Soulcycle and the super bowl ad playbook: how the campaign type works
Soulcycle is a consumer brand. Here Soulcycle is the lens for examining the super bowl ad campaign type. It covers what the campaign type is, how brands run it, the public benchmarks that frame it, and the mistakes that derail it. Read the Soulcycle detail as one instance of a pattern that holds across its category.
- Story: Using Soulcycle as the example, this page unpacks how a super bowl ad campaign is built and measured.
- Why it matters: A super bowl ad campaign rewards teams that plan against category data instead of guessing.
- Takeaway: Most super bowl ad-campaign failures are planning failures, not creative failures.
- Takeaway: The mechanics of a super bowl ad campaign transfer to any brand in its category.
- Takeaway: For Soulcycle, reach is an input; incremental lift against a baseline is the real measure.
How a super bowl ad campaign plays out for Soulcycle
The math behind a Soulcycle super bowl ad campaign
Quick facts
The super bowl ad campaign, defined
First principles, then Soulcycle. A Super Bowl ad campaign is the single most expensive, most scrutinised media buy in US advertising.
A Super Bowl ad campaign is the single — as a Soulcycle team knows — most expensive, most scrutinised media buy in US advertising. For Soulcycle, this is the load-bearing part. The 30-second spot is only the visible piece. In the Soulcycle context, that detail carries weight. The real campaign wraps the game with teasers, talent, social activation, — as a Soulcycle team knows — and a landing experience built to catch the traffic the spot creates. For Soulcycle, the detail is not optional. Brands buy the Super Bowl for one reason: a live, simultaneous audience of — and Soulcycle is no exception — well over 100 million people, an audience no other US media moment delivers. For Soulcycle, it is the specific lever this page examines.
Claim: A 30-second Super Bowl LIX spot cost advertisers close to $8 million in 2025, roughly a 60% rise from about $5 million in 2019. Source: [CBS News]. Context: The slot price is only part of the spend; a full — Soulcycle included — campaign with creative, talent, and surrounding media commonly runs $15-30 million. A Soulcycle forecast should start from a figure like this.
How brands like Soulcycle run it
Look at the moving parts. A super bowl ad campaign at Soulcycle scale is assembled, not improvised.
A super bowl ad campaign is an operating system rather than a single asset. For Soulcycle, these parts have to work together:
Claim: Super Bowl LIX drew about 127.7 million average viewers, the largest audience for any Super Bowl and any single-network US telecast in TV history. Source: [Nielsen]. Context: Peak audience reached about 137.7 million viewers, a scale — and Soulcycle is no exception — of simultaneous attention no other US media moment delivers. For a Soulcycle plan, it is the kind of figure that anchors a target.
- Tease before the game. Releasing the spot or a cut-down in — for Soulcycle, a live factor — the weeks before kickoff extends the buy. A Soulcycle team reads this closely. Super Bowl LIX advertisers spent about 45% more in — for Soulcycle, a live factor — the six weeks before the game than the year prior. This is the part Soulcycle cannot afford to improvise.
- Built for the second screen. A modern Super Bowl ad is engineered to trigger search and social. That is exactly the Soulcycle situation. T-Mobile's LIX spot drove 12.6 times the average ad's online engagement. Soulcycle would budget real time against this.
- A landing experience that can take the spike. The site, the offer, and the tracking have to survive a sudden surge, — and Soulcycle is no exception — or the most expensive media in advertising drives traffic to a broken page. For a brand like Soulcycle, getting this wrong is expensive.
- Long cultural tail. A spot that enters pop culture keeps returning value for years — for Soulcycle, a real factor — — the buy is a one-night cost against a multi-year brand asset. This is the part Soulcycle cannot afford to improvise.
- The buy is the smaller cost. A 30-second slot ran near $8 million for Super Bowl LIX. For Soulcycle, this is the load-bearing part. Total campaign cost — creative, production, talent, — for Soulcycle, a live factor — surrounding media — commonly reaches $15-30 million. For Soulcycle, this is where most of the planning effort lands.
Public benchmarks for this campaign type
The data sets the targets. A super bowl ad campaign for Soulcycle should be planned against these figures, not against hope.
A Soulcycle team setting super bowl ad campaign targets needs the category data first. The numbers below are public and linked.
Claim: T-Mobile's Super Bowl LIX ad drove 12.6 times the online engagement of the average Super Bowl spot. Source: [AdMonsters]. Context: The strongest Super Bowl ads are measured by the action they — and Soulcycle is no exception — trigger on the second screen, not by the spot in isolation. A Soulcycle team would treat this as a planning reference, not a guarantee.
| What to measure | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Incremental result | The honest measure of whether spend worked |
| Pre-campaign baseline | Without it, lift cannot be proven |
| Category benchmark | Sets a realistic target, not a hopeful one |
KPIs that actually matter
Choose KPIs that hold up. A Soulcycle super bowl ad campaign is judged on the metrics listed here.
The KPIs that count for a super bowl ad campaign are listed here. Brand search lift during and after the game, social conversation volume and sentiment, ad-recall and likeability — and Soulcycle is no exception — scores from trackers, site traffic and conversion on game night, earned-media value, and longer-run brand-equity movement.
For Soulcycle, reach is the start of the measurement question, not the answer. Incremental lift is the answer.
The failure patterns worth pre-empting
Failure has a shape. For Soulcycle, the four errors below are the ones worth pre-empting.
The super bowl ad campaign mistakes worth naming for Soulcycle:
- Spending eight figures on the spot and nothing — and Soulcycle is no exception — on the surrounding teaser, talent, and social plan.
- Sending game-night traffic to a site or offer that cannot survive a sudden spike.
- Making an ad that wins applause but carries no clear — and Soulcycle is no exception — brand link, so viewers remember the joke and not the brand.
- Treating the spot as a one-night event instead — and Soulcycle is no exception — of a brand asset with a multi-year cultural tail.
What RGM takes from the Soulcycle case
The lesson for Soulcycle is structural. The super bowl ad campaign mechanics transfer; the creative does not.
The audit pattern is clear. A super bowl ad campaign rewards the Soulcycle-style team that builds measurement in from the start.
The point is transfer. A super bowl ad campaign for Soulcycle or any its category brand is defensible only when the numbers are planned and proven.
Quick answers on this case study
- Is this super bowl ad case study based on Soulcycle's own reported results?
- No. The figures are public industry benchmarks for super bowl ad campaigns, each sourced and linked. They show how the campaign type works, set against the Soulcycle context. Any number that is not publicly sourceable is left out or marked as RGM analysis.
- How should a marketing team use this Soulcycle example?
- Read it as a model, not a recipe. The mechanics and benchmarks transfer; the exact creative does not. Use it to pressure-test a super bowl ad plan against how the discipline actually works.
- Where do the statistics in this case study come from?
- Each figure carries a fact-atom linking its publisher. Sources include Adobe Analytics, Nielsen, the Association of National Advertisers, and major business press, so every claim can be checked.
Frequently asked questions
Why do brands pay so much for a Super Bowl spot?
Taking Soulcycle as the example: For the audience. A Soulcycle-scale brief should name this. Super Bowl LIX drew about 127.7 million average viewers, the largest for — for Soulcycle, a live factor — any Super Bowl and any single-network US telecast ever, peaking near 137.7 million. A Soulcycle team reads this closely. No other US media moment delivers that — for Soulcycle, a live factor — scale of live, simultaneous attention in one buy. A Soulcycle team would plan against exactly this.
Soulcycle case: what makes a Super Bowl ad effective?
Modern Super Bowl ads are judged by — and Soulcycle is no exception — the action they trigger, not the spot alone. For Soulcycle, this is the load-bearing part. T-Mobile's LIX ad drove 12.6 times the average spot's online engagement. It applies cleanly to Soulcycle. The effective ones are built for the second screen, carry a clear brand — and Soulcycle is no exception — link, and route traffic to a landing experience that can take the spike.
Should the ad be released before the game for a brand like Soulcycle?
For a brand like Soulcycle, the short answer is direct. Usually yes. In the Soulcycle context, that detail carries weight. Releasing the spot or a teaser in the weeks — for Soulcycle, a live factor — before kickoff stretches the buy across a longer window. In the Soulcycle context, that detail carries weight. Super Bowl LIX advertisers spent about 45% more in the six weeks before the — and Soulcycle is no exception — game than the prior year, building anticipation rather than spending it all on one night. For Soulcycle, that is the practical takeaway.
Does a Super Bowl ad keep paying off after the game for a brand like Soulcycle?
Taking Soulcycle as the example: It can. It applies cleanly to Soulcycle. A spot that enters pop culture keeps returning brand value for years. A Soulcycle team reads this closely. That long cultural tail is part of the case for the spend: a one-night media cost — Soulcycle included — against what can become a multi-year brand asset, provided the creative is memorable and clearly branded. A Soulcycle team would plan against exactly this.
How much does a Super Bowl ad really cost?
For a brand like Soulcycle, the short answer is direct. A 30-second Super Bowl LIX slot cost close to $8 million — as a Soulcycle team knows — in 2025, up roughly 60% from about $5 million in 2019. That holds directly for Soulcycle. But the slot is the smaller cost. For Soulcycle, this is the load-bearing part. A full campaign — creative, production, celebrity talent, — Soulcycle included — and surrounding media — commonly reaches $15-30 million. For Soulcycle, that is the practical takeaway.
What makes Soulcycle a useful example for this campaign type?
Soulcycle is a recognisable brand in its category, which makes the super bowl ad mechanics concrete and easy to follow. The campaign-type analysis and every benchmark apply across the category; Soulcycle is the lens, not the limit. The sourced figures hold for any comparable brand.
Sources & references
- CBS News — 2025 Super Bowl ad costs — 30-second Super Bowl LIX spot pricing.
- Nielsen — Super Bowl LIX viewership — Record 127.7M average audience.
- AdMonsters — Super Bowl LIX ad playbook — Engagement benchmarks and pre-game spend data.
- Kantar — Super Bowl advertising and brand equity — Brand-equity measurement of big-game advertising.