WARC’s latest Global Ad Trends report examines the shift in advertising spend from professionally-produced content to user generated content (UGC) and ‘creator-journalists’ willing to operate within digital platform ecosystems. It explores how news publishers are tackling the decline in ad spend and how they plan to better demonstrate the role of professional journalism on advertising effectiveness.
Alex Brownsell, Head of Content, WARC Media, says: “Brands have become increasingly squeamish about hard news content. Keyword blocking hinders the ability of publishers to monetise newsworthy moments, while ad investment is increasingly shifting from professional journalism to ‘creator-journalists’.
“In this Global Ad Trends report we look at where the news media ad dollars are being allocated and what newsbrands are doing to combat these losses and win back advertisers.”
News media struggles as brands favour softer content
Ad spend on news content is falling across the board. Despite high audience interest, serious news stories are frequently demonetised due to keyword blocklists deployed by brands concerned by reputational risk. As brands avoid placing ads alongside content deemed controversial or distressing, they are favouring softer content like sport and lifestyle over “hard” news.
Only 3.7% (£177m) of total UK TV ad spend was allocated to news programming in 2024, per Nielsen. In the US, pharma brands have become increasingly integral for news broadcasters, accounting for 12% of national TV ad sales.
This evokes longstanding questions about the value of news as a content category, and whether brands should focus agnostically on targeting audiences.
User generated content set to overtake professional media in ad spend by 2026
The difficulties facing news media come at a time when advertisers increasingly favour user generated content (UGC) from influencers and creators, which offer low production costs, direct audience engagement, and alignment with platform algorithms.
Traditional media, which invests upfront in journalism and operates under stricter content standards and to tighter regulations, has struggled to compete. This shift is particularly damaging to the ad-funded news industry, which has long warned that shrinking investment in professional journalism risks a decline in civic literacy, and weaker defences against disinformation.
By next year, professionally produced content is forecast to account for less than half of content-driven ad spend, according to GroupM. Platforms like TikTok and podcasts are fuelling the rise of creator-journalists, as is the rise of AI-generated content which also accelerates this trend.
Kate Scott-Dawkins, Global President, Business Intelligence, GroupM, says: “As spend from the long tail of advertisers continues to outpace growth from the top 200, UGC is likely to dominate even more.”
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