Going Native: three reasons marketers are embracing native advertising
Native advertising is big business, and a valuable tool for brands looking to market their product offering to targeted audiences. There are three key reasons marketers are going native:
1. It has viral potential
2. It can drive growth
3. It builds relationships
This week Think OTB is looking at the logic behind these claims. We see which brands are buying in to native advertising and why native shouldn’t be confused with content.
A little context
Often confused with content marketing, native advertising is not new. If you’re not completely clear on the differences, CMI’s Joe Pulizzi’s LinkedIn article is a great place to start.
For The Drum, although the term native advertising was first coined in 2011, its concept dates back over 100 years. They trace it back to when a special interest magazine blended its product advertisements seamlessly into its editorial copy.
Native marketing is more extensive than the likes of Google PPC ads but arguably less organic than original content. For The Guardian, the key is for native advertising to be ‘in the flow of editorial content’ and ‘feed an audience need’.
So why are marketers embracing native advertising, when they could create content marketing for free?
1. It has viral potential
The potential of native advertising to go viral is high, according to a recent article by The Guardian.
The Guardian claims that ‘according to research from IPG media lab, native ads are viewed for the same amount of time as editorial content and are much more likely to be shared than a banner ad’.
It is argued that it is this propensity to go viral that gives native marketing the edge over editorial content and even sponsored advertising. This scale and potentially global reach is central to the value placed on native. It makes the cost involved worthwhile for many marketers.
2. It can drive growth
Marketing Week state that native advertising can be a useful tool for marketers. Particularly for those looking to drive growth and increase sales with their strategy.
M&S have been struggling to revive their fashion offering for many years now. It is argued that native advertising is a great tool to help them achieve this. They can use it adopt a different and fun tone of voice, promote authenticity and even inspire new products.
Nathan Ansell is M&S’ global director of loyalty, insight and customer analytics. He argued that ‘native advertising is increasingly important to returning its [M&S’] general merchandise division to growth’.
Through clear objectives such as this, Marketing Week believes it is possible to make native marketing a worthwhile venture. Even major brands looking for long term benefits can make use of it.
3. It builds relationships
A recent article published by the Harvard Business Review somewhat contradicts the wisdom that native advertising is worth the cost.
Written by Florida-based content marketing firm Fractl openly acknowledge their inherent preference for content. Their article argues that content offers marketers benefits that native does not. An increased organic search ranking or cross-platform reach are among the benefits lacking in native content.
But HBR argues if building relationships with specific publishers is what you’re looking for, native is the route to choose. It is claimed ‘for some firms with large budgets, the expense is worth it if it means aligning their brand with a high-authority publisher and the right niche’.
While organic content may be less costly, when used alongside a focused strategy native, content still has its place in the marketing mix. Whatever your aim, be clear on the goals you want to achieve. Then, native advertising can deliver good return on investment for marketers.