Close Menu
CovMediaCovMedia
    What's Hot

    The Corporate Concert Sponsorship Boom: Why American Express and Citibank Are Buying Up Live Entertainment

    July 16, 2026

    Shopify’s Logistics Retreat: The Financial Masterstroke of Focusing Exclusively on E-Commerce Software

    July 16, 2026

    Tom Cruise’s Backend Deals: How He Became the Highest-Paid Actor in Hollywood Without a Traditional Salary

    July 16, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter)
    CovMediaCovMedia
    • Home
    • Trending
    • Banking
    • Economy
    • FinTech
    • Game
    • Investments
    • Markets
    • Tech
    CovMediaCovMedia
    Home » The Attention Economy Crash: Why Brands Are Slashing Ad Budgets on TikTok and Instagram
    Economy

    The Attention Economy Crash: Why Brands Are Slashing Ad Budgets on TikTok and Instagram

    Sam AllcockBy Sam AllcockJuly 16, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email
    The Attention Economy Crash, Why Brands Are Slashing Ad Budgets on TikTok and Instagram
    The Attention Economy Crash, Why Brands Are Slashing Ad Budgets on TikTok and Instagram
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email

    Neither a quarterly earnings call nor a boardroom announcement was the first indication that something was actually wrong. The comment sections are where it originated. By the end of 2024, replies to influencers who shared images of luxury purchases and far-off vacations on Instagram and TikTok were flattened, not because they were phony but rather because they were tone deaf. The audience was no longer the same. And slowly but clearly, the ad dollars started to come in.

    Social media advertising relied on a sort of shared faith for more than ten years. Brands thought that conversions would occur where the eyeballs were. It seemed to be supported by the numbers. However, data from the last eighteen months reveals a different picture, one that many marketing executives are quietly uneasy about.

    Instagram’s engagement rate has decreased by about 67% since the beginning of 2024, to about 1.16%, the lowest of any major platform. Over the same period, brand content engagement on TikTok, which gained notoriety for its remarkable organic reach and creator-driven virality, decreased from 5.69% to roughly 2.63%. These are not small dips. The trajectory is difficult to explain away for platforms that have been marketing themselves as the most effective attention-capture devices ever created.

    Beneath the numbers, there is a more significant cultural shift that merits consideration. According to a 2025 Deloitte survey, almost 25% of adults had removed at least one social media app in the previous 12 months; among Gen Z, this percentage increased to about a third. These are the same individuals that brands have been actively pursuing. In response, the platforms flooded feeds with algorithmically amplified noise and AI-generated content, which worsened the experience for actual users while maintaining engagement metrics. Advertisers are beginning to price in this slow-motion credibility issue.

    Budgets for marketing are already changing. Influencer Marketing Hub reports that between 2024 and 2025, the percentage of brands allocating ad funds to online creators decreased by almost 10 percentage points. Campaign sizes have also decreased; whereas a mid-sized brand may have collaborated with more than twenty creators on a single push, many now use just one. Once thought to be virtually recession-proof, the influencer economy is now realizing that it isn’t. Consumers and brands are becoming more cautious, skeptical, and significantly less inclined to spend money on aspirational content that doesn’t feel authentic due to recession anxiety.

    An overdue reckoning with waste is part of what’s taking place. Up to 30% of social ad budgets are thought to have been lost due to bot traffic, poorly targeted ads, and non-performing impressions. On these platforms, advertising expenses continued to rise while conversion efficiency steadily declined. CPMs went up. The amount of attention per impression decreased. For an increasing number of brands, there is a point at which the math just doesn’t work.

    The Attention Economy Crash, Why Brands Are Slashing Ad Budgets on TikTok and Instagram
    The Attention Economy Crash, Why Brands Are Slashing Ad Budgets on TikTok and Instagram

    Where some of that money is going is a topic of less discussion. What the industry refers to as the “open internet”—news websites, editorial platforms, and content hubs where users actively search for something rather than passively scrolling—is gaining popularity again. According to reports, 37% of consumers recall brands from online news and magazine placements, while only about 25% do so from social media. The $220 billion social advertising market may have been over-indexed on platforms that are more adept at making impressions than memories. For years, the industry chose not to look too closely at that important distinction.

    It seems like the industry is at last posing more challenging queries. It’s not just about where to put money; it’s about what it really means to get someone’s attention instead of interrupting them. Volume and targeting accuracy were the cornerstones of the platforms’ value proposition. However, if a significant percentage of younger users have already trained themselves to ignore your advertisement in 1.3 seconds, it doesn’t matter how precisely you target them. Before the message has a chance, the focus is diverted.

    It is still genuinely unclear what will happen next. Certain brands will drastically retreat. Others will continue in the hopes that the platforms will figure out a way to improve the experience. Some will attempt to be creative and invest in engaging content instead of purchasing it. However, it appears that the days of believing that a TikTok or Instagram placement will inevitably result in impact are coming to an end. Silently, and then suddenly.

    Economy Crash TikTok and Instagram
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleSaudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund: How Trillions in Oil Wealth Are Buying Up Western Sports and Tech
    Next Article Amazon’s Logistics Empire: How the Retail Giant is Quietly Deflating Global Shipping Costs
    Sam Allcock
    • Website
    • X (Twitter)
    • LinkedIn

    Related Posts

    The Corporate Concert Sponsorship Boom: Why American Express and Citibank Are Buying Up Live Entertainment

    July 16, 2026

    Shopify’s Logistics Retreat: The Financial Masterstroke of Focusing Exclusively on E-Commerce Software

    July 16, 2026

    The Costco Gold Rush: Why Middle-Class Americans Are Hoarding Bullion Alongside Their Groceries

    July 16, 2026

    Comments are closed.

    Top Posts

    How to Get Cricfy TV Download for Smart TV Apps Without the Play Store

    April 20, 202517,704 Views

    Jay Kay Net Worth, Inside the $70 Million Life of the Funk Icon with 22 Cars and a Buckinghamshire Mansion

    July 11, 2025501 Views

    Rory McPhee Net Worth Revealed – Mel B’s Husband Is Secretly a Millionaire!

    July 31, 2025488 Views

    Character AI No Filter: The Secret Trick That’s Changing AI Conversations Forever

    April 16, 2025404 Views
    Don't Miss
    Banking

    The Corporate Concert Sponsorship Boom: Why American Express and Citibank Are Buying Up Live Entertainment

    By Sam AllcockJuly 16, 2026

    Between the headliner and the opening act, there’s a point where you notice the branding.…

    Shopify’s Logistics Retreat: The Financial Masterstroke of Focusing Exclusively on E-Commerce Software

    July 16, 2026

    Tom Cruise’s Backend Deals: How He Became the Highest-Paid Actor in Hollywood Without a Traditional Salary

    July 16, 2026

    The AgTech Revolution: How Indoor Vertical Farming in Dubai is Disrupting the Global Food Supply Chain

    July 16, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Our Picks
    About Us
    About Us

    Stay informed with CovMedia's latest business and finance updates. For queries, contact editor@covmedia.co.uk. Empowering you with accurate insights and news.

    Our Picks

    The Corporate Concert Sponsorship Boom: Why American Express and Citibank Are Buying Up Live Entertainment

    July 16, 2026

    Shopify’s Logistics Retreat: The Financial Masterstroke of Focusing Exclusively on E-Commerce Software

    July 16, 2026

    Tom Cruise’s Backend Deals: How He Became the Highest-Paid Actor in Hollywood Without a Traditional Salary

    July 16, 2026
    Most Popular

    The Swiss Banking Consolidation: What the UBS and Credit Suisse Merger Means for the Future of Hidden Wealth

    July 14, 20263 Views

    Steve Clarke Salary Scotland: Was He Worth Every Penny the SFA Paid?

    July 14, 20264 Views

    Keir Starmer’s Financial Disclosures: What the UK Prime Minister’s Net Worth Reveals About Modern British Politics

    July 16, 20264 Views
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.