“As Advertised on TV” Still Works. Here’s Why.

“As advertised on TV” is one of the oldest signals in retail marketing, and it still moves product. Not because television is magic, but because broadcast reach does something that no amount of retargeting or search capture can replicate: it creates demand before the customer knows they want something.

The phrase itself is almost quaint now. But the principle behind it, that mass-reach media builds the kind of familiarity and trust that converts later down the funnel, is as commercially sound as it has ever been. The brands that have quietly kept investing in it while everyone else chased last-click attribution are, in many cases, the ones still growing.

Key Takeaways

  • Television and broadcast media still build brand salience in ways that performance channels cannot replicate, because they reach people before intent exists.
  • The “as advertised on TV” signal works because it borrows credibility from the medium itself, not just the message.
  • Most performance marketing captures demand that broad-reach media created. Cutting brand investment to fund performance often cannibalises the pipeline you cannot see.
  • The shift to digital did not make TV redundant. It made the measurement of TV harder, which is not the same thing.
  • Go-to-market strategies that ignore top-of-funnel reach are optimising for the customers they already have, not the growth they need.

Why “As Advertised on TV” Was Never Just a Tagline

Walk into any mid-market retailer and you will still see the sticker. “As seen on TV.” It sits next to the price tag on blenders, cleaning products, fitness equipment, and kitchen gadgets. It has been there for forty years. Nobody updated the design. Nobody pulled it. Because it still works.

The reason is not nostalgia. It is credibility transfer. Television, even in a fragmented media landscape, carries an implicit quality signal. The assumption is that if a brand can afford to advertise on TV, it has passed some threshold of legitimacy. That assumption is not always correct, but it is persistent. And in retail environments where a customer is making a low-consideration purchase with limited information, that signal does real work.

This is worth understanding clearly, because it speaks to something deeper than media planning. It speaks to how trust is built at scale. You cannot build that kind of ambient credibility through search ads or retargeting. Those channels reach people who are already in motion. Broadcast media reaches people who are not thinking about you at all, and plants something that pays out later.

Earlier in my career I was heavily focused on lower-funnel performance. It looked efficient. The numbers were clean. But over time I started questioning how much of that performance was genuinely created by the channel, and how much was simply captured from demand that already existed, often demand that had been seeded by brand activity elsewhere. The honest answer, in most of the accounts I ran, was that performance was doing more capturing than creating. That distinction matters enormously when you are trying to grow rather than just harvest.

What Broadcast Reach Actually Does to a Go-To-Market Strategy

A go-to-market strategy that relies entirely on capturing existing intent has a structural ceiling. You can optimise your way to the top of a fixed pool, but you cannot optimise your way to a bigger pool. That requires reaching people who do not yet know they need what you are selling.

This is the fundamental case for broad-reach media in any serious growth strategy. It is not about brand awareness for its own sake. It is about expanding the addressable audience before the purchase decision happens. The Marketing Juice growth strategy hub covers this tension across several articles, but the television question puts it in sharp relief because TV is the channel where the argument is most visible and most misunderstood.

Think about how market penetration actually works. It is not about converting more of the same people. It is about reaching new people who have not yet formed a preference. Television, and broadcast media more broadly, is one of the most efficient ways to do that at scale. The cost-per-reach figures, when measured honestly against the full customer experience rather than last-click attribution, are often more competitive than marketers assume.

The challenge is that the measurement is harder. Digital channels give you a dashboard. Television gives you a lag. And in organisations where the CFO wants a clean return-on-investment figure by quarter end, the lag is politically inconvenient. So budgets shift to performance, performance captures the demand that brand had already built, and the numbers look fine until the pipeline starts thinning. By then, the connection between the budget cut and the growth slowdown is hard to prove, which is exactly the problem.

The Credibility Mechanics Behind the Signal

There is a specific mechanism worth examining here. When a product is advertised on television, it does not just reach the people who see the ad. It also reaches the people who see the “as advertised on TV” sticker in-store and recognise the signal, even if they never saw the original ad. The medium lends its credibility to the product at the point of sale, long after the campaign has ended.

This is a form of social proof that operates at the category level rather than the individual level. It says: other people have seen this, other people have considered this, this brand has been through some filter of legitimacy. That is enormously powerful in low-consideration categories where the customer is not doing deep research before buying.

I spent time judging the Effie Awards, which evaluate marketing effectiveness rather than creative execution. One of the things that becomes clear when you read through the case studies is how often the winning campaigns combined broad-reach media with a specific behavioural trigger at the point of decision. The television ad did not close the sale. It created the conditions for the sale to be closed by something else, a shelf placement, a promotion, a word-of-mouth recommendation. The attribution models almost never captured that chain. The effectiveness data did.

This is the honest picture of how television works in a go-to-market context. It is not a standalone channel. It is a foundation layer that makes everything else work harder.

Why the Digital Pivot Did Not Kill This Logic

When digital advertising scaled, the narrative was that television was dying. Budgets would follow eyeballs, eyeballs were moving online, therefore television was a legacy channel for brands that had not caught up yet. That narrative was partially right and mostly wrong.

Eyeballs did move. Attention fragmented. But the credibility mechanics of broadcast media did not disappear. They adapted. Connected TV, streaming with ads, YouTube pre-rolls at scale, all of these carry some version of the same signal. The format changed. The underlying psychology did not.

What actually happened is that measurement got harder to do honestly across channels. Digital gave marketers a false sense of precision. You could see exactly which ad led to which click led to which conversion. The problem is that this view of the world only captures the last step in a experience that might have started six months earlier when someone saw a television ad and filed the brand name away somewhere in their memory. Research from Vidyard on pipeline and revenue potential points to how much untapped value sits in the parts of the funnel that are hardest to attribute directly.

The brands that pulled TV budgets entirely to fund digital performance often saw short-term efficiency gains followed by medium-term growth stagnation. The ones that maintained a broad-reach presence, even at reduced levels, tended to hold their market position better. This is not a universal rule, and category dynamics matter enormously. But the pattern is consistent enough to be worth taking seriously.

The Attribution Problem Is Not a Reason to Stop Investing

One of the most commercially damaging habits in modern marketing is defunding anything that cannot be cleanly attributed. It sounds rigorous. It is actually a form of short-termism dressed up as discipline.

When I was running agencies and managing large media accounts, the attribution conversation came up constantly. Clients wanted to know exactly what each pound was doing. That is a reasonable question. The problem is that the answer you get from attribution models is not the same as the truth. It is a model of the truth, built on assumptions, and those assumptions almost always favour the channels that sit closest to the conversion event.

Television sits furthest from the conversion event. So it gets the least credit. And because it gets the least credit, it gets the least budget. And because it gets the least budget, the top-of-funnel thins out, and eventually the performance channels start showing diminishing returns because there is less new demand coming in to be captured. The whole system degrades, slowly and then suddenly, and by the time the diagnosis is made, the fix takes 12 to 18 months to show up in the numbers.

This is not a hypothetical. I have seen it in accounts across multiple categories. The pattern is consistent. The solution is not to abandon attribution, but to be honest about what it can and cannot tell you. BCG’s work on commercial transformation makes the case clearly: growth-oriented organisations treat marketing investment as a portfolio, not a collection of individual line items to be optimised in isolation.

What “As Advertised on TV” Teaches Us About Reach and Trust

There is a version of this conversation that applies well beyond television. The underlying principle is about reach and trust, specifically about the relationship between the two.

Trust at scale requires exposure at scale. You cannot build a trusted brand by only talking to people who are already in your purchase funnel. You have to reach people before they are in the funnel, repeatedly, consistently, over time. That is what broadcast media does. That is what “as advertised on TV” signals at the point of sale. It is evidence of sustained investment in reaching a broad audience, and that investment is itself a credibility signal.

Think about the clothes shop analogy. Someone who tries something on is far more likely to buy it than someone who just browses the rail. But they only try it on because something made them pick it up in the first place. That something is awareness, familiarity, a visual cue that registered earlier. Television, at its best, is the thing that makes people pick up the product. The performance channel is the fitting room.

This is why go-to-market strategies that skip the reach layer tend to struggle in the medium term, even when they look efficient in the short term. They are optimising the fitting room experience without investing in getting people into the shop. BCG’s analysis of evolving go-to-market models in financial services illustrates how this plays out in categories where trust is the primary purchase driver. The mechanics are different but the logic is the same.

How to Think About TV in a Modern Go-To-Market Plan

This is not an argument for throwing budget at television without a strategy. It is an argument for taking the reach question seriously and not defaulting to “TV is dead” as a reason to avoid the hard work of planning a proper full-funnel approach.

The practical questions are: who are you trying to reach that you are not currently reaching, what is the most efficient way to reach them at scale, and what does the conversion path look like once they have been reached. Television, connected TV, and broadcast-adjacent channels like podcast advertising and streaming pre-rolls all deserve a place in that conversation, evaluated honestly against the full customer experience rather than last-click performance.

For brands in categories where purchase cycles are long or consideration is high, the case for broad-reach investment is particularly strong. Forrester’s work on go-to-market challenges in complex categories highlights how organisations that focus exclusively on lower-funnel tactics often find themselves competing for a shrinking pool of already-decided buyers rather than shaping the preferences of undecided ones.

The measurement challenge is real but manageable. Brand tracking studies, media mix modelling, and controlled geographic tests all provide meaningful signals about the contribution of broad-reach media to overall growth. None of them are perfect. But imperfect approximation is more commercially useful than precise measurement of the wrong thing.

I remember being handed the whiteboard pen at Cybercom during a Guinness brainstorm when the founder had to step out for a client meeting. The brief was about reach, about how you make a brand feel present in culture rather than just visible in a media plan. The honest answer then, and the honest answer now, is that you cannot fake that kind of presence with performance spend alone. You have to earn it through sustained investment in reaching people who are not yet looking for you.

The Broader Lesson for Growth Strategy

The “as advertised on TV” principle is really a lesson about how growth works. Growth requires reaching people who do not yet know they need you. That requires investment in channels that operate before intent exists. And it requires the organisational patience to hold that investment even when the attribution models make it look like it is not working.

The brands that have figured this out are not doing anything exotic. They are running brand campaigns alongside performance campaigns, measuring the combined effect honestly, and resisting the pressure to defund the layer that is hardest to attribute. That is not a sophisticated strategy. It is a disciplined one. And discipline, in my experience, is rarer than sophistication in most marketing organisations.

Growth hacking case studies often focus on the clever tactical move, the referral loop, the viral mechanic, the product-led growth trick. Those things are real and sometimes they work. But the brands with the most durable growth trajectories are almost always the ones that combined those tactics with sustained investment in broad-reach brand building. The tactics create spikes. The brand investment creates the baseline that makes the spikes possible.

If you are working through the reach and investment questions in your own go-to-market planning, the Go-To-Market and Growth Strategy hub covers the full landscape, from audience definition through to measurement and channel mix, with the same commercially grounded perspective.

About the Author

Keith Lacy is a marketing strategist and former agency CEO with 20+ years of experience across agency leadership, performance marketing, and commercial strategy. He writes The Marketing Juice to cut through the noise and share what works.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does TV advertising still work for brand building?
Yes, television and broadcast media still build brand salience effectively, particularly for reaching audiences who are not yet in an active purchase mindset. The credibility signal that comes with TV presence transfers to the point of sale and influences purchase decisions even when viewers do not consciously recall the ad. The measurement is harder than digital channels, but harder to measure is not the same as less effective.
Why do performance marketing channels seem more efficient than TV?
Performance channels appear more efficient because they sit closest to the conversion event and therefore receive the most attribution credit. But much of what performance marketing captures is demand that was created earlier in the customer experience, often by brand activity in broad-reach channels. The efficiency is partly real and partly a measurement artefact. Organisations that defund brand to invest in performance often see short-term gains followed by medium-term growth stagnation as the top-of-funnel thins out.
How should TV fit into a go-to-market strategy?
Television and broadcast-adjacent channels belong in the reach layer of a go-to-market strategy, alongside other broad-reach formats like connected TV, streaming pre-rolls, and large-scale digital video. Their role is to build familiarity and trust with audiences who are not yet in the purchase funnel, creating the conditions for performance channels to convert more effectively later. The allocation depends on category, purchase cycle length, and the size of the untapped audience relative to the existing customer base.
What does “as advertised on TV” signal to consumers?
The phrase signals legitimacy and scale. It implies that the brand has invested in reaching a broad audience, which consumers interpret as evidence that the product has passed some threshold of quality or market acceptance. This credibility transfer operates at the point of sale, often influencing purchase decisions for people who never saw the original advertisement. It is a form of social proof borrowed from the medium rather than generated by individual customer reviews or endorsements.
How do you measure the impact of TV advertising on growth?
The most reliable approaches are brand tracking studies, which measure awareness and consideration over time, media mix modelling, which estimates the contribution of each channel to overall sales, and controlled geographic tests, which compare growth rates in markets with and without TV investment. None of these methods are precise in the way digital attribution appears to be, but they provide commercially useful approximations. The goal is honest estimation of the full customer experience, not false precision about the last click.

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