Big brands are allocating small amounts of their advertising budget to Elon Musk’s X, seeking to avoid being seen as boycotting the social media platform and triggering a public fallout with its billionaire owner.
Multiple marketing executives told the Financial Times that companies have felt pressure to spend a nominal sum on X following Musk’s high-profile role in US President Donald Trump’s administration.
They said Musk’s pursuit of legal action against groups that have stopped advertising since his $44 billion acquisition in late 2022 had also sparked alarm. X last month added about half a dozen more companies to its case including Shell, Nestlé, Pinterest, and Lego.
“It’s whatever amount is enough to stay off the naughty list,” said Lou Paskalis, chief executive of marketing consultancy AJL Advisory and a former media executive at Bank of America.
“It’s not because the brand safety risk has gone away. But the far greater risk is that a comment [from Musk] in the press sends your stock price tumbling, and instead of a multimillion-dollar risk you’re facing a multibillion-dollar risk.”
The move comes as X was this week bought by Musk’s artificial intelligence group xAi in a deal that valued the social media platform at $45 billion, including debt. Musk said that he would combine the data, models, and talent of the two companies.
Investors have been buoyed by Musk’s proximity to the Trump administration as well as signs that his cost-cutting approach has been effective and revenues are improving.
Musk and X chief executive Linda Yaccarino have set a goal that aims to boost advertising revenues back to 2022 levels, according to two people familiar with the matter. They believe this is the minimum X should be bringing in without the hit caused by brands “boycotting” or avoiding the platform over its political bent, the people said.