Episode Details
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Super Bowl Commercials – Do They Really Work?
Description
This year, companies spent $8–10 million for a single 30-second Super Bowl commercial, before production, celebrity fees, and amplification even begin. It’s one of the biggest marketing bets any company can make, and one of the few remaining moments of true mass, real-time cultural attention.
In this episode, the panel tackles the real question behind the hype:
Do Super Bowl commercials actually work, or are brands gambling millions on a flashy coin flip?
To answer this question, we're joined by featured guests and ad agency experts Anaka Kobzev (main episode and included post-show) and Amelea Renshaw (post-show) who have both been instrumental in shaping Super Bowl campaigns, among other things:
- Anaka has led global communications for legendary agencies like McCann and TBWA and is Founder and Principal of Through Line Advisory, helping brands to elevate their visibility through strategic communications and content.
- Amelea is Head of Strategy at Lucky Generals NY, spearheading brand positioning, award-winning creative campaigns, and comms thinking for brands such as Universal (with a 2026 ad spot), Ally, Google, Peloton, Pinterest, and Girls Who Code.
Recorded in two parts, the episode opens with a pre-game breakdown, where the panel evaluates the economics, risks, and strategic rationale behind Super Bowl advertising. After the game, the conversation continues with a bonus after-show, analyzing what actually aired, which ads cut through, which ones missed, and what patterns emerged across categories like AI, finance, health, food and beverage.
With perspectives from brand strategy, communications leadership, and deep agency experience, the group goes beyond “Was it funny?” and instead evaluates ROI, readiness, cultural fit, and long-term brand impact.
Key Topics & Takeaways
Why Super Bowl ads now cost 2–3× more than a decade ago
The difference between awareness, engagement, and actual business impact
When Super Bowl ads amplify strength vs expose weakness
Why creative misalignment can erase millions in value
The danger of confusing celebrity recognition with brand recall
How layoffs, market timing, and internal morale affect ad perception
Why some brands win with one ad and others disappear entirely
The rise of AI, health, and fintech themes in this year’s game
How pre-game leaks and post-game amplification now matter as much as game night
Strategic Frameworks Discussed
Readiness Test: If your operations can’t handle the spike, don’t buy the spot
Lifecycle Fit: Super Bowl ads work best at inflection points, not desperation moments
Creative Discipline: Entertainment alone is not strategy
Before / During / After: The ad is the spark, not the fire
Internal Alignment: Employees must understand the “why,” not just see the spend
Cultural Context: Tone matters as much as message
Who This Episode Is For
CMOs and brand leaders
Marketing and communications executives
Agency strategists and creatives
Founders considering big-budget awareness plays
Anyone curious why some Super Bowl ads become legendary and others become memes
The Big Question This Episode Answers
Is a Super Bowl commercial a smart investment or a very expensive ego play?
Final Take
Super Bowl commercials can work, but only when the entire business is ready to support the moment. Without operational strength, creative clarity, and strategic intent, the biggest stage in advertising doesn’t save brands, it exposes them.
The real win isn’t airtime.
It’s alignment, execution, and what happens after the confetti settles.
Main Panel
Aaron Wolpoff
Melissa Eaton
Chino Nnadi
Anaka Kobzev (Special Guest)
Anaka's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ana