Yesterday Was Officially “Mock Native Advertising Day”

On Monday, The Atlantic ran a sponsored post from the much-maligned Church of Scientology, which was subsequently picked up by Gawker, mocked, and shared across the interwebs.  Since then, The Atlantic has pulled down the post, but not before spoofs appeared on The Onion and TechCrunch, among others.  While the entire web used yesterday as “Mock Native Advertising Day”, we wanted to use our blog to do the opposite. Instead of focusing on why this particular sponsored post was received so poorly, we wanted to highlight a few publishers (including The Atlantic) and brands that have implemented sponsored content in a meaningful way. In a new category like native advertising, mistakes will happen, but growing pains are bound to happen in every industry.

The most important part of successful sponsored content integration, whether it’s a video, post or another format, is that it is relevant to the publisher’s audience.  A post about Scientology may not work for The Atlantic, but on other sites it may be the perfect piece of sponsored content. With that in mind, below are five pieces of sponsored content that were excellent matches for the audiences of the respective publications in which they appeared:

Mashable/IBM – The Rise of Mobile Shopping
Audience: Business professionals, entrepreneurs, technology enthusiasts

 

Coca-Cola’s “Happiness Is” Tumblr
Audience: Teens, young professionals, females

 

The Atlantic/IBM – Why Social Media Matters For Your Business
Audience: Business professionals, marketing managers, social media enthusiasts, technology enthusiasts

 

 Men’s Journal/Land Rover – Remote & Refined
Audience:  Males, affluent individuals, car enthusiasts

 

Slate/Mini – Hipster Roadtrip
Audience: Males, entrepreneurs, affluent individuals

 

Native Advertising Round-Up: Agency Teams Shift Towards Native; Digg’s Relaunch, Google’s Wildfire Acquisition, and Facebook’s Promoted Posts Drive Headlines

Is your team ready to take on native? Whether it is producers who can create excellent branded content or real-time copywriters who can work on the fly, there are clear signs that show agency dynamics are fundamentally shifting. In a Sharethrough-authored article on AdAge, we breakdown the reasons behind this shift as well as the type of roles that will help drive native content moving forward. For many of the companies below, these types of roles are already being examined, and in some cases, filled.

Additionally, while most of us have been busy watching the Olympics this week, the trio of Facebook, Digg and Google have been busy making headlines.

Don’t call it a comeback — this week Digg launched their new, advertisement-free site. By removing all ads (both native and display), Digg is making a decision to refocus on their users and rebuild a community base that long ago moved to competitors like Reddit. While their initial plan centers on community building, their clean, image-focused layout hints at a monetization strategy that will be focused solely on native. As Digiday’s Brian Morrissey points out in article below, “For content-based sites like Digg, the banner is unwanted.”

Google got a little bigger this week with its $250 million acquisition of Wildfire. Wildfire, a social marketing company, allows companies to manage their social media campaigns across the Internet. While their ability to offer sophisticated insights into application development and analytics provides tangible value, TechCrunch points out that they do not have the social API relationships to allow them to place ads. Instead, they have an exclusive social ad deal with social start-up, Adaptly. Safe to say that their social advertising M&A acquisitions are far from over….

Speaking of social advertising, Facebook continues to make news after its earnings last week by teeing up their new ad product, “Promoted Posts”. In this model, brands pay per status update based on how many of their followers they want to see the update. This is another attempt by Facebook to segment brands’ followers into groups that they can individually monetize, next up “Targeted Posts” a la Linkedin.

AdAgeThe Future Belongs to ‘Native’ Ads, Is Your Agency Ready?

Don Draper may not understand why having a native team is important, but we certainly do. In an age where branded content and native postings are becoming the norm, it is imperative that agency teams stay ahead of the curve. By bringing in new talent that knows how to work within a native environment, agencies can think more creatively, respond to social media suggestions quicker, and pivot to new trends more efficiently. This article does an excellent job breaking down the talent categories that matter.

DigidayThe Aesthetic Pity of Web Advertising

Brian Morrissey does an excellent job breaking down what he calls the “display advertising industrial complex”. In layman’s terms, this essentially means that some form of banners will exist for the foreseeable future because advertisers are already used to dumping billions of dollars into them. Because of the complex, it is even more important for native platforms, like Sharethrough, to continue to find scalable solutions and showcase analytics highlighting the power of native advertising over banners. When you have people like Gawker founder Nick Denton saying he hopes one day his sites won’t run banners, you are on to something.

MashableDigg is Back With New App and Site Re-Launch

As discussed in the opening paragraphs, Digg rolled out a new website. By using larger story panes and a cleaner approach, the website looks more polished and is receiving positive feedback. One thing that is interesting to note about the new site is that much more of the content is picked by editors than users. This is very different from previous Digg versions that tried to remain user-centric. However, given that BetaWorks, which owns the news aggregator News.me, acquired Digg; it is no surprise that Digg has taken on more of an editorial voice and has moved further away from purely user-generated content.

TechCrunchWildfire Only Sells Ads Through Its Partner Adaptly, So Will Google Buy Them Too?

With the $250 million acquisition of Wildfire, Google made a statement that they consider social a very important part of the future. While AdWords has been a gigantic moneymaker in the search world, gaining access to social data will allow Google to find in-roads within Facebook and Twitter’s ad strategies. Wildfire is an excellent first step for Google, as they can help educate Google on social and begin to think of a strategy around social advertising.

ForbesFacebook Page Owners Can Pay $500 For 250,000 Eyeballs With ‘Promoted Posts’

While last week was all about their earnings, this week was all about Facebook’s new “Promoted Posts”. Facebook, in essence, has (smartly) decided to charge brands to interact with their followers. While the prices range significantly depending on how many followers you want to engage, brands are now met with a choice every time they have a new link, statement, or video they want to post. Now the waiting game is on to see whether brands consider their Facebook community as valuable as Facebook believes it is.

If you like this round-up and want to receive even more insights into the world of native advertising and branded content, make sure you sign up for our bi-weekly newsletter.

Natively,
Team Sharethrough

Native Advertising RoundUp: Defining Premium In the Native World

There is no more overused word than “premium” when it comes to online advertising. It’s universally desirable, even though its exact definition continues to change with the evolution of the web.

This week OMMA dug into the definition of premium as it relates to display advertising in a recent article called “What is Premium Now?”  In a fitting kickoff for the native advertising round-up, OMMA’s Laurie Sullivan noted confidently in the piece “Native targeted display ads provide the best results.” We agree.

Laurie’s article obviously opens the door for future conversations about what is ‘premium’ among the native ad market, but we’ll stop short of getting into that just yet. For now, we are working with the broad world of native ad platforms to flesh out the native ad framework and further define open versus closed native ads. Lets figure out just exactly who the players are before we decide on the all stars.

As some of the articles below highlight, the race to premium native is very much on. From Twitter’s enhanced targeting capabilities to Foursquare’s massive redesign, major social platforms are investing heavily in improving their user experience and enhancing their native ad offerings.

The native ad space is moving fast, so read up below to get caught up on the week in native ad news:

OMMA – What is Premium Now – This article tries to tackle everything in one swoop.  It discusses where the display ad market current stands, where it seems to be going, and how that ties in with the growing mobile and native strategies.  The general goal of the article is to figure out what constitutes a “premium” display advertisement. Given the incredible statistic that the display ad market in the United States will reach $15.4 billion this year, up from $12.4 billion in 2011, it is no surprise that there is still substantial focus on display as a viable advertising option.  However, with Microsoft recently writing off billions of dollars in losses stemming from display advertisements, it may be a strategy worth discussing.  For those (like us) who are proponents of native, the author points out is that many of these display ads are rolling in native elements. Unfortunately, only partially interrupting users is not the answer.   While I applaud the reporter for trying to come up with an interesting hybrid model that ties in mobile, native and display, the growing social landscape is showing that true native content is the most effective model.

Twitter Advertising Blog – New targeting adds greater relevance to your Promoted Tweets – Rumored for the past two weeks, Twitter is now rolling out targeted Promoted Tweets.  Similar to what Facebook is trying to do with their Sponsored Stories, Twitter is trying to figure out a way to use their massive collection of data to push out information to specific DMAs or demographics without blasting the entire Twitisphere.  For Twitter, they are itching to figure out ways to raise their ad numbers. According to a study released by TBG Digital, Facebook’s mobile ad click-through rate is 1.1%, while Twitter’s sits at .266%.

Venture Beat – Foursquare paves way for ad products with release of Local Updates – Foursquare needed to figure out a way to make some money, so it is no surprise that they went back to the drawing board and completely redesigned their entire user interface and experience.  For those of you who use Foursquare, you probably notice that the redesign is both visually appealing and more interactive. By allowing users to interact with each other, it creates an experience that feels similar to Facebook or Twitter.  Not only can users interact with each other now, but businesses can now weave themselves into the stream of discussion. Their ad unit, Local Updates, will be contextual.  Users will only receive updates on those businesses that they have shown interest in based on past check-ins.  While Foursquare advertising may appeal mostly to local businesses, large brands need to consider creative ways to reach Foursquare’s nearly 20 million users.

FMP Signal (Blog) The Rise of Native AdvertisingFederated Media’s recent Conversational Marketing Summit featured this presentation by Stumble Upon’s Jack Krawczyk.  One interesting topic he touches on is the cycle of content discovery and how native fits in that model.  The general thinking breaks down like this: Discover –> Share –> Amplify (Repeat).  Think about it, our main goal of using content aggregators, social sites, and other online mediums is to discover content. If we find awesome content (hopefully branded content), we share it.  Following those shares, native ad units work to amplify and reinforce the importance of the content that is being shared.  This process should not work in a Facebook or Twitter silo. Each of the social sites interacts with its users in different ways, so brands need to think about the complimentary process that buying across multiple platforms offers them.

Digiday – Brands Try out SocialCam – Despite a controversial $60M acquisition by Autodesk earlier this week, brands are beginning to check out what SocialCam has to offer.  While SocialCam has not jumped into the “Promoted” and “Sponsored” monetization game with their fellow social sites, they are garnering significant organic interest from the likes of Brisk Iced Tea and The Washington Post. In fact, WaPo just formed a partnership with SocialCam to allow a select group of London Olympic reporter to use SocialCam as their online video recorder.  This is a great first step for an app that has seen  massive adoption in such a short amount of time.

Hope you enjoyed this installment.  As always, make sure to check in again next week.

Natively,

Team Sharethrough