What you want from TV advertising: Full-screen, non-skippable ads on premium platforms.
What you get: "Your ad is on TV. Trust us."
Modern, performance-driven CTV gets your TV ads where you want with transparent placement, precision audience targeting, and measurable performance just like other digital channels.
The most popular framing in marketing circles is that Red Bull cracked the code by "becoming a media company that happens to sell drinks." The implication is always the same: brands should stop buying ads and start making content, produce things people actually want to watch, and the sales will follow.
This framing is technically accurate and strategically useless. It identifies the output without explaining the input. It's like saying Amazon "became a cloud company that happens to sell books" and concluding that you should start a data centre.
Red Bull's real advantage isn't content. It's the financial structure that makes the content possible—and that structure is almost entirely unreplicable by any public company operating under normal market conditions.
Here's what everyone gets wrong.
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The margin story no one tells
Red Bull’s production cost is approximately $0.09 per can. It wholesales at $1.87. It retails at around $3.59 in Western markets.
That’s a 20x markup from production to retail, with roughly $1.78 margin per unit at the wholesale level. On 12.6 billion cans sold annually, this generates €11B+ in revenue with margins that would embarrass most consumer goods companies.
Red Bull reinvests 25–30% of that revenue back into marketing. In 2023, that figure was approximately €3 billion—more than the entire annual revenue of many Fortune 500 companies—spent on events, athletes, content production, and owned media. No traditional advertising. No TV spots. Everything goes into assets they own outright.
You cannot do this if you have quarterly earnings calls. You cannot do this if activist investors are watching your SG&A line. You cannot do this if your compensation structure rewards this year’s EBITDA over next decade’s brand equity.
Red Bull is privately held. Dietrich Mateschitz, who built the company from a $500,000 initial investment in 1984, famously refused to take it public for exactly this reason. After his death in 2022, the Yoovidhya family (51%) and his estate (49%) maintained that structure. The company has never had to explain to a public market why it spent $50 million sending a man to the edge of space.
That is the actual secret. Not “make content.” Make content at a scale and time horizon that public markets will never permit, funded by margins that most beverage companies can’t achieve, under ownership that is structurally insulated from the pressure to monetise faster.
One thing worth noting about this sequence: the margins didn’t come first. Mateschitz didn’t build a high-margin business and then decide to invest in culture. He had the brand conviction first—a specific idea about what Red Bull stood for—and used it to justify a premium price in a category that didn’t exist yet. The margins were a consequence of the positioning. Most people read the causality backwards, which is why most people draw the wrong lesson.
The event ownership mechanic
The common version of the Red Bull story goes: “They sponsor extreme sports.” This is wrong in the most important way.
Sponsoring an event means you pay for logo placement on someone else’s property. The broadcast rights belong to the network. The footage belongs to the league. The sponsor gets a few seconds of brand exposure and a contractual limit on how they can use the content afterwards.
Classic theory: if you control upstream production, you control downstream distribution economics.
Hollywood studios did this in the 1930s:
owned production studios
owned film distribution
owned cinema theatres
So they didn’t “market movies.” They controlled the entire pipeline of attention.
Red Bull builds the events from scratch. Red Bull Cliff Diving. Red Bull Flugtag. Red Bull Crashed Ice. Red Bull Rampage. None of these competitions existed before Red Bull invented them. Which means Red Bull owns 100% of the media rights in perpetuity.
The downstream consequence of this is significant. When CNN covers the Cliff Diving World Series, they are broadcasting Red Bull’s content on Red Bull’s terms. When a sports blog embeds the highlight reel, they are embedding Red Bull’s player, and the view counts accumulate on Red Bull’s channel. Every outlet that covers the event becomes an unpaid distribution arm for Red Bull’s owned media library.
So the flow is:
Red Bull funds event + production → gives free high-quality media to press → press publishes it as coverage → Red Bull gets massive brand exposure that looks like editorial, not ads.
They don’t buy distribution. They manufacture something so interesting that distribution happens organically.
Compare this to a conventional sponsorship. Sponsor pays $5M for logo rights at the Super Bowl. The network owns the broadcast. The league controls the footage. After the game, the sponsor has some third-party usage rights and a bill. Red Bull pays to build the event, owns everything that comes out of it, and continues monetising that content for years.
The Stratos jump is the clearest example of this mechanic executed at maximum scale. Felix Baumgartner’s freefall from 39 kilometres cost Red Bull an estimated $30–50M. Eight million people watched live—on Red Bull’s YouTube channel, not on a network that Red Bull had paid to broadcast it. Every TV station that cut to the livestream was pointing its audience at Red Bull’s owned media. The event generated an estimated $6 billion in earned media coverage and a 7% bump in US sales over the six months that followed.
More importantly, Red Bull framed the whole thing as a scientific mission, not a marketing stunt. They partnered with aerospace researchers, released data to NASA, and positioned Felix as a pioneer rather than a sponsored daredevil. This wasn’t altruism. It was a deliberate choice to ensure that news desks covered the event as news—not as advertising they’d label, caveat, or ignore. The world’s journalists reported on Red Bull’s content as if it were a government press release. At no point did Red Bull pay them to do so.
The same logic applies to athletes. Conventional endorsement deals work like this: celebrity has audience, brand borrows audience, brand pays a premium for access. Red Bull inverted the model entirely. They find athletes before they have an audience, build the athlete’s platform through their own media infrastructure, and the athlete becomes famous through Red Bull. Travis Pastrana. Robbie Maddison. Felix himself. Their careers and Red Bull’s brand equity grew simultaneously. You cannot separate them afterwards. By the time a competitor wants to sign a Red Bull athlete, the athlete’s identity is already Red Bull. You’d be buying someone whose cultural meaning was manufactured by your rival.
The Content Pool: the unglamorous part that actually compounds
Red Bull Media House maintains a publicly accessible library. 300,000+ photos. 22,000+ HD videos. Free to any journalist or editor worldwide.
A sports journalist needs cliff diving photos. Red Bull has the best cliff diving photos in the world because they funded the expedition that produced them. The journalist takes the photos, credits Red Bull Media House, publishes. That outlet just distributed Red Bull's content to its entire readership. Voluntarily. At zero cost to Red Bull.
Do this across thousands of publications and you've effectively outsourced your entire distribution network to the global press corps.
The journalists think they're doing Red Bull a favour. What they're actually doing is running Red Bull's distribution operation.
I love this mechanic. It is, structurally, one of the most elegant things in modern brand strategy. It is also significantly less powerful than it was ten years ago, which I'll get to.
Why the F1 investment looks dumb and isn’t
Red Bull bought the failing Jaguar Formula 1 team in 2004 for $1, then absorbed approximately $400 million in operational costs over the following three years. Red Bull Racing posted a profit of £1.7 million in 2024 on an annual investment in the range of $300–500 million. That is a less than 1% return on capital by traditional accounting.
This is the number critics point to when they argue Red Bull’s strategy is irrational.
The critique misunderstands what Red Bull is buying. Formula 1 broadcasts to 180+ countries. It runs 24 weekends per year. In 2021 it reached 445 million viewers. Red Bull Racing has won six Constructors’ Championships — with Sebastian Vettel and then Max Verstappen — and every podium finish is a live demonstration of what the brand’s slogan claims to deliver. Red Bull gives you wings is not a metaphor when your car has just won the Monaco Grand Prix.
More importantly, the team produces thousands of hours of content that Red Bull owns outright: race footage, behind-the-scenes documentaries, driver profiles, technical explainers. That content feeds Red Bull TV, YouTube, and the Content Pool. The F1 investment isn’t an advertising budget. It’s a content production operation that happens to also race cars, and the marginal cost of the content it generates is folded into the team’s operational expenses.
The correct comparison is not: “what would $400M in television advertising buy?” The correct comparison is: “what is it worth to be the most visible brand in the world’s fastest-growing sport, for 24 weekends a year, across 180 countries, while retaining full rights to all content produced?” At that framing, the economics look different.
The caveat is real, though. The brand equity tied to winning is rented, not owned — regardless of whether you own the team. Verstappen will retire. The car will have bad seasons. What the F1 investment looks like without a dominant driver at the front is a question Red Bull hasn’t had to answer yet. The analysis that says this investment is genius is doing most of its work during a dynasty. The more interesting test is what comes next.
The replicability problem
Every marketing conference in the world has a deck explaining Red Bull’s strategy. Almost no brand has replicated it. The reason is not creativity, or courage, or vision. The reason is structural.
To replicate what Red Bull does, you need: margins thick enough to sustain 25–30% revenue reinvestment into owned media; ownership patient enough to accept that the return on that reinvestment is measured in decades, not quarters; and a founding insight clear enough to know which sports, which athletes, and which events actually extend the brand rather than dilute it. Red Bull got this right because Mateschitz had a very specific idea about what he was building and held it for 35 years without being forced to optimise for anything else.
Public companies have attempted versions of this. Red Bull’s success spawned a generation of “brand as media” imitations, most of which collapsed when earnings pressure forced a reallocation back to performance marketing. The time horizon of “build a content asset library that compounds over decades” is incompatible with the time horizon of “explain to analysts next Thursday why SG&A increased.”
There’s a less obvious structural advantage buried in this. Red Bull’s marketing is essentially unmeasurable by design. You cannot put a last-click attribution model on Felix Baumgartner jumping from space. Most brands treat this as a problem. It’s actually a feature. When your marketing can’t be measured, it can’t be cut by a CFO looking at the wrong dashboard. It also can’t be reverse-engineered by a competitor. The brands that spent the last decade optimising for measurability built something efficient and capped. Red Bull built something that compounds.
The structural barriers are real. But they’re also used as an excuse. The same mechanic — find the person who defines a scene before they’re famous, own the relationship before it has market value, build the media around it — works at the local level just as well as it works at $50 million. Red Bull’s student brand manager programme does exactly this on university campuses worldwide. The architecture scales down. What doesn’t scale down is the willingness to think this way in the first place.
The lesson is not “make content.” The lesson is that making content at the scale required to dominate a category requires a financial structure that most public companies cannot sustain, margins that most consumer goods companies cannot achieve, and an ownership structure that most founders eventually trade away.
Red Bull’s strategy is a media strategy built on top of a margin structure built on top of a private ownership model. Remove any one leg and the whole thing falls over. Most brands trying to become media companies are attempting to build the top floor without laying the foundation.
The can is almost irrelevant. It’s just what funds everything else.
What Changed
The analysis above describes a machine that was built and perfected over roughly thirty-five years. It is accurate. It is also, in important ways, a description of a past competitive advantage rather than a current one.
Several things have changed that the standard Red Bull case does not acknowledge.
The Content Pool is less powerful than it was. When Red Bull built its library of extreme sports photography, the alternative for a journalist who needed a cliff diving image was to hire a photographer or go without. Today, AI image generation can produce any visual at near-zero cost. Getty Images has digitized decades of sports photography. The structural scarcity that made the Content Pool extraordinary has been substantially eroded. Red Bull's library remains valuable, but its value as a distribution mechanism is declining.
TikTok ended the production quality monopoly. Red Bull's content worked, for a generation, because producing footage that looked like a Red Bull film required a budget and a production company that almost no individual athlete could access. That constraint no longer exists. A teenager with a GoPro and a TikTok account can now produce authentic extreme sports content that reaches the same demographic as Red Bull's most expensive productions. The barriers that protected Red Bull's editorial monopoly on this aesthetic have largely collapsed.
Monster Energy is not a footnote. As of 2024, Monster held 36.6% percent of the U.S. energy drink market against Red Bull's 25.8 percent. The gap is not zero. But it is smaller than the gap between their brand narratives would suggest. Monster matched Red Bull on distribution and margin without building anything resembling a content infrastructure. The two companies serve as a natural experiment in whether the Red Bull model is necessary to compete at Red Bull's scale. The evidence, at this point, is ambiguous.
The Formula 1 asset is more complicated than it appears. In 2024, Red Bull finished third in the constructors' championship as McLaren won its first title in decades. In 2025, Red Bull finished third again. Verstappen lost his drivers' championship to Lando Norris by two points—a margin that provoked enormous press coverage, virtually none of which was flattering to the team. In July 2025, Christian Horner — who had run Red Bull Racing for its entire existence as a works team — was dismissed after twenty years. Adrian Newey, the technical genius most responsible for the team's championship-winning cars, had already left for Aston Martin. The narrative that made Red Bull Racing such a powerful brand platform was a narrative of dominance. The platform still exists. The dominance that made it meaningful is no longer guaranteed.
There is also a more subtle problem with the audience. The people who watched Felix Baumgartner fall from space in 2012 are now in their mid-thirties. Red Bull Zero's search traffic has grown faster than any other Red Bull product over the past twelve months—which tells you something about where the original audience is in its lifecycle. Whether Red Bull's brand architecture, which was built around a specific vision of physical extremity as the highest form of living, resonates with a generation that grew up with smartphones rather than skateboards is a question the company has not fully answered.
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