.
Gonca Bubani concludes: “Campaigns which reach more receptive audiences are seven times more impactful. That’s why it’s so important for marketers to find the sweet spot between the right channel, the right media brand and the right format. To thrive in today’s fragmented environment, brands have to do more than understand shifting cultural and media dynamics – they need to care about their creative quality and make sure they’re customising it for the right environment. That means finding opportunities to stand out meaningfully, meet consumers in their diversity, and connect with audiences in more authentic and impactful ways.”