The Biggest Paid Media Takeaways from 2025: A Year of Clarifying Signals

The Biggest Paid Media Takeaways from 2025: A Year of Clarifying Signals

December 29, 2025
Jessica Guffey, SVP, Integrated Marketing

As 2025 draws to a close, paid media seems more like a maturing discipline than a rapidly evolving trend cycle.

We have collaborated with companies in a variety of sectors, platforms, and stages of development over the course of the last year to plan, test, improve, and scale paid media initiatives in real time. The most significant changes weren’t connected to specific platform updates, even though strategies kept changing. They had to do with how brands viewed strategy, creativity, data, and measurement as interconnected systems.

In retrospect, 2025 provided several clarifying indicators. These are the key lessons from paid media that we found most noteworthy in our work, and we think they will continue to influence performance in the future.

1. Platform Growth Invited More Intentional Decision-Making

In 2025, advertisers had more paid media options than ever before. Platforms expanded placements, formats, and discovery surfaces, while retail media networks continued to gain relevance within broader media mixes.

What became increasingly clear is that opportunity alone isn’t the driver of performance. Intentionality is.

Brands saw the most momentum when platform expansion was guided by clear objectives, realistic expectations, and a thoughtful understanding of where the audience already engaged. Rather than feeling pressure to show up everywhere, many teams found success by deepening investment in channels that were already working and expanding selectively when the right conditions were in place. 

2. Creative Emerged as the Most Reliable Performance Signal

Throughout 2025, creative consistently proved to be one of the strongest indicators of paid media success.

As targeting continued to broaden, ads themselves carried more responsibility. Messaging, pacing, format, and authenticity all played a greater role in how campaigns performed. Creative that clearly articulated value, addressed real customer needs, and felt native to the platform often outperformed more polished, but less relevant assets.

Strong creative didn’t come from one perfect concept. It came from building systems that allowed teams to test, learn, and iterate quickly. Over time, these feedback loops became one of the most dependable ways to improve efficiency.

3. First-Party Data Continued to Strengthen Performance Foundations

Another pattern that became increasingly visible in 2025 was the role of first-party data in creating stability and consistency.

Brands that invested in clean data infrastructure—through CRM connections, server-side tracking, and thoughtful event design—gave platforms clearer signals to work with. This didn’t eliminate volatility, but it often made performance more predictable and learning periods more efficient.

At the same time, these investments helped teams better understand their audiences beyond platform dashboards, supporting stronger alignment between paid media, lifecycle marketing, and overall growth strategy.

4. Paid Media Naturally Moved Further Up the Funnel

In 2025, paid media continued to play a broader role across the customer journey.

Many brands observed that conversion-focused campaigns performed best when supported by earlier touchpoints — ads designed to educate, introduce, and build familiarity over time. Rather than viewing awareness and consideration as separate initiatives, teams began to see them as essential inputs to conversion efficiency.

This shift was especially evident on platforms like Meta, TikTok, and YouTube, where audiences often discover brands before actively searching for them.

5. Measurement Became More About Direction Than Certainty

Measurement conversations evolved noticeably in 2025.

As attribution remains imperfect, teams spent less time searching for precision and more time looking for consistency and directional insight. Blended metrics, trend analysis, and incrementality testing helped provide context that single-channel reports could not.

This shift encouraged stronger collaboration between marketing, analytics, and leadership—and helped align paid media decisions with broader business outcomes.

6. Rising Costs Reinforced the Importance of Fundamentals

Costs continued to rise across most paid media platforms in 2025, but this trend also brought an important realization into focus: paid media reflects the strength of what it’s built on.

Brands with clear positioning, compelling offers, cohesive messaging, and strong on-site experiences often found that paid media remained an effective growth lever, even in a more competitive environment.

Rather than being a standalone solution, paid media functioned best as an amplifier of solid fundamentals already in place.

Looking Ahead

2025 wasn’t defined by a single platform shift or tactical breakthrough. It was defined by a growing sense of alignment between creative and media, data and strategy, short-term performance and long-term brand building.

As we look toward 2026, the most successful paid media programs will continue to be those built with intention: grounded in strong fundamentals, guided by learning, and flexible enough to evolve alongside changing platforms and consumer behavior.

That’s the lens we bring to our work, and the one we believe will continue to serve brands well in the years ahead.

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Our Top 9 PR Successes of 2025

Our Top 9 PR Successes of 2025

December 9, 2025
Rob Benson, Corporate PR Director & Jenn Smulo, Consumer PR Director

How We Humanize Brands by Creating Moments of Influence 

Public relations is a different beast than traditional marketing or social media. While marketing pushes messages out, PR pulls people in. We humanize your brand by creating moments of influence – the stories, voices, and personalities that help audiences connect on an emotional level. 

Here are some of our favorite PR successes from 2025 that show how powerful human-centered storytelling can be. 

1. Circus Circus Las Vegas: Introducing Fear Zone

Circus Circus Las Vegas celebrated spooky season by presenting Fear Zone in the Adventuredome. Fear Zone combined terrifying haunted houses, scare zones, live scare actors and a one-of-a-kind coaster experience in the dark for the ultimate fear-filled scream park. We worked with Circus Circus Las Vegas and South of Heaven Productions to secure local press coverage and influencer content highlighting the limited run production. 

Our PR team invited media to Fear Zone previews and VIP tours inside the Adventuredome, as well as offered interview opportunities with Circus Circus leadership and Fear Zone creators. 

The result: Extensive local media coverage and high-impact influencer content positioned Fear Zone as a must-visit Halloween experience at Circus Circus Las Vegas. 

2. Ellis Island Casino & Hotel: Unveiling Phase One of a $35M Expansion

As Ellis Island Casino began working on its $35 million expansion, they approached MassMedia to help announce the first phase. The new space doubles the casino floor, which includes a new casino bar, high-limit gaming area, and the recently announced Boomer’s Sportsbook. The expansion also includes a new rooftop bar, The Deck, with views of Las Vegas Boulevard and seasonal craft cocktails.  

Our PR team announced the expansion by highlighting how the new space would both elevate the property and maintain the history surrounding Las Vegas local’s favorite off-Strip property, securing coverage locally and across industry publications. Additionally, we hosted a variety of influencers at The Deck to highlight the new addition.  

The result: The announcement brought forth both local and national coverage, as well as influencer content, which drove widespread awareness in Ellis Island’s continued expansion.  

3. IndiCap’s “The Ranch”: Telling the Human Side of a Large-Scale Industrial Development

Industrial developments don’t often get associated with people, but that’s exactly where we saw an opportunity. 

When IndiCap and its partners announced The Ranch, a first-of-its-kind industrial-anchored mixed-use development in Gilbert, AZ, we focused on the project’s human impact: 

  • What it means for the community 
  • How it will serve as a gathering place 
  • Its mix of shopping, dining, housing, and an 18-acre green space 

Coverage spanned consumer, trade, and business media, with IndiCap’s Regional VP of Development highlighting how the project was intentionally designed to benefit local residents, not just businesses. 

The result: An industrial development turned into a community story. 

 

4. Launching Kenerator with Ken Goodrich: Introducing a Leader to New Markets

Ken Goodrich, chairman of Goettl Air Conditioning & Plumbing, is a well-known business leader in the Southwest. But when he launched his newest venture, Kenerator whole-home standby generators, in multiple Sunbelt markets, including Texas and Florida, our goal was to introduce the man behind the brand to audiences who had never met him. 

Our PR team coordinated a mix of media and podcast interviews that allowed Ken to share his personal and professional journey, including his successes, challenges, and reputation for trusted leadership. 

The result: Three successful market launches, each already operating profitably, supported by meaningful storytelling that built familiarity and credibility from day one. 

 

5. MAC.BID: How Savvy Shoppers are Saving Big

MAC.BID, a liquidation auction site with thirty locations across the country, tasked MassMedia with developing a public relations campaign to raise brand awareness nationally as well as in local markets.  

The campaign focused on value, highlighting MAC.BID’s ability to help shoppers save on everything from toys to home decor to tools and more as American’s struggled with tariffs and inflation. The multipronged approach included paid influencer partnerships, national outreach, and highlighting new openings in local markets.  

The result: A major feature in USA Today highlighting the brand, which was syndicated across multiple local publications, as well as coverage highlighting openings in Macon, Davenport, Hamilton, and more.  

 

6. Nocturno Cocktail Bar: Bringing a Taste of Mexico City to the Arts District

Nocturno Cocktail Bar opened in the Las Vegas Arts District and sought to stand out from competitors by positioning itself as a leader in the craft cocktail movement. MassMedia was tasked with developing a campaign that helps Nocturno build a national presence and earn World’s 50 Best Bars recognition.  

The kickoff the campaign, MassMedia connected Nocturno with Mexico City’s Rayo, named #87 on World’s 50 Best Bars 2024 and #5 on North America’s 50 Best Bars 2024. Nocturno hosted the Rayo team for a one night pop up event, inviting the Las Vegas community to enjoy a taste of Mexico City.  

The result: A sold-out event introducing Las Vegas to Rayo’s award-winning mixology, cementing Nocturno as a destination for craft cocktails while pairing Nocturno’s name with an internationally recognized cocktail destination.  

 

7. Organizers Direct Industries: Humanizing a Brand to Grow a National Dealer Network

When Organizers Direct Industries (ODI) partnered with MassMedia to expand brand awareness and recruit new dealers, we built a multi-pillar strategy centered on people, not products. 

First, we positioned the company’s president, Alicia Barker, as the face and voice of ODI. By sharing her background, leadership philosophy, and vision for stylish, high-quality home storage solutions, we secured coverage with national outlets including Bloomberg, NBC News Now, Real Simple, and more. 

Next, we amplified the stories of ODI’s top dealers. Through industry podcasts, trade outlets, and vertical media, we showcased real entrepreneurs reflecting on their partnership with ODI. 

The result: Human storytelling that drove both brand growth and dealer interest. 

 

8. Primak Construction Group: Bringing a New Brand Name to Life

When longtime client Lou Primak approached us about renaming his construction company after himself, we knew the rebrand needed to do more than change a logo – it needed to reaffirm trust. 

Our PR team built a launch strategy that positioned Lou as the heart of the company, emphasizing that while the name was evolving, the craftsmanship, reputation, and reliability remained the same. 

We delivered widespread coverage across local business, industry, and trade media, with Lou front and center in interviews and podcasts. 

The result: a smooth, confidence-building transition to a new name backed by human credibility. 

 

9. Sam & Ash Injury Law: Influencing Teens Through Safe-Driving Stories

Sam Mirejovsky and Ash Watkins have always aimed to differentiate themselves by focusing on community impact. This year, we helped bring that mission to life with a campaign centered on teen driver safety. 

Local students were invited to submit short essays on “What Safe Driving Means to Me” for a chance to win prizes, including a brand-new Volkswagen Jetta as the grand prize. 

Our PR strategy highlighted both the emotional and educational benefits of the campaign: 

  • The importance of safe driving for teens 
  • The personal story of the student who received the car 
  • Sam & Ash’s commitment to protecting young drivers 

The result: A feel-good, purpose-driven campaign that positioned Sam & Ash as trusted community advocates.  

 

Human Stories Create Human Brands 

The common thread in each of these successes is simple but powerful: people connect with people. By weaving the human stories behind the brands and businesses we represent, we create campaigns that resonate, influence, and endure. 

If 2025 has shown us anything, it’s that PR doesn’t just build awareness, it builds relationships. 

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