The first real media plan I ever built was a disaster. Not because the creative was bad or the budget was wrong, but because I didn't understand reach. I'd allocated the entire budget to three high-performing placements and ran them at heavy frequency for six weeks. The ROI on those placements looked great in isolation. But when we pulled the post-campaign analysis, we'd reached about 12% of our target audience. Twelve percent. The other 88% never saw a single impression. We'd been showing the same ad to the same people over and over while leaving the vast majority of potential customers completely untouched.

That's when I learned what every good media planner already knows: if you're not thinking about reach, you're not really planning media. You're just buying placements.

What Is Advertising Reach?

Advertising reach is the total number of unique individuals (or households) exposed to an advertisement or campaign at least once during a specified time period. The operative word is "unique." Reach counts people, not exposures. If one person sees your ad five times, that's one unit of reach and five impressions.

The American Marketing Association's Universal Marketing Dictionary defines reach as "the number of different persons or households exposed to a particular advertising media vehicle or a media schedule during a specified period of time." It's typically expressed either as an absolute number (we reached 2.4 million people) or as a percentage of the target audience (we reached 45% of adults 25-54 in the market).

Reach is one half of the foundational media planning equation, paired with advertising frequency. Together, they describe the shape of your campaign: how broadly you spread your message and how deeply you reinforce it with each person.

Gross Reach vs. Net Reach: The Distinction That Matters

This is where things get tricky, and where a lot of marketers (including younger-me) get confused.

Gross reach counts every contact with a medium, including duplicates. If the same person sees your ad on three different websites, that's three gross reach contacts. Gross reach is essentially another way of saying total impressions, and it's almost always a larger number than net reach.

Net reach (also called unduplicated reach or deduplicated reach) counts each person only once, regardless of how many times they were exposed. Net reach tells you the actual number of unique humans who encountered your campaign. This is the number that matters for strategic planning.

Here's a simple example to make it concrete:

Metric Value What It Tells You
Total Impressions 5,000,000 Total number of times your ad was served
Gross Reach 5,000,000 Same as impressions; includes duplicates
Net Reach 1,250,000 unique people Actual number of different humans who saw your ad
Average Frequency 4.0 Each person saw the ad an average of 4 times
Reach % 25% of 5M target audience One quarter of your total addressable audience saw the campaign

The relationship between these metrics is governed by a simple formula: Reach = Impressions ÷ Frequency. Or rearranged: Impressions = Reach × Frequency. This is the equation that every media budget allocation ultimately comes back to.

Reach in the GRP Framework

For anyone working in TV, radio, or traditional media planning, reach lives inside the Gross Rating Point (GRP) framework:

GRP = Reach % × Average Frequency

If your TV campaign reaches 60% of your target audience with an average frequency of 5, your campaign delivered 300 GRPs. The GRP system was the universal currency of media planning for decades, and while digital has introduced new metrics, GRP thinking still dominates broadcast media and many cross-channel planning tools.

The Target Rating Point (TRP) is a related metric that narrows the calculation to your specific target demographic rather than the total audience. TRPs are more useful than GRPs for marketers because they filter out wasted reach (impressions served to people outside your target).

Metric Formula When to Use
GRP Reach % of total audience × Frequency Broadcast media planning, total audience measurement
TRP Reach % of target audience × Frequency Targeted campaign planning, demographic-specific evaluation
Impressions Reach × Frequency Digital media planning, platform-level reporting
CPM (Cost ÷ Impressions) × 1,000 Efficiency comparison across placements
Cost Per Reach Point Total Cost ÷ Reach % Efficiency of unique audience delivery

The Reach Imperative: Byron Sharp and How Brands Grow