Flighting Strategy
Advertise in bursts, then go dark. A flighting strategy concentrates ad spend into intense periods with gaps between — trading constant presence for periodic impact, the budget-saving alternative to always-on.
- Term
- Flighting strategy
- Is
- Ad bursts separated by dark periods
- Trades
- Constant presence for periodic impact
- Vs
- Continuous (always-on) and pulsing
Parts of speech & senses
- A flighting strategy schedules advertising in concentrated bursts (flights) separated by periods of no advertising (hiatus) — concentrating budget for impact while going dark between bursts. "They flighted the ads around the launch and the holidays."
What a flighting strategy is
A flighting strategy (or flighting) is a media scheduling pattern in which advertising runs in concentrated bursts — called flights — separated by periods of no advertising at all, called hiatus or dark periods. Rather than spreading a budget thinly across the whole period (continuous) or maintaining a low baseline with bursts on top (pulsing), flighting concentrates the budget into intense advertising periods and goes completely silent in between. The pattern is on-off-on-off: heavy advertising, then nothing, then heavy advertising again, timed to the moments that matter most.
Flighting is one of three classic media scheduling strategies, alongside continuous (steady advertising throughout) and pulsing (a continuous baseline with periodic bursts). It's distinguished by the complete gaps — during hiatus, there's no advertising, unlike pulsing's maintained baseline. Flighting is used to concentrate limited budgets into high-impact periods (achieving meaningful weight when advertising, rather than thin presence throughout), and to align advertising with the times it matters most — seasonal peaks, product launches, buying cycles, or competitive moments — accepting absence in the gaps as the cost of impact when present.
Flighting versus continuous and pulsing
The three scheduling strategies trade off presence against concentration differently. Continuous (always-on) maintains steady advertising throughout the period — best for constant presence, top-of-mind awareness, and products bought year-round, but it spreads budget thin and may lack impact at any moment. Pulsing keeps a continuous baseline with periodic bursts on top — combining steady presence with extra weight at key times, a hybrid that maintains a floor while concentrating extra impact. Flighting goes all-in on concentration: heavy bursts with complete gaps, maximizing impact when advertising but accepting total absence between flights.
The choice among them depends on the goal, budget, and buying pattern. Flighting suits limited budgets that need real weight when they advertise (better to make an impact periodically than to whisper continuously), and products or moments that are seasonal or event-driven (where advertising matters most at specific times). Its risk is the dark periods — going silent can cede attention to competitors, let memory and awareness decay, and miss demand that arises during hiatus. Continuous avoids those gaps but dilutes weight; pulsing tries to get both. Flighting is the choice when concentrated, periodic impact beats constant thin presence for the situation.
Using a flighting strategy well
Using flighting well means concentrating advertising into the periods that matter most — aligning flights with seasonal peaks, launches, buying cycles, or competitive moments when advertising has the most impact — while managing the risks of the dark periods. It means timing flights to demand and attention (advertising heavily when it counts), ensuring each flight has enough weight to register and build memory that carries through the hiatus, and weighing whether the gaps will cost too much in lost presence, awareness decay, or ceded competitive ground. Flighting is a deliberate bet that periodic concentrated impact beats constant thin presence.
The failures are flights mistimed to the audience's actual moments, gaps so long that awareness and memory decay (so each flight starts from scratch), going dark when demand or competition demands presence, and choosing flighting when continuous presence is what the product or goal needs. The discipline is to flight when concentrated periodic impact genuinely suits the goal, budget, and buying pattern — timing bursts to the moments that matter, with enough weight to carry through the gaps — and to choose continuous or pulsing instead when constant presence is what's required.
Synonyms & antonyms
Synonyms
Antonyms
Origin & history
Flighting — advertising in concentrated bursts separated by dark periods — is one of the three classic media scheduling strategies, concentrating budget for periodic impact versus continuous presence or pulsing's hybrid.
Etymology: source.
Usage trends
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Common questions
- What is a flighting strategy?
- A media scheduling pattern that runs advertising in concentrated bursts (flights) separated by periods of no advertising (hiatus) — concentrating budget for periodic impact while going completely dark between bursts.
- How is flighting different from pulsing and continuous?
- Continuous runs steadily throughout; pulsing keeps a continuous baseline with bursts on top; flighting has complete gaps with no advertising between bursts. Flighting maximizes concentration but accepts total absence in the dark periods.
- When should you use a flighting strategy?
- When a limited budget needs real weight when advertising (rather than thin constant presence), and for seasonal or event-driven goals where advertising matters most at specific times — managing the risk that dark periods cede presence and let awareness decay.
Resources & people to follow
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Disciplines
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