Warc, 19 June 2014
CANNES: Native advertising is much more effective than
display, especially when it comes to reaching millennials, according to Yahoo
CEO Marissa Mayer.
In a presentation at the Cannes International Festival of
Creativity and in a subsequent closed-door media session, she emphasised that
she saw native advertising playing a vital role in Yahoo's future.
"Native experiences beat their traditional display
counterparts in almost every metric," Mayer said, citing Yahoo research
which showed that a viewer of a native ad was 3.6 times more likely to conduct
a brand search than viewers of traditional display ads and six times more
likely to do a related search.
Further, 46% of millennials who noticed branded content said
they consumed the content and one third of those then shared it.
Mayer's pitch coincided with the news that Yahoo would be
running Tumblr Sponsored Post ads on its own sites, Ad Week reported. She later
elaborated on this, telling reporters that an average sponsored post on Tumblr,
the blogging platform Yahoo paid more than $1bn for last year, was reblogged
10,000 times.
She had an interesting take on native advertising,
explaining that she had noticed her son paying more attention to the ads on
Saturday morning TV than to the surrounding cartoons.
"When you think about it, TV ads are native. They are
30-second stories embedded in a 30-minute story," she said. "Print
ads add to the aspirational factor of the medium and radio is smaller
programming in previously scheduled programming.
"On a PC, however, the ads are stickers around the
content. It was never native to its environment."
While there are attractions of native advertising for Yahoo,
regulators are also keen to ensure clarity for consumers so that they
understand what they are reading is an ad. The Advertising Standards Authority
(ASA), the UK regulator, has just ruled that an ad for related content at the
bottom of a newspaper article was not "obviously identifiable as
such", Media Week reported.
This related to content recommendations provided by Outbrain
which included paid-for links to third party websites and which the ASA said
breached its codes on recognition of marketing communications and misleading
advertising.
In the US, the Federal Trade Commission has also discussed
the issue informally with advertisers, publishers and legal experts.
Data sourced from Ad Week, Media Week, Campaign
Asia-Pacific; additional content by Warc staff
No comments:
Post a Comment