Crissy Lintner |
Last week, I gave my first thoughts on native advertising. I left off
stating that while earned media coverage is the preferred method of exposure, I
would recommend an online advertorial opportunity to my clients if the budget
existed and only if we can ensure the content is valuable. I wanted to expand
on that (without my first post becoming a novel) because it can be done right.
Valuable content, paid or unpaid, is valuable content.
Period. I love this
example of a paid post on The New York Times website. Netflix is promoting
its original hit series, “Orange is the New Black.” The article is multifaceted,
utilizing copy, video, photos and audio components. It is informative, engaging
and very well done – arguably, a stellar piece of pure editorial content, if only it weren’t paid content. I came away
from this article with a greater understanding of the challenges women face in
prison, how the prison system is changing to meet their needs, and where some
formerly incarcerated women are today – living successful lives after having
been incarcerated for years in what for some were drug-related or “minor”
crimes. This is a brilliant way that Netflix and “Orange is the New Black” are using
native advertising to bring awareness to an issue with the prison system while
promoting the show. Note how NYT makes it impossible for you not to realize
you’re reading content that was paid for – it’s even in a special section of
the website that uses a URL with “paidpost.nytimes.com” at the beginning, a
banner that says “Paid Post,” and the logo for Netflix and “Orange is the New
Black.” Even the graphics use brand colors: orange and black.
Screenshot of Netflix’s “Orange is the New Black” paid post on nytimes.com |
Of course, BuzzFeed is the king of native advertising – as
referenced on this
episode of “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” on HBO, which I mentioned
in my previous post. However, nonprofits
take note: you can participate in native advertising on BuzzFeed without
paying for it! See our client Literacy
Mid-South’s BuzzFeed Community page and note that on each actual post,
there’s a disclaimer that explains why LMS does not pay, even though they are a
brand publisher. Sure, all of their posts are about LMS, but that’s the point. This
is a fun way to have unique content for social media and newsletters, enhance
SEO and perhaps be found in the community by potential supporters. LMS is effectively
using this unique aspect of BuzzFeed, and we love it!
Literacy Mid-South’s BuzzFeed Community page |
I think consumers are wiser than the FOX News experts gave
them credit for, and they will only become more so as the years pass. Awareness
of native advertising will make all of us savvier. Brands will become better at
ensuring content is valuable to readers. And, if I see an article that looks
like it could offer interesting or entertaining content, I’ll read it. Then,
it’s completely on me – a consumer – if I feel like it was a waste of my time
to read what turned out to be shameless promotion or biased content created by
a company, political group or other entity.
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