
The Marketing Architects The Hidden Cost of Media Flighting
Mar 24, 2026
Jordan Rosler, VP of Media Analytics known for TV media buying and measurement, breaks down why concentrated media peaks can backfire. He unpacks marginal versus blended ROI. Short spikes, upfronts, shoulder weeks, always-on strategies, and how to plan measurable 2026 media are all discussed in clear, practical terms.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Shoulder Weeks Often Beat Peak Week Spending
- Concentrating spend into peak weeks can reduce efficiency due to higher CPMs, clutter, and faster saturation.
- Data across 400 brands and $42B suggests shoulder weeks often deliver higher marginal returns than overloaded peak weeks.
Flighting Is An Inherited Habit That Damages Memory
- Flighting is an institutional habit from limited-channel, campaign-driven eras and reinforced by retail calendars like Black Friday.
- Angela Voss warns disappearing between flights hurts mental availability and forces costlier rebuilds later.
Peak Weeks Drive Up CPMs And Eat Efficiency
- Piling into peak TV weeks raises media prices because competing demand increases the price to clear.
- Jordan Rosler says higher CPMs will eat efficiency unless the business has a true seasonal lift that boosts effectiveness in those weeks.
