TV ads aren’t dead, they’re just getting a Snapchat facelift

Today’s a very chatty Snapchatty kind of day. The internet is awash with stories and speculation about the rise and potential future of the fun messaging application after its first set of results as a public company are released.

One of the biggest considerations is their hot pursuit of ad dollars from giant brands to smaller businesses.  They’ve launched a new self-serve ad manager for buying video snap ads which will make it a lot easier for third parties to join the party.

So, for marketers perhaps a little resistant to its potential, who spend big on more traditional routes (TV, print), there’s no escaping. It’s time to download it and see what the fuss is about, as the hot off the press Snap Inc. report states that the growth of mobile advertising reflects “…the shift of people’s attention from their televisions to their mobile phones”, and with that comes a(nother) shift in how we view advertising.

We’ve had pre-roll horizontal video ads and in-feed horizontal ads that felt intrusive or simply, overlooked. Now, Snapchat want to “figure out how to capture the entertainment and creativity of television advertisements that made them so engaging, and make video advertising part of the fun of watching Stories.”

Last year’s user-centric Spotify campaign spanned 14 markets, used their mega-cache of data from listeners to localise out-of-home (digital billboards) messages on a global scale. Nike went reflective for their ‘Time is Precious’ ads – looking at our daily smartphone habits, and PwC celebrated its 82nd year of involvement in the Oscars with their #BallotBriefcase Snapchat campaign. A literal storytelling journey (although, human error on the big day also added to their coverage).

Some of the best TV campaigns ran for years. Gold Blend, BT, Barclaycard all featured ‘characters’, a clear slogan and won the hearts and spending power of the nation on a grand scale. We’ve come a long way since the first UK TV ad (1955 Gibbs SR toothpaste), and now? We can incorporate the best Film & TV techniques and tropes, mix it with all-powerful and conquering data to create advertising that’s more personal and targeted. It’s less one TV nation under a hypnotic groove and more about a virtual party filled with every kind of personality you want to chat to.

Embrace Snapchat. You’ll be able to buy, manage and view reporting for your campaigns, have a range of ad formats to tailor and deliver to your audience with no minimum ad spend and a free to use benefit. Bring that old-school creativity, mix it up with modern tech, cherry pick your audience and watch your brand and sales grow.

Latest Posts

Yep – it’s a 101 for finding out if your B2B social campaigns and content are delivering. Think you know it all? Think again. The sands of marketing are shifting…again. Aligning metrics and business objectives. Most B2B marketers can tell you the engagement rate. And they certainly know the level…
Read More
Meta has started rolling ads into Threads timelines globally from late January 2026. That’s the moment Threads stops being a side app and becomes a paid, recommendation-led public square. Threads has passed 400 million monthly active users, and Meta has put daily actives at around 150 million. The strategic implication for B2C and B2B is the same; distribution gets easier to buy, credibility gets harder to earn. Threads rewards coherence in public conversation, how you answer, how you sound, how specific you are. Treat it as a trust surface, because that’s where decisions get shaped now.
Read More
Feeds are getting tired of “perfect”. A lot of the most interesting work going into 2026 is reacting against hyper-digital polish with visuals that feel more handled: scanned textures, mismatched elements, collecting layouts, and deliberate “imperfections” that make the human hand visible again. That matters for social, because audiences clock…
Read More