Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Research Finds Native Advertising Can Damage Media Outlets' Reputations

Research Finds Native Advertising Can Damage Media Outlets' Reputations | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Native Insider: Part of the challenge with "native" is that each organization has a different understanding of what it is. For the purposes of the research, what is your definition of native advertising?

Wu: In our study, we defined native advertising as sponsored content, which features content that is similar and consistent with publishers’ content and is often consumed by readers like non-sponsored content. I agree that there are also other types of native advertising, such as sponsored social media posts or sponsored hyperlinks. We focused on sponsored content because it is widely adopted by many news organizations, including very reputable ones like The New York Times. 

Native Insider: Your research found that when content was identified as native advertising, readers expressed a lower opinion of the media outlet it was published in. However, the reputation of the company being promoted was not affected. Can you elaborate on this finding?

Wu: I think this was one of the most interesting findings in our study. We originally expected that both companies and media outlets would be negatively influenced. However, the media outlet was the only source that was affected. On one hand, this indicates that readers are not surprised by the sponsored content from a company, since similar covert marketing techniques have been utilized before, such as video news releases....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Fascinating research study shows media host's reputation suffers but not the advertiser doing native advertising. Also, the conversation looks at the FTC and its out of date guidelines.

Pierre Placide's curator insight, May 18, 2016 1:20 PM
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Patrick Frison Roche's curator insight, May 19, 2016 3:50 AM
What? Readers can actually differentiate advertising from editorial? And they resent media who entertain the confusion? Quelle surprise!
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John Oliver Roasts Native Advertising in Hilarious Fashion | Contently

John Oliver Roasts Native Advertising in Hilarious Fashion | Contently | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
On Sunday's Last Week Tonight With Jon Oliver, the network took their commentary on the separation of business and journalism up a notch and completely annihilated sponsored content. Needless to say, it was hilarious.


...Oliver started off his rant by noting that he was lucky to work for advertisement-free HBO, where he is free to say that “Old Navy makes you look like a tacky murderer.” After that, Oliver delivered 11 full minutes of pinpoint jokes about native ads. Few escaped the fire, with The New York Times‘ Meredith Levien, TIME Inc. CEO Joseph Ripp, and BuzzFeed co-founder Jonah Peretti on the receiving end of Last Week Tonight’s hottest burns....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Very funny take down of native ads. Brought to you by The PR Coach. Just kidding! Enjoy.

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Column: Is it time for your PR agency to lead your creative? | Marketing Magazine

Column: Is it time for your PR agency to lead your creative? | Marketing Magazine | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The public relations industry is known for a lot of things: media relations, press conferences, event management, crisis communications, and, more recently, social media strategy and community management.


But there’s one thing that many communicators haven’t been particularly well-known for: creativity. At best, PR has been put in a box to amplify creative ideas developed by others. At worst, we’ve been accused of “spinning” stories or doing “stunts” to make a splash.


That’s changing. Over the last 18 months or so, branding, advertising and digital agencies’ dominance over creative campaigns has started to wane. Clients are increasingly turning to PR agencies to come up with the “big idea,” as the discipline is now in a good spot to call the shots on creative development. Here’s why.

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Five reasons why PR can lead your creative.

Street Advertising Services's curator insight, August 15, 2014 4:56 AM

Interesting take on PR agencies creating the big idea for your next campaign. In our 8 years experience of delivering PR led stunts, the majority of creative ideas comes from the PR agency..

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Content Marketing: Sunny with a Chance of Burritos? | The PR Coach

Content Marketing: Sunny with a Chance of Burritos? | The PR Coach | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Marketing forecast? Sunny with a chance of burritos...

 

Who said content marketing isn’t fun? A recent Adweek story looked at three companies, including Taco Bell, who are buying real-time, mobile ads based on the weather.

 

Twitter and The Weather Channel were quick to recognize the growing revenue possibilities in mobile marketing. They announced a deal to create custom content based on the weather and sell it to eager marketers....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

The key question in traditional and social media soon will be: "How much sponsored content is too much?"

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Native Advertising Is Broken: Here's How to Fix It

Native Advertising Is Broken: Here's How to Fix It | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Learn how to use inbound marketing and native advertising together to drive measurable results. Native advertising is all the rage these days. Companies like BuzzFeed and ShareThrough have based their business models on the notion that in-stream, organic-like content will save the day and finally allow everyone to retire those tired and underperforming banner ads to a nice tropical island far, far away.

 

In its current form, however, native advertising is destined to fail just like the banner ad failed. Why? Because most native advertising placements -- just like most banner ad placements -- are not structured with inbound marketing strategies that treat native advertising content creation as a starting point. Rather, the content is treated as the end point. In essence, most native advertising today is basically a branding play....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

The native advertisers are restless... and looking for ROI.

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Experimental Google ads show off a perfect content marketing model

Experimental Google ads show off a perfect content marketing model | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Want to know what the future of content marketing looks like? Just ask Google – or more accurately, check out its leaked patents for a new type of advertisement. It’s emblematic of what brands should be doing to stay top-of-mind among prospects and ultimately lead to higher engagement and conversion rates.


The new advertising product is basically a content-rich splash ad that follows users from one page to another. Rather than a banner, which just takes customers to a landing page and interrupts the flow of their navigation, these “morphing” ads will feature menus for readers to click on and manipulate and multiple forms of content, including pictures, video and text. More importantly, the ads will follow people from one site to another, allowing them to continue reading no matter what page they’ve loaded....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

A new prototype advertising from Google demonstrates how brands should create content that follows customers and adapts to their preferences.

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A Growing Number of E-Commerce Sites Are Moving Into Print | AdWeek

A Growing Number of E-Commerce Sites Are Moving Into Print | AdWeek | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Ask any lifestyle magazine publisher how they’re making up for declining print revenue, and chances are they’ll mention e-commerce. But while countless publishers are struggling to drive dollars via online shopping, there’s a growing number of e-commerce companies moving in the opposite direction.


In recent months, customers of online-only retailers like Rent the Runway, JackThreads and Birchbox have received catalogs—yes, those old-school, printed booklets—in their mailboxes, while flash sale site One Kings Lane has been sending out “magalogs” combining decorating tips with photographs of rooms populated by the site’s ever-changing inventory....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

How to explain this counterintuitive native advertising trend?

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Why Every Social Network Should Be Betting On In-Stream, Native Advertising

Why Every Social Network Should Be Betting On In-Stream, Native Advertising | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest are all moving to native ads. The native-social rush is on.


BIA/Kelsey estimates that social ad spend will reach over $10 billion by 2017 and that up to 40% or more of those outlays will go to native ads. In the social context, we define native ads as ads that are seamlessly integrated into a user's feed and are nearly indistinguishable from organic content.


...On Facebook, native ads in the News Feed generate 49-times higher click-through rates and a 54% lower cost-per-click than traditional placements in the right-rail sidebar. LinkedIn is making major investments in its native strategy and Pinterest is piloting native ads on its platform.


According to Jan Rezab, CEO of Socialbakers, a social media analytics company that works with Fortune 100 brands, "In the future, all advertising on social media will be native in-stream ads. The right rail and banners will disappear altogether."...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Take a really close look at this chart. That "hockey stick" growth is what native advertising spending looks like in four years. If you're in advertising, marketing or PR, this is a trend you really need to study.

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Don’t Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater: What We Can Learn from Traditional Advertising | Business 2 Community

Don’t Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater: What We Can Learn from Traditional Advertising | Business 2 Community | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Traditional advertising just doesn’t work in social media — at least that’s what most folks working in this area believe. And, I agree with them. Using social networks as a tool for blasting noise, self-promotion, and generally disrupting the flow of conversation can devastate your brand. Even using Facebook ads (or newer LinkedIn ads) is generally pretty ineffective. But, does that mean we can’t learn ANYTHING from traditional advertising? My answer is NO! And, here’s why I think traditional advertising still has something to say about how we SHOULD do social media marketing — new media....
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The opportunities and dangers in the native advertising land rush | PaidContent

The opportunities and dangers in the native advertising land rush | PaidContent | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Native advertising, brand journalism — whatever you call it, the current ad-driven content boom provides a lot of opportunity. But for it to work, journalists and publishers need to think about their brand as much as the advertiser does.
Jeff Domansky's insight:

Excellent overview of the challenges of "native advertising" for journalists and publishers. And these days that includes most organizations.

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