Ali Glemser |
According to Sharethrough, the world’s largest in-feed
advertising organization, native advertising is a form of paid mass media where
the ad experience follows the natural form and function of the user experience
in which it is placed.
This is growing particularly popular among advertisers in
the digital space and is a contributing reason to why mobile-ad spending has
now surpassed advertising dollars spent on traditional media such as radio and
newspapers. As successful as this tactic has been for advertisers, the public
is starting to catch on to what many are saying is leaving them feeling tricked
and/or deceived. Specifically, a recent study by a company that pairs brands with
writers to produce native ads reported that two-thirds of respondents said they
felt deceived when they realized that what they thought was genuine editorial
content was really sponsored by a brand.
I can’t say I blame this group; my initial reaction is a
feeling of deception, too. But, when you take a look back, brands have been
doing this for many years in print, radio and television media. Only now does
the development of the digital space give them an opportunity to further the
evolution of this idea.
The simple equation that many content consumers forget is
media outlets exists because of advertisers. Advertising dollars pay the bills
for these outlets to research, create and publish content; subscriptions are
only a very little slice of the income pie for print, radio, television and
digital outlets because consumers are not willing to pay high prices for media
consumption.
And now, as consumers try to hack the content in the digital
space to get around pay walls, outlets are feeling the heat from advertisers to
get their ads as much exposure as possible – hence, the concept of native
advertising.
The Irony: Native
advertising exists and evolves as consumers try to avoid paying for media
content and as media outlets try to combat this avoidance to please the hand
that feeds them – advertisers.
The Reality: Native
advertising isn’t going away any time soon, unless consumers decide to start
paying for all content they consume and outlets see an overwhelming
subscription response as a result.
But, don’t forget that advertisers are trying to show they
are listening to consumers through native advertising, as well. Many of these
ads are videos, images, music and other media designed to be engaging based
upon feedback from consumers.
Native advertising shows all the signs of a tactic that is
here to stay. My advice would be to pay close attention to what media you
consume, and if you are invested in the subject of the content, read articles,
watch videos or listen to broadcasts from multiple sources to form the most
educated opinion on something. Remember, as a consumer you have the
responsibility of taking the necessary steps to be accurately informed.
No comments:
Post a Comment