Connected, interactive content experiences deliver more trusted data, and more measurable results. Original research illuminates how marketersare making big, beautiful music.
The majority of content marketers surveyed (53%) currently use interactive content as part of their content marketing strategies. Usage is higher among large enterprises. Most users find interactive content effective at grabbing attention, enhancing message retention, generating repeat visits, and increasing engagement. Common interactive content types used include assessments, calculators, contests and quizzes. Marketers see educating audiences as the primary purpose of interactive content over engagement or lead generation. Measurement of interactive content's effectiveness remains immature, though marketers with more experience report higher effectiveness.
Defense contractors who use the right online display advertising tactics can boost awareness, improve search advertising efforts, enhance email marketing, and increase leads.
Welcome to our annual Enterprise Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends report. Here we present the findings from enterprise marketers (those who work in organizations with 1,000+ employees) who replied to our 11th Annual Content Marketing Survey.
At the time of the survey, content marketers had just made it through the first half of 2020. Most reported that their organization made quick changes when the pandemic hit, most notably by changing their targeting/messaging strategy, adjusting their editorial calendar, and changing their content distribution/promotion strategy. The majority (57%) expected to spend about the same on content marketing during the second half of 2020 as they spent in the first half (17% expected a decrease).
Team size hadn’t changed drastically compared with the previous year (48% said it stayed the same); yet, another 35% reported an increase.
Overall, one-third of the enterprise respondents reported high levels of content marketing success. These top performers said the top two factors contributing to that success in the last 12 months were “the value our content provides” (79%) and “website changes” (62%).
Looking forward, 74% of respondents felt the pandemic would have a major or moderate long- term impact on their organization’s overall content marketing success. It will be interesting to see how enterprise marketers rise to the challenges in 2021.
There is a huge opportunity for marketers to get more from the content they’re developing. That’s the conclusion the Content Marketing Institute (CMI) research team came to after
conducting its first-ever content management and strategy survey.
Our team surveyed 411 marketers from the CMI audience to learn how they manage content within their organizations. Read on to see the results.
Greetings Technology Marketers,
Welcome to our annual Technology Content Marketing: Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North America report.
I’m pleased to announce the percentage of technology marketers that reported high levels of overall content marketing
success increased from 24% last year to 31% this year—another 50% reported moderate success. Like last year, nearly 70%
said their organization is much/somewhat more successful with content marketing compared with one year ago.
For a glimpse into how the top-performing content marketers operate, see the chart on page 4. You’ll note that these
marketers report high levels of commitment; document their content marketing strategy; are focused on building audiences;
and are given ample time to produce content marketing results, among other distinguishing factors.
Technology is rapidly changing the processes around content marketing. We look forward to watching how things progress
and reporting back to you again next year.
Welcome to the Manufacturing Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends with Insights for 2022 report. This report looks back on the last 12 months and includes expectations for 2022.
This year’s research suggested that the pandemic awoke a sleeping giant – content marketing, that is. Without in-person events and face-to-face selling, many who had previously paid little attention to content marketing suddenly became aware of its power. More content marketers got a seat at the table and helped keep many businesses on their audiences’ radar. Some discovered new audiences altogether.
Videos and virtual events/webinars were big over the last 12 months with the manufacturing marketers we surveyed. In addition, 85% expect continued investment in video in 2022, making it the top area of predicted investment.
Yet manufacturing marketers continue to face content marketing challenges within their organizations: 51% said they are challenged with creating valuable content instead of sales-oriented content as well as with overcoming the traditional marketing and sales mindset. Fifty percent said they are challenged with accessing subject matter experts to create content. If manufacturing marketers can overcome these challenges, they’ll improve their odds of achieving greater content marketing success in the coming year.
For three years we’ve looked at B2B content marketing trends, and this year, we are excited to bring you these compelling B2C findings.
According to our research, both B2B and B2C marketers are still struggling with the effectiveness of their content marketing. So while we are happy that more marketers are engaging in content marketing to attract and retain customers, we also realize we have a ways to go.
B2B enterprise marketers approach content marketing differently than their overall B2B peers in three key ways: 1) They use more content marketing tactics on average, citing 16 tactics compared to 12 for all B2B marketers, 2) They outsource content creation more at 65% versus 43% for all B2B marketers, and 3) They are more challenged with lack of integration across marketing functions at 58% versus 25% for all B2B marketers.
Virtual conferences and events provide new opportunities for you
to showcase your product or service, meet 1:1 with your current
and potential customers, and listen to the needs of the industry. With such a large investment of time, money, and human resources, it’s no surprise that management expects great returns on each event that your company sponsors.
On behalf of the Content Marketing Institute team, we’re all here to help you. We’re ready for exciting experiences, great ROI for sponsors, and new ways for customers to advance the practice of content marketing because of partner relationships built at our events.
This document discusses challenges with content marketing and technology. It notes that many organizations do not have a formal content strategy and are unsure how to measure success. There are also opposing priorities between marketing and IT teams - marketing wants to move fast while IT focuses on stability. The document proposes a layered approach to content and experience management with four layers - awareness and introduction, engagement and relationships, intelligence and insight, and shared values and expectations. It provides examples of companies applying this approach and emphasizes the need for cross-functional collaboration between marketing and IT.
Welcome to Content Marketing Institute’s first Video & Visual Storytelling Survey. In this report, you’ll learn how content marketers are using videos, how they’re getting them produced, where they’re seeing results, and more.
Are you using video strategically? Are you paying as much attention to your video distribution plan as you are to video creation? Are you measuring results to see what works? All are important to overall video marketing success. Here’s to yours!
B2C Content Marketing: 2013 Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North AmericaMarketingProfs
MarketingProfs produced B2C Content Marketing: 2013 Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends (North America) in partnership with the Content Marketing Institute. Our goal was to give you a clear view of the State of B2C Content Marketing. Among the questions this report answers: What's really happening? What are your biggest content marketing challenges? What slice of the budget will be dedicated to content next year, and what social channels are most relevant?
Welcome to our annual Technology Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends report, based on our latest annual content marketing survey conducted in July 2020.
The study showed that technology marketers, in the throes of adjusting to business changes presented by a global pandemic, put more emphasis on using content marketing to generate demand and leads than they had the previous year. They also were looking more closely at conversion and marketing qualified lead (MQL) metrics to track the performance of their content.
These insights suggest that tech marketers were increasingly called upon to use content marketing for demand and lead generation. It makes sense, then, that their use of virtual events (83%) increased by nine percentage points over the previous year, as virtual relationship-building and selling took a front seat. In addition, livestreaming video finally took off (one-third of all tech respondents—and 53% of those working in large companies—reported using it).
It’s too soon to tell if these will be lasting shifts. Priorities are likely to change again as restrictions caused by the pandemic ease up. We look forward to exploring these topics in our next round of annual content marketing research.
This document discusses how digital asset management is key to effective content marketing in today's media landscape. It argues that digital asset management can provide three "tickets" to successful content marketing: integration, optimization, and accessibility. Integration refers to bringing together internal teams and external partners to collaborate on asset production. Optimization means streamlining workflows and facilitating connections between dispersed teams. Accessibility is about making assets easily searchable and usable for all relevant parties. The document advocates for digital asset management systems that provide these three features to help brands keep up with increasing demands for real-time, multi-channel content marketing.
B2B Content Marketing: 2013 Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North AmericaMarketingProfs
B2B marketers are spending more, using more tactics, and distributing their content on more social networks than they have in years past, according to the latest findings of a study from MarketingProfs and the Content Marketing Institute.
There is also more uncertainty, however, the study found: B2B marketers are more uncertain whether they are using various content marketing tactics effectively.
Don't leave your sales force behind gooding communications groupElizabeth Gooding
Printers are investing in new technology, which is good news for the industry. For printers to gain the most from their new investment they must plan for the impact on sales processes, compensation plan and the need for enhanced marketing support for B2B sales.
Presentation from Joe Pulizzi from the Content Marketing Institute on 10 ways to fix your content and 10 tactical tips to implement within your content marketing strategy.
Welcome to the sixth annual Content Marketing in Australia: Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends report. One of the most striking findings was the increased percentage of Australian content marketers who have become more focused on building an audience (85%) compared with last year’s survey results (69%). This finding was not unique to Australia; the Content Marketing Institute team observed it among all groups of content marketers studied. Building a subscriber base is a key content marketing goal. However, what you do with that list is equally as important. The quality of content you create (does it speak to your audience’s wants and needs?) … how efficiently you produce it … whether it’s credible … how/when/where you distribute it – these are just a handful of factors that impact overall content marketing success. And let us not forget the
importance of a documented strategy and a strong commitment to the approach (see page 4 for a glimpse at commitment’s influence). We wish you success with using content marketing to provide meaningful, long-term value for your audience – and business results for your organisation. If you need educational resources, please let us know.
Welcome to our ninth annual B2B Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North America report. We surveyed content marketers worldwide about a range of content marketing topics including strategy, audience development, technology proficiency, and content types. This report presents the data from the B2B content marketers in North America.
Although issues such as changes in SEO and social media algorithms are top-of-mind for B2B content marketers, they are accustomed to rapid changes in technology that often enable them to do their jobs faster, with better results. When the process-related components of the content marketer’s job are efficient, time is freed up to better serve the audience, discovering and developing the types of content they truly want and need.
We hope you find this research helpful as you plan for 2019!
The Future of Content Marketing: 10 Things to Consider Today
Over the last few months. Joe Pulizzi has been sharing exclusive insights in CMI’s weekly newsletter, The Content Marketing Revolution. These tips are things that struck him each week, but when we looked at them in total many had a theme: they help marketing leaders prepare for the future of content marketing. The ideas range from big to small and quick to implement and a bit longer-term, but all are things you should be thinking about today. For more exclusive insights from Joe, subscribe to The Content Marketing Revolution. What do you really need to know to prepare for the future of content marketing?
Seven tips for writing customer case studies that sellDavidDodd
The document provides seven tips for writing effective customer case studies that can help reduce buyers' perceptions of risk and boost marketing efforts. The tips are to: 1) inventory the key facts that can be used in the case study; 2) define the target audience for the case study; 3) identify the two or three main takeaways; 4) tell the case study like a story with a setup, complication, and resolution; 5) include specific quantitative results; 6) liberally use customer quotations; and 7) make the case study easy to scan with features like subheadings. Following these tips can help create case studies that are more compelling and persuasive to readers.
Welcome to the Enterprise Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends: Insights for 2022 report. This report looks back on the last 12 months and includes expectations for 2022.
The research suggested that, due to lockdowns and work-from-home mandates, content marketing piqued the interest of many who were previously unaware of its power. With more people than ever spending time online, content marketing presented a prime opportunity to get and stay in front of audiences.
As in the previous year, nearly one in three enterprise marketers said their organization was extremely or very successful with content marketing. These marketers, our “top performers,” have certain characteristics that set them apart from their peers (see page 4). A few of the biggest things they do are to differentiate their content and use content collaboration/calendaring/workflow tools.
No matter how successful they are at content marketing, most respondents plan to invest in video in 2022: 72% of all enterprise respondents forecast investment in this area followed by investment in events (62%), paid media (59%), and owned-media assets (55%).
And, yes, challenges remain. The top challenge, which is the same as it was two years ago, is internal communication between teams/silos (57%). It indicates a pressing need to formalize content operations in enterprises that have not yet done so.
- B2B small business content marketers in North America have increased confidence in their content marketing abilities, with 45% now considering themselves effective compared to 34% last year.
- Those that are most effective are more likely to have a documented content strategy and someone overseeing the strategy, and produce more content than less effective peers.
- Usage of social media platforms like Google+, SlideShare, Instagram and YouTube by small B2B marketers has increased significantly over the last year.
- On average, small B2B marketers allocate 27% of their budget to content marketing and 60% plan to increase spending over the next 12 months.
Welcome to Technology Content Marketing 2020: Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends. This report is based on the findings from our 10th annual content marketing survey. Technology marketers continue to make progress with content marketing. Approximately one-third rate their organization’s overall content marketing as extremely or very successful, and 76% report they are much more or somewhat more successful compared with one year ago. What makes them successful? When we look at the top performers, we see they treat content marketing as a strategic business function, craft content thoughtfully, experiment with distribution, and measure their results. They use content marketing not only to create brand awareness and generate leads, but also to build loyalty and subscribed audiences.
Throughout 2012, video marketing for B2B marketers undoubtedly showed an upward trend in both effectiveness and popularity, and most industry observers expect this to continue into 2013 and beyond.
The document discusses trends in native advertising. It provides an overview of how native advertising is still nascent but growing rapidly. It then summarizes various studies and statistics on the use and effectiveness of native ads. These include findings that while most media buyers already use native ads, two-thirds plan to use them more. The benefits of native ads for advertisers are discussed, but challenges like measurement and alignment with objectives are also noted.
Content Marketing in the Digital Driver's SeatScribbleLive
1) The document discusses how marketing budgets are shifting from traditional to digital media, with digital ad revenue expected to grow at 11% annually while traditional media grows at just 0.4%.
2) It emphasizes that content marketing has seen significant growth in recent years as marketers try to adapt to how digital media has changed consumers' relationships with information.
3) Content marketing is presented as more effective than interruptive digital ads, as it provides valuable content consumers want to engage with and share, benefiting both consumers and brands.
B2B enterprise marketers approach content marketing differently than their overall B2B peers in three key ways: 1) They use more content marketing tactics on average, citing 16 tactics compared to 12 for all B2B marketers, 2) They outsource content creation more at 65% versus 43% for all B2B marketers, and 3) They are more challenged with lack of integration across marketing functions at 58% versus 25% for all B2B marketers.
Virtual conferences and events provide new opportunities for you
to showcase your product or service, meet 1:1 with your current
and potential customers, and listen to the needs of the industry. With such a large investment of time, money, and human resources, it’s no surprise that management expects great returns on each event that your company sponsors.
On behalf of the Content Marketing Institute team, we’re all here to help you. We’re ready for exciting experiences, great ROI for sponsors, and new ways for customers to advance the practice of content marketing because of partner relationships built at our events.
This document discusses challenges with content marketing and technology. It notes that many organizations do not have a formal content strategy and are unsure how to measure success. There are also opposing priorities between marketing and IT teams - marketing wants to move fast while IT focuses on stability. The document proposes a layered approach to content and experience management with four layers - awareness and introduction, engagement and relationships, intelligence and insight, and shared values and expectations. It provides examples of companies applying this approach and emphasizes the need for cross-functional collaboration between marketing and IT.
Welcome to Content Marketing Institute’s first Video & Visual Storytelling Survey. In this report, you’ll learn how content marketers are using videos, how they’re getting them produced, where they’re seeing results, and more.
Are you using video strategically? Are you paying as much attention to your video distribution plan as you are to video creation? Are you measuring results to see what works? All are important to overall video marketing success. Here’s to yours!
B2C Content Marketing: 2013 Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North AmericaMarketingProfs
MarketingProfs produced B2C Content Marketing: 2013 Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends (North America) in partnership with the Content Marketing Institute. Our goal was to give you a clear view of the State of B2C Content Marketing. Among the questions this report answers: What's really happening? What are your biggest content marketing challenges? What slice of the budget will be dedicated to content next year, and what social channels are most relevant?
Welcome to our annual Technology Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends report, based on our latest annual content marketing survey conducted in July 2020.
The study showed that technology marketers, in the throes of adjusting to business changes presented by a global pandemic, put more emphasis on using content marketing to generate demand and leads than they had the previous year. They also were looking more closely at conversion and marketing qualified lead (MQL) metrics to track the performance of their content.
These insights suggest that tech marketers were increasingly called upon to use content marketing for demand and lead generation. It makes sense, then, that their use of virtual events (83%) increased by nine percentage points over the previous year, as virtual relationship-building and selling took a front seat. In addition, livestreaming video finally took off (one-third of all tech respondents—and 53% of those working in large companies—reported using it).
It’s too soon to tell if these will be lasting shifts. Priorities are likely to change again as restrictions caused by the pandemic ease up. We look forward to exploring these topics in our next round of annual content marketing research.
This document discusses how digital asset management is key to effective content marketing in today's media landscape. It argues that digital asset management can provide three "tickets" to successful content marketing: integration, optimization, and accessibility. Integration refers to bringing together internal teams and external partners to collaborate on asset production. Optimization means streamlining workflows and facilitating connections between dispersed teams. Accessibility is about making assets easily searchable and usable for all relevant parties. The document advocates for digital asset management systems that provide these three features to help brands keep up with increasing demands for real-time, multi-channel content marketing.
B2B Content Marketing: 2013 Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North AmericaMarketingProfs
B2B marketers are spending more, using more tactics, and distributing their content on more social networks than they have in years past, according to the latest findings of a study from MarketingProfs and the Content Marketing Institute.
There is also more uncertainty, however, the study found: B2B marketers are more uncertain whether they are using various content marketing tactics effectively.
Don't leave your sales force behind gooding communications groupElizabeth Gooding
Printers are investing in new technology, which is good news for the industry. For printers to gain the most from their new investment they must plan for the impact on sales processes, compensation plan and the need for enhanced marketing support for B2B sales.
Presentation from Joe Pulizzi from the Content Marketing Institute on 10 ways to fix your content and 10 tactical tips to implement within your content marketing strategy.
Welcome to the sixth annual Content Marketing in Australia: Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends report. One of the most striking findings was the increased percentage of Australian content marketers who have become more focused on building an audience (85%) compared with last year’s survey results (69%). This finding was not unique to Australia; the Content Marketing Institute team observed it among all groups of content marketers studied. Building a subscriber base is a key content marketing goal. However, what you do with that list is equally as important. The quality of content you create (does it speak to your audience’s wants and needs?) … how efficiently you produce it … whether it’s credible … how/when/where you distribute it – these are just a handful of factors that impact overall content marketing success. And let us not forget the
importance of a documented strategy and a strong commitment to the approach (see page 4 for a glimpse at commitment’s influence). We wish you success with using content marketing to provide meaningful, long-term value for your audience – and business results for your organisation. If you need educational resources, please let us know.
Welcome to our ninth annual B2B Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North America report. We surveyed content marketers worldwide about a range of content marketing topics including strategy, audience development, technology proficiency, and content types. This report presents the data from the B2B content marketers in North America.
Although issues such as changes in SEO and social media algorithms are top-of-mind for B2B content marketers, they are accustomed to rapid changes in technology that often enable them to do their jobs faster, with better results. When the process-related components of the content marketer’s job are efficient, time is freed up to better serve the audience, discovering and developing the types of content they truly want and need.
We hope you find this research helpful as you plan for 2019!
The Future of Content Marketing: 10 Things to Consider Today
Over the last few months. Joe Pulizzi has been sharing exclusive insights in CMI’s weekly newsletter, The Content Marketing Revolution. These tips are things that struck him each week, but when we looked at them in total many had a theme: they help marketing leaders prepare for the future of content marketing. The ideas range from big to small and quick to implement and a bit longer-term, but all are things you should be thinking about today. For more exclusive insights from Joe, subscribe to The Content Marketing Revolution. What do you really need to know to prepare for the future of content marketing?
Seven tips for writing customer case studies that sellDavidDodd
The document provides seven tips for writing effective customer case studies that can help reduce buyers' perceptions of risk and boost marketing efforts. The tips are to: 1) inventory the key facts that can be used in the case study; 2) define the target audience for the case study; 3) identify the two or three main takeaways; 4) tell the case study like a story with a setup, complication, and resolution; 5) include specific quantitative results; 6) liberally use customer quotations; and 7) make the case study easy to scan with features like subheadings. Following these tips can help create case studies that are more compelling and persuasive to readers.
Welcome to the Enterprise Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends: Insights for 2022 report. This report looks back on the last 12 months and includes expectations for 2022.
The research suggested that, due to lockdowns and work-from-home mandates, content marketing piqued the interest of many who were previously unaware of its power. With more people than ever spending time online, content marketing presented a prime opportunity to get and stay in front of audiences.
As in the previous year, nearly one in three enterprise marketers said their organization was extremely or very successful with content marketing. These marketers, our “top performers,” have certain characteristics that set them apart from their peers (see page 4). A few of the biggest things they do are to differentiate their content and use content collaboration/calendaring/workflow tools.
No matter how successful they are at content marketing, most respondents plan to invest in video in 2022: 72% of all enterprise respondents forecast investment in this area followed by investment in events (62%), paid media (59%), and owned-media assets (55%).
And, yes, challenges remain. The top challenge, which is the same as it was two years ago, is internal communication between teams/silos (57%). It indicates a pressing need to formalize content operations in enterprises that have not yet done so.
- B2B small business content marketers in North America have increased confidence in their content marketing abilities, with 45% now considering themselves effective compared to 34% last year.
- Those that are most effective are more likely to have a documented content strategy and someone overseeing the strategy, and produce more content than less effective peers.
- Usage of social media platforms like Google+, SlideShare, Instagram and YouTube by small B2B marketers has increased significantly over the last year.
- On average, small B2B marketers allocate 27% of their budget to content marketing and 60% plan to increase spending over the next 12 months.
Welcome to Technology Content Marketing 2020: Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends. This report is based on the findings from our 10th annual content marketing survey. Technology marketers continue to make progress with content marketing. Approximately one-third rate their organization’s overall content marketing as extremely or very successful, and 76% report they are much more or somewhat more successful compared with one year ago. What makes them successful? When we look at the top performers, we see they treat content marketing as a strategic business function, craft content thoughtfully, experiment with distribution, and measure their results. They use content marketing not only to create brand awareness and generate leads, but also to build loyalty and subscribed audiences.
Throughout 2012, video marketing for B2B marketers undoubtedly showed an upward trend in both effectiveness and popularity, and most industry observers expect this to continue into 2013 and beyond.
The document discusses trends in native advertising. It provides an overview of how native advertising is still nascent but growing rapidly. It then summarizes various studies and statistics on the use and effectiveness of native ads. These include findings that while most media buyers already use native ads, two-thirds plan to use them more. The benefits of native ads for advertisers are discussed, but challenges like measurement and alignment with objectives are also noted.
Content Marketing in the Digital Driver's SeatScribbleLive
1) The document discusses how marketing budgets are shifting from traditional to digital media, with digital ad revenue expected to grow at 11% annually while traditional media grows at just 0.4%.
2) It emphasizes that content marketing has seen significant growth in recent years as marketers try to adapt to how digital media has changed consumers' relationships with information.
3) Content marketing is presented as more effective than interruptive digital ads, as it provides valuable content consumers want to engage with and share, benefiting both consumers and brands.
Always wondered what the effects of a promotional product is? Wondered which item is best to buy and has the best ROI?
Read this article and if you have any questions, email me
What people really think about native advertising [Research]Headstream
As part of our recent brand storytelling research, we asked UK consumers a handful of questions about their experience and opinion of native advertising and brand-sponsored content.
The document discusses how traditional advertising is becoming ineffective due to changing consumer behaviors and the rapid pace of technological change. Message-centric advertising that interrupts audiences is not as effective as value-centric advertising, which provides people with useful content or experiences that also promote the brand. Successful companies like Netflix, Apple and Kraft are realizing much higher returns by creating valuable content for audiences rather than just messages about their brands. For advertising to be effective in the future, it needs to shift from a focus on messages to delivering real value and utility for people in a way that aligns with brands.
THE COLLAPSE AND REBIRTH OF ADVERTISINGJohn McGarry
At 2mrw, we asked ourselves, “What if…”; what if all that advertising money could actually be spent in a more effective way where people benefited more than the advertising industry. To that end, we’re releasing findings through a detailed white paper.
Most global industries have changed and are evolving at a quickening pace due to technological advancements in device and distribution. The film, music, photography, news and media industries will never be the same. These industries continue to evolve dramatically and there have been many winners and losers throughout the process. Why has the advertising industry fundamentally remained the same?
How the crumbling foundation of the advertising industry as we know it is making way for a new, more valuable one.
At 2mrw, we asked ourselves, “What if…”; what if all that advertising money could actually be spent in a more effective way where people benefited more than the advertising industry. To that end, we’re releasing findings through a detailed white paper.
Most global industries have changed and are evolving at a quickening pace due to technological advancements in device and distribution. The film, music, photography, news and media industries will never be the same. These industries continue to evolve dramatically and there have been many winners and losers throughout the process. Why has the advertising industry fundamentally remained the same?
Native Advertising and Content Marketing - White Paper - IAB Europe - Decembr...Romain Fonnier
Dans un livre blanc sur le native advertising et le content marketing, l’IAB Europe livre un aperçu de la manière dont ce type de contenus contribue à fournir de meilleures expériences publicitaires. La publication revient également sur les nouveaux types de formats et fournit des conseils sur la création et la distribution de ces publicités.
Ont notamment contribué à ce livre blanc, Stéphane Hauser (IAB France), Charlotte Diemer (Teads), Mick Loizou Michail (Yahoo), Jean-Paul Edwards (OMD), Libby Wright (MediaCom)…
This document provides an overview of native advertising and content marketing. It discusses how native advertising can enable meaningful relationships between consumers and brands by providing high-quality content that fits with the style and format of surrounding editorial content. The document also outlines key considerations for creating and distributing native advertising, including ensuring transparency and distinguishing advertising from editorial content. Publisher and advertiser perspectives on native advertising are presented.
IAB Europe White Paper : Native Advertising and Content Marketing - December ...SCREENVIEW
This document provides an overview and guidance on native advertising and content marketing. It defines key terms and discusses various native advertising formats including in-feed units, recommendation widgets, social media units, and out-stream video ads. It also covers business models for native advertising, including how content is monetized through production and distribution fees. The document aims to help advertisers, publishers and marketers better understand native advertising and its opportunities to build meaningful consumer relationships.
The document summarizes the key findings of a survey on native advertising conducted by Hexagram and Spada with over 1,000 respondents. It finds that while publishers are currently driving most native advertising, brands and agencies use is growing. The majority of publishers, agencies, and brands see native ads as adding value for readers. Publishers prefer traffic/audience metrics to measure effectiveness, while brands and agencies also value video and social engagement. All groups forecast growth in native advertising over the next year, especially for publishers and agencies.
Global Trust in Advertising Report by NielsenVictor Kong
Reaching your audience is an important component of any ad campaign, but what good is ad reach if it doesn’t resonate with the audience? A recent Nielsen global online survey discussed the trust levels across earned, owned and paid advertising formats, but effective campaigns require more than identifying the right channel for reaching consumers. It’s also about delivering the right message.
Nielsen Consumer Neuroscience research shows that highly successful ads score well on three dimensions: attention, conversion to long-term memory and emotional engagement. So how can marketers ensure that their ads stand out on these factors? In Nielsen’s latest Global Trust in Advertising Survey, we asked 30,000 online consumers which advertising themes are most impactful. The findings shine light on the types of messages they most enjoy—and not surprisingly, they often differ by region and generation.
Courtesy of Nielsen
This report addresses the questions: What is native advertising and, by extension, what is it not? It also attempts to map and outline product offerings from the native advertising triumvirate: publishers, technology vendors, and social media platforms. What opportunities are inherent in this nascent form of digital marketing? And what are the inherent risks and pitfalls?
Transform results by focusing on receptive audiences TNS
The best ad in the world won’t deliver results if it can’t reach those likely to buy its product. A future-focused approach to identifying receptive audiences is delivering results where traditional targeting has failed.
Four forces reshaping the digital advertising landscapePwC España
Móviles y vídeo están llamados a cambiar los hábitos de los usuarios relacionados con el aumento del uso de nuevas tecnologías y el consumo de contenidos multimedia, expandiendo así el grado de interacción y el volumen del mercado de la publicidad, accesible ya en todo momento a través de los 4 canales protagonistas del estudio.
1) Expert content-based advertising leverages positive earned media from independent experts by curating and promoting it through paid advertising channels. This allows brands to scale the impact of trusted content beyond what is possible through earned media alone.
2) A case study found that consumers who read expert content through an expert content-based advertising program were 58% more likely to consider purchasing the product and 68% more likely to share information about the product with others, compared to a control group.
3) The case study estimated that such a program could deliver a return on investment up to 14 times the cost of the program through incremental sales revenue, highlighting the potential value of expert content-based advertising.
This document discusses trends in native advertising and custom content creation. It identifies five key trends: 1) Custom content will still have a place on desktop devices, not just mobile, as complex storytelling is better experienced without distractions. 2) Brands will use custom content to engage audiences and learn from them through comments and discussions. 3) Brands need to be agile and experimental with custom content strategies. 4) Video and audio content are growing formats that can stand out if well-produced. 5) Brands must measure custom content effectiveness using the same metrics as other advertising to evaluate return on investment.
A presentation I gave at Digital Summit: Mass publishing is the lowest form of value the internet can provide you. Relying on a content publishing model for lead generation, and relationship building will not give you the sustainable, or scaleable competitive advantage you need to succeed in this new world of infinite noise. Nobody cares about your content because you’ve missed the true reason people consume content, because it fulfills their inner purpose. Learn what the five pillars are and why they must be new foundations for the future marketing organization.
Whether it’s advertising via old standbys like TV, newspapers and radio or newer media like mobile and online, earning consumer trust is the holy grail of a successful campaign, according to Nielsen’s latest Trust In Advertising report. The good news for advertisers is that consumers around the globe are more trusting now than they were several years ago. In fact, the study reveals that trust in online advertising is increasing, as is trust in ads on TV, radio and movie screens.
Word-of-mouth recommendations from friends and family, often referred to as earned advertising, are still the most influential, as 84 percent of global respondents across 58 countries to the Nielsen online survey said this source was the most trustworthy. Trust in advertising on branded websites increased 9 percentage points to 69 percent in 2013 as the second most trusted format in 2013, a jump from fourth-place ranking in 2007. Sixty-eight percent of survey respondents indicated that they trust consumer opinions posted online, which ranked third in 2013, up 7 percentage points from 2007.
“While TV remains the front-running format for the delivery of marketing messages based on ad spend, consumers globally are also looking to online media to get information about brands,” said Randall Beard, global head, Advertiser Solutions at Nielsen. “On the flipside, earned advertising channels have empowered consumers to advocate for their favorite brands, something that shouldn’t go unnoticed by brand advertisers.”
Global Trust in Advertising Report Nielsen 2013Dung Tri
- Friends and family recommendations remain the most trusted form of advertising according to the survey. Owned media like branded websites has become the second most trusted.
- Trust in online and mobile advertising is increasing, with the biggest gains seen in formats like online banners ads, online video ads, and text ads on mobile phones.
- Regions with the highest levels of trust, like Latin America, also reported the greatest willingness from consumers to take actions in response to advertisements.
There’s one question on every marketer’s mind: “How do I connect?”
We’ve all been seeking connection since the pandemic struck. Stuck at home, working from kitchen tables and converted closets, marketers have been fighting to create and maintain connections with their audiences.
Despite all the upheaval, content remains a tried-and-true way to generate demand. After all, it’s content-driven experiences that build those precious connections, no matter what’s going on in the world outside.
Connection is more important than ever. And as you’ll find out in this report, successful marketers are beginning to make it easier for prospects to purchase at any stage of the buyer’s journey — messages are shifting from why to buy to how to buy.
This has been another tough year. One negative headline after another has drained audiences’ emotional reserves. They need an escape. Marketing content can offer that empathetic, emotionally stirring olive branch they’re searching for.
As you read on, you’ll discover that blogs, podcasts, and videos are the content types that are most effective at the early stages of the buyer’s journey, where brands are fighting to establish customer awareness and audience interest.
The reason is simple: These content types foster connection. They tell a story, they evoke emotion, and they present a face that the audience can relate to. And the strength of the connections that these content types create helps carry buyers through the rest of their journey on a wave of engagement and investment.
In conclusion: Connection lies in content. The last Content Marketing for Demand Generation survey report (2020) talked about creating desire and holding attention. This year, we talk about making it easier for customers to purchase across all stages of the buyer’s journey.
By providing audiences with earnest and engaging content, you can build lasting connections in 2022 and beyond that drive demand to new heights.
1) The document discusses benchmarks, budgets, and trends for technology content marketing in 2022 based on a survey.
2) It finds that nearly one-third of technology marketers rated their content marketing success as "extremely" or "very" successful over the past year. Top performers stand out through differentiating content and prioritizing audience needs.
3) Creating content for multi-level roles, accessing subject matter experts, and internal communication were the top challenges reported. Most technology marketers plan to invest in video content in 2022.
Welcome to the B2C Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends: Insights for 2022 report. This report looks back on the last 12 months and includes expectations for 2022.
Our research suggested that, due to work-from-home requirements, content marketing piqued the interest of many who were previously unaware of its power. With more people than ever spending time online, content marketing presented a prime opportunity for businesses to get and stay in front of audiences. Some B2C marketers discovered new audiences altogether.
Short articles and videos were big over the last 12 months with the B2C marketers we surveyed. In addition, expect a lot of B2C investment in video in 2022: 72% forecast investment in this area. Paid media came in a distant second.
Although most B2C marketers reported success with content marketing in the last 12 months, there are still challenges. Respondents said their top two content marketing challenges were creating content that appeals to multi-level roles within the target audience (42%) and internal communication between teams/silos (41%).
If B2C marketers can overcome these challenges, they’ll improve their odds of achieving greater content marketing success in 2022.
Welcome to the 12th Annual Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends: Insights for 2022 report. What a year it has been.
This edition of our report looks back on the last 12 months and includes expectations for 2022. Throughout, you will see quotes from the many rich, qualitative responses we received to the question, “What did the pandemic change most about your organization’s content marketing strategy/approach?” In all, 75% of respondents took the time to answer this question and we are ever so grateful. What amazing insights it yielded!
The key theme that emerged was this: The pandemic awoke a sleeping giant – content marketing, that is. Without in-person events and face-to-face selling, many who had previously paid little attention to content marketing suddenly became aware of its power. More content marketers got a seat at the table and helped keep many businesses on their audiences’ radar. Some discovered new audiences altogether.
The research also confirmed what many of us already knew: Content marketers are some of the fiercest business pros around. In the most difficult of times, they get the job done – and many come through more creative and stronger than before.
Congratulations, content marketers, for a job well done in the most difficult of times. Our entire team salutes you!
By day, you’re in the office, cooking up content. By night, you’re in the kitchen, preparing a satisfying meal. But what if we combined the two?
Developing a content marketing strategy is like creating a dinner menu. You start with the basic ingredients and build upon them. You perfect your technique, exercising balance while adding a dash of flavor. And don’t forget, presentation is key. You must distribute and plate your meal beautifully.
So, what are people making and how are they making it? We asked the Content Marketing Institute team to share their favorite content-inspired dishes. Whether you are a first-time cook or a seasoned chef, these recipes will give you new perspective on processes, measurement and ROI, technology, and more. They are definitely ones you want in your repertoire.
We’ve put together the ultimate cookbook for content marketers, filled with tasty (and mildly entertaining) recipes. We hope you enjoy it. Bon appétit!
The survey found that more organizations are taking a strategic approach to content management. 81% of respondents said their organization views content as a core business strategy, up from 72% last year. However, fewer organizations are able to extract meaningful insights from data and analytics compared to the previous year. While proficiency with content management technology increased, integration, training and communication issues remain barriers to fully utilizing these tools.
B2C marketers are increasingly strategic in their approach to content marketing. While over half still have small content marketing teams, many outsource content creation. Livestreaming video saw a significant increase in use among B2C marketers compared to the previous year. Analytics tools, social media publishing, and email marketing software are the most commonly used technologies to support content marketing.
This document describes the rules for a Bingo game being played during CMWorld, an annual content marketing conference. Players print a Bingo card with content marketing-related squares and mark squares as they participate in conference activities. Players can win prizes by being the first to mark a row, column or diagonal of squares. To enter, players take a photo of their completed card and share it on Twitter or email by October 18th. Six winners will be randomly selected to receive prizes including Amazon or conference registration gift cards.
Welcome to the 11th Annual B2B Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends report. You may notice this year’s report feels different than past years and that’s by design. A year like no other required an approach like no other.
As in past years, we fielded the survey during the summer. We asked many of the same questions as last year but added new ones to see how content marketers were faring several months into the pandemic.
Although the data did not reveal drastic reductions in content marketing resources, many respondents shared in the fill-in comments their challenges of having to do more with less. Others shared their concerns about trying to reach audiences in an overcrowded virtual world.
Nevertheless, one thing stood out: Content marketers are resilient. Most have met the challenges of the pandemic head-on: They’re adapting quickly—and they believe in the value their content provides.
When Content Marketing Institute (CMI) first reported on manufacturing in 2014, we noted that manufacturers were later to adopt content marketing than other industries we studied. They’ve certainly come a long way since then.
As you’ll see in this report—based on the results of our 10th annual content marketing survey—manufacturing marketers have become more strategic with their content marketing and are feeling less challenged with communicating complex content. Many are reporting success with their overall approach to content marketing. The ability to craft content for different audiences across various stages of the buyer’s journey—and distribute that content with precision—will be important to continued success in 2020.
Most B2B organizations have small content marketing teams, with over half having just one person or no dedicated team. Content creation is the activity most commonly outsourced. While goals focus on top-of-funnel awareness, more organizations report using content marketing successfully for deeper goals like nurturing and revenue generation compared to past years. Analytics tools and email software are the most used technologies. Documented strategies are becoming more prevalent and correlate with success.
Unpredictable algorithm shifts. Falling reach and lower engagement rates. Growing consumer mistrust from fake news and data breaches.
Despite woes like these, people still use social media platforms – and marketers are still drawn to their relationship-building powers. In fact, in 2019 research from Content Marketing Institute and MarketingProfs, 61% of B2B marketers and 69% of B2C marketers say they’ve increased their use of social media for content marketing compared with one year ago.
However, navigating the social media landscape is like entering a dark forest without a map. If you aren’t familiar with the terrain and don’t have a solid plan, you can’t expect to reach your destination, let alone make it out of the woods unscathed.
This guide is full of tools that will help you find the best path to success, from planning your social media explorations, to growing legions of brand fans, to engaging them in meaningful ways.
We’ll cover the top content marketing opportunities in the social sphere, including:
- Landmark locations like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn
- Video viewing-centric channels like YouTube and Twitch
- Streaming media sites like Snapchat Stories and Instagram Stories
- Emerging social platforms like Vero True Social and WeGather Online
Welcome to B2C Content Marketing 2019—Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends. This report presents the results from the B2C marketers who took our ninth annual content marketing survey.
Our research has consistently shown that creating brand awareness is a top goal for B2C content marketing. However, many of this year’s survey respondents also reported strong concern for using content to solidify existing relationships (see page 13).
Content that can be effective at building loyalty takes many shapes and forms today, for example:
- Videos and social media stories that entertain
- In-person events that create a sense of community and belonging
- Podcasts that inspire
- Live or virtual experiences that evoke emotion
- Articles, guides, newsletters, etc., that provide information
Obviously, the list goes on. The point is, that while driving people to content is critical, giving them reasons to keep coming back will grow long-term success!
What are some of the changes content marketers are likely to encounter over the next 12 months and beyond? Find out what dozens of experts see on the horizon in Content Marketing Institute's 11th annual e-book of content marketing predictions.
It's back! Content Marketing World's annual conference ebook featuring a large number of our incredible speakers offering their insights on content marketing, how to level up and advance, how best to amplify your message and so much more. Check out what your favorite content marketers have to say on these topics and also meet some new faces to CMWorld. CMWorld 2018 is going to be epic - be sure to join us there! Game On!
The document provides a checklist for sponsors and exhibitors at conferences and events to help them maximize their investment and nurture happy customers. It offers tips for the pre-event, during event, and post-event stages, including committing early, complementing the event theme, networking with attendees, following up on leads, and respecting people's contact preferences. The overall goal is to showcase products and services, meet customers, and listen to their needs at the event and beyond.
Greetings Marketers,
Welcome to B2C Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North America. This is the companion report to the B2B research we released in September 2017. The data presented in both reports was generated from our eighth annual content marketing survey. One of our key observations this year is that while B2C marketers reported slightly higher levels of overall content marketing success compared with last year, there was a decrease among those who agreed their organization has realistic expectations about what content marketing can achieve. A documented content marketing strategy can help, as it sets expectations for what teams should prioritize; yet, only 38% of B2C marketers reported having one.
Our annual research has consistently shown that those who document their content marketing strategy get better results than those who don’t. Another important key to success is an efficient workflow process (page 4 shows how top-performing B2C marketers rate their project management flow and other distinguishing characteristics that set them apart from their peers). We hope these research findings will be helpful as you consider which content marketing priorities to focus on in the year ahead.
In this e-book, you'll see over dozens of predictions from thought leaders who share their views on brand strategy, organizational structure, emerging technology and platforms, and other big developments that may be on the horizon for content marketing.
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Is Native Advertising the New Black?
1. Content Marketing Institute research reveals that users are still
in the minority, but the value of native advertising is evident.
By TIM WALTERS, PH.D., Senior Contributing Strategic Analyst,
and ROBERT ROSE, Chief Strategy Officer, Content Marketing Institute
NOVEMBER 2015
2. 2
Native advertising is one way of distributing content and is a pay-to-play model. One of the greatest
things that native advertising can do for a brand is guarantee content placement and visibility in some
of the top news sources and websites outside of a company’s owned media. Native advertising should
not be promotional in nature and should conform to the same guidelines that other forms of content
marketing follow. The content should always be relevant, informative, and valuable so that it helps to
cultivate a relationship with the customer and establish trust and credibility.
Here at Advance Ohio, we focus on reaching the desired target audience given its motives at each stage
of the conversion funnel—awareness, interest/desire, and action. We can help you determine where
native advertising fits best in your overall content marketing strategy and help you implement it, analyze
the results, and optimize your campaign along the way.
We hope you enjoy this report and realize what a valuable role native advertising can play in your
marketing campaigns. Visit us at advance-ohio.com to learn more about our native advertising
solutions.
3. 3
INTRODUCTION
Going Native With Oysters and Beer
Picture this: a single-page guide to nine types of oysters, each described in a few clever, informative
sentences. It seems like a great piece of editorial copy for a magazine like Esquire, where it appeared
in the early 1950s. Except that a smiling pint of Guinness beer occupies the lower right corner, and the
whole thing is an iconic “advertorial” created by the advertising mastermind David Ogilvy.1
Native advertising—a paid placement in which the ad blends in with the look and format of the
surrounding content—isn’t new, but it is enjoying a major renaissance. According to one estimate,
spending on native advertising in the U.S. has grown by more than 200% between 2013 and 2015, and
will double again to $21 billion by 2018. Investment in “native style” advertising, such as the Guinness
Guide to Oysters, is pegged to grow nearly 600% during that five-year period.2
Many factors and forces are driving the renewed interest
in native ad formats. For example, as digital media
consumption goes mainstream, advertisers are paying more
attention to optimizing the performance of their digital
portfolio. Also, consumption on mobile devices (mostly
phones) exceeded that on “fixed” browsers in mid-2014, and
the gap continues to grow.3
The reduced real estate on a
mobile screen encourages the use of native “in-stream” ads
such as promoted Facebook posts and sponsored Tweets.
Publishers have been quick to accommodate native advertising.
New digital outlets such as BuzzFeed and VICE have built their (very successful) business models
almost entirely around native content.4
More quietly and behind the scenes, traditional publishers have
embraced native advertising, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Atlantic.5
Already in 2013, three out of four U.S. publishers offered native advertising opportunities.6
Native advertising—a
paid placement in which
the ad blends in with
the look and format
of the surrounding
content—isn’t new, but
it is enjoying a major
renaissance.
4. 4
Feeding the Hunger for Information
But, at the end of the day, it is consumers, not advertisers or publishers, who are driving the rise of
native advertising. Empowered by social networks and mobile computing, consumers have rapidly
developed an insatiable appetite for information. Consumers seek insight rather than product
pitches; they trust friends and colleagues more than salespeople; they want to navigate their own
way to a purchase decision rather than get squeezed through a company’s sales funnel. More than
70% of consumers say they prefer to learn about a product or service through content rather than
traditional advertising.7
Announcing their own native advertising offerings in September
2015, the Financial Times noted, “It’s all about creating quality
experiences people want to spend time with,”8
which also is a
fair characterization of the overall goal of content marketing.
Content Marketing Institute (CMI) views native advertising
as a companion activity to content marketing. The primary
difference is that native is a paid placement on a media site that
you are “renting,” according to CMI Founder Joe Pulizzi. Content
marketing, among other things, involves providing attractive,
desirable content on your own properties (websites, blogs, print
publications, etc.).9
To better understand how and to what extent content marketers are using native advertising, we
recently surveyed random marketers from CMI’s broader audience. For purposes of this research, native
advertising was defined as a form of paid online content placement that matches the format and function
of the publishing platform on which it appears.
In particular, we aimed to understand the attitudes and motivations among those who use native
advertising (“users”) compared to those who do not (“nonusers”). What led users to invest in native
advertising formats, and what is holding back nonusers? Are there emerging practices and guidelines
that can reduce the uncertainty and risk of investing in this relatively new form of advertising? Will native
become a predominant outlet for marketers, and if so, how quickly? Is it really the new black?
More quietly and
behind the scenes,
traditional publishers
have embraced native
advertising, including
The New York Times,
The Wall Street Journal,
and The Atlantic.
5. 5
METHODOLOGY
In July and August 2015, CMI conducted
an electronic survey of randomly
selected marketers from its broader
audience. A total of 111 surveys were
completed. Of these, 96 respondents
said they had a content marketing
role within their organization and
were qualified to respond to the main
questions on the survey.
Survey respondents were primarily
business-to-business (B2B) marketers
in North America. Numerous other
countries are represented in the findings;
however, due to the small number
of responses, we did not attempt to
interpret the results by country or region.
Further research is recommended to
substantiate and extend these findings.
Respondent Profile
Nature of Organization
B2B
B2C
Both B2B & B2C
Nonprofit
Other
58%
13%
14%
8%
7%
Size of Organization
Micro (Fewer than 10 Employees)
Small (10-99 Employees)
Midsize (100-999 Employees)
Large (1,000+ Employees)
31%
19%
27%
23%
Content Marketing Roles
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Overall Program Content Marketing Leader
Writer
Editorial Lead
Website/Technology
Internal Content Curator
Public Relations
Audience Development
Traditional Marketing and Paid Media
Designer
Community Management
Agency/Freelance Relations
Influencer Relations
Sales
Other Content Marketing Roles
Base: Number of respondents who answered the question. Multiple responses permitted.
53%
34%
31%
27%
25%
21%
19%
16%
16%
14%
11%
11%
9%
31%
Industry Classification
Advertising/Communications/
Marketing/Promotions/PR
Technology/IT/
Software/Hardware
Publishing/Media
Manufacturing
Consulting
Healthcare/Medical/
Pharmaceuticals
Other
19%
31%
16%
11%
8%7%
7%
6. 6
FINDINGS
Overall Perception of Native Advertising Effectiveness
Unlike Green Eggs and Ham, There Is No Hard Core Resistance to Native Advertising
We first asked all respondents (users and nonusers) to state their opinion or perception of native
advertising (see Figure 1). Predictably, users of native advertising rate its effectiveness more highly than
do nonusers: 53% consider it extremely or very effective, another 44% rate it somewhat effective. Only
2% of native advertising users perceive it as not very or not at all effective.
Among nonusers, nearly a third (29%) perceive native advertising to be extremely/very effective; 58% say
it is somewhat effective; and 11% say it is not very/not at all effective.
Clearly, much depends on how one interprets
the “somewhat effective” response on the
five-point scale. If it indicates a generally
negative attitude, we can conclude that nearly
seven in 10 nonusers (69%) are not convinced
of the effectiveness of native advertising.
On the other hand, if “somewhat effective”
indicates a wait-and-see, prove-it-to-me
attitude, nearly nine in 10 (87%) believe that
native may offer some beneficial impact.
When we drilled more deeply into the
respondents’ opinions about native advertising, the difference between users and nonusers was even
less clear (see Figure 2). For example, 85% to 90% of users agreed that native “offers valuable content
to the reader,” “can be used to promote content marketing efforts,” “can be used to build audiences,”
and “can be used to drive action.” Yet among nonusers, at least 70% also agreed with these statements.
Moreover, 76% of native users (and 73% of nonusers) agreed that native is “more effective than
traditional banner advertising.”
Figure 1: How Effective is Native Advertising
When Used for Content Marketing?
0 20 40 60 80 100
29% 58% 11%
53% 44% 2%
Extremely/Very Effective
Somewhat Effective
Not Very/Not At All Effective
Native Advertising
Nonusers
Native Advertising
Users
7. 7
To be sure, there were noticeable perceptual disparities between users and nonusers in some areas,
such as whether native advertising “produces metrics that could help establish ROI for paid advertising”
(68% agreement among users versus 42% among nonusers), or whether it “can be used to test ad
campaigns” (56% versus 38%). But these strike us as areas in which it is hard to have an informed
opinion without some practical experience with native advertising.
In short, we believe that the generally positive perception of the uses and impact of native advertising
indicates that nonusers are not held back by prejudice or strongly held doubts about its effectiveness.
0 20 40 60 80 100
Figure 2: Please Indicate How Strongly You Agree or Disagree with Each of the Following Statements
Concerning the Use of Native Advertising for Content Marketing.
Offers valuable content to the reader
Offers advantages over traditional paid advertising
Produces metrics that could help establish ROI for paid advertising
Can be used to test ad campaigns
Can be used to promote content marketing efforts
Can be used to build audiences
Can be used to drive an action
Need more information on how to use it effectively
Unsure how to fully integrate it into content marketing strategy
More effective than traditional banner advertising
Labeling the source of content can be confusing to the reader
An effective means to engage an audience when used for content marketing
85%
71%
65%
42%
38%
73%
71%
71%
76%
65%
47%
73%
49%
73%
68%
56%
85%
90%
88%
46%
20%
76%
39%
80%
(% Agreement with Statements)
Users Nonusers
8. 8
NATIVE ADVERTISING USE
You Can Lead a Horse to Water, But Eventually You Have to Ride It
Going native is still not a mainstream activity. Forty-three percent of respondents reported using native
advertising for content marketing purposes in the last 12 months, versus 57% who did not. Based on
their experience (rather than their perception), 56% of users rated native advertising as extremely/very
effective, one-third as somewhat effective, and one in 10 as not very effective.
These judgments must be considered as tentative, given that one-third of users have deployed native for
less than one year and nearly three-quarters have used it for one to two years.
Not surprisingly, few firms have yet fully embraced native advertising and baked it into their content
marketing efforts. Only 12% of users said they have incorporated it into their calendar and use it “on a
continual basis.” However, another 29% use it “as often as we can.” More than half use native advertising
on an ad-hoc basis (37%) or experimentally (17%).
Organizations are using a variety of native
advertising formats (see Figure 3), including
blog posts (83%), articles (80%), Facebook
(78%), videos (76%), and YouTube (73%).
Interestingly, when asked to rate the
effectiveness of these formats (see Figure
4), users put YouTube (83%) and videos
(81%) at the top, with Facebook in seventh
place (at 50%). This suggests that content
marketers use Facebook out of necessity
(an expectation to be present on the
platform) rather than due to effectiveness.
Figure 3: Forms of Native Advertising That
Marketers Use
0 20 40 60 80 100
83%
80%
78%
76%
73%
71%
63%
Blog Posts
Articles
Facebook
Videos
YouTube
Twitter
Infographics
Other forms of native advertising that marketers use include: Podcasts and
audio presentations (46%), Interactive polls/quizzes (39%), Instagram (27%),
Tumblr (20%), Vine (17%), and Other types of native advertising (56%).
9. 9
So, why have some firms hopped
onto the native advertising saddle,
while more than half are still just
admiring the horse?
We asked users to indicate what initially
motivated them to try native advertising
(see Figure 5). The overwhelming
top response (selected by 61%) was
identification of native advertising
opportunities. About half as many
said awareness of others using it in ad
campaigns and proven case studies
(each at 32%) were motivators. Only 12%
said they started native advertising after
receiving education or training on the
benefits.
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Identification of native advertising opportunities
Proven case studies
Saw others using it in ad campaigns, so we decided to try
Having enough staff/bandwidth to pursue
More budget to experiment with
Obtained buy-in from management after recommending we pursue
Recommendation from a well-respected source
Received education/training on benefits and/or how to implement
Documented best practices for implementation
A dictate from upper management
Other
61%
17%
17%
17%
12%
10%
2%
7%
32%
32%
20%
Figure 5: Marketers’ Initial Motivations for Using Native Advertising
Figure 4: How Marketers Rate Native
Advertising Effectiveness
0 20 40 60 80 100
83%
81%
74%
70%
69%
58%
50%
YouTube
Videos
Blog Posts
Articles
Infographics
Podcasts/Audio Presentations
Facebook
10. 10
Now, compare the responses among nonusers, when we asked what top three factors would
encourage them to start using native advertising for content marketing (see Figure 6). Again, there
is a clear favorite response, with 49% selecting “documented best practices for implementation,”
followed by identified opportunities, more budget, and proven case studies (all with 36%).
The results are deceptively similar—but we believe that the clear number-one choice in each case
points to the important role of company culture in the adoption of native advertising (and, no
doubt, of other innovations). In short, users identified opportunities for native advertising and
seized them; they demonstrate a culture of experimentation. Nonusers, on the other hand, crave
documented best practices above all else; they have less tolerance for risk. It feels a lot like Geoffrey
Moore’s classic adoption curve. And indeed, when percentages are applied to the groups in Moore’s
adoption curve, the innovators through early majority account for half of the users of a product,
while the late majority and laggards make up the other half—not that far from the 43% to 57% split
today for native advertising.10
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Documented best practices for implementation
Identification of native advertising opportunities
More budget to experiment with
Proven case studies
Buy-in from management
Education/training on benefits and/or how to implement
A dedicated head count/staff
Recommendation from a well-respected source
Other factors
Nothing specific
49%
29%
29%
18%
16%
9%
2%
36%
36%
36%
Figure 6: Factors That Nonusers of Native Advertising
Say Would Encourage Use
11. 11
NATIVE ADVERTISING GOALS AND BENEFITS
Eyes on the (Right) Prize
The top goals for the respondents’ organizations when using native advertising for content marketing
are creating brand awareness (63%), building a subscriber base (39%), producing deeper brand
engagement (39%), and generating leads (39%). These correspond nicely to the main goals of many
content marketing initiatives, indicating that organizations are not making the mistake of treating native
advertising as a direct substitute for conversion-oriented banner advertising.
Similarly, when we asked why
content marketers use native
advertising rather than other
traditional forms of advertising
(see Figure 7), they cited the ability
to target/retarget customers and
buyers in the sales funnel (41%), the
longer shelf life of native advertising
content (39%), the ability to reach
target audiences across trusted
channels (34%), and the way native breaks through the clutter of banner advertising (32%). In particular,
the extended shelf life of content developed for native advertising also suggests the opportunity to use a
single asset across multiple content marketing properties and projects.
0 10 20 30 40 50
Ability to target/retarget customers and buyers in the sales funnel
Content has longer shelf life
Extends reach to target audience across trusted channels
Breaks through the clutter of banner advertising
41%
39%
34%
32%
Figure 7: Top Factors That Motivate Marketers
to use Native Over Traditional Advertising
The use of native advertising clearly makes
the heart grow fonder. Almost all respondents
(97%) indicated that their companies plan to
use more or the same amount of native
advertising for content marketing in the
next 12 months, with 63% citing an increase.
12. 12
Importantly, the use of native
advertising clearly makes the
heart grow fonder. Almost all
respondents (97%) indicated that
their companies plan to use more
or the same amount of native
advertising for content marketing
in the next 12 months, with
63% citing an increase. Only 2%
said they plan to use less native
advertising (see Figure 8).
The data on spending for native advertising is, again, subject to contrasting interpretations. On the
one hand, seven out of 10 respondents said their native advertising budget (excluding staff) is less
than 25% of the total marketing budget. On the other hand, the average budget for native advertising
was 22%—which is fairly impressive, given how recently organizations have embraced native formats.
(Remember, one-third have used it for less than a year and 73% for less than three years.)
Figure 8: Marketers’ Plans for Using Native Advertising
for Content Marketing in Next 12 Months
More
Same
Less
2%
34% 63%
13. 13
PRODUCTION AND MEASUREMENT OF NATIVE ADVERTISING
No Escape From Marketing’s Perennial Challenges
The fact that the budget figures exclude staff costs is critical, especially because 66% of content marketers
said the marketing team is responsible for creating native advertising content, and 61% said they create
content in-house using a dedicated writer(s). Twenty-nine percent outsource to freelancers. Only 15% said
they outsource production of native content to an agency, with 10% citing outsourcing to a publisher.
We expect that the latter will
change, as publishers mature their
native advertising offerings, expand
their dedicated staff, and impose
requirements to use their own resources
in order to deflect some of the criticism
of how native advertising undermines
journalistic integrity.11
Given this pronounced reliance on
in-house resources, respondents not surprisingly cited lack of staff/bandwidth (44%) and lack of budget
(41%) as their top two challenges when using native advertising for content marketing (see Figure 9),
closely followed by inability to measure ROI (37%).
No budget, no resources, no way to prove ROI—the perennial marketing headaches, the Three Horsemen of the
Marketing Apocalypse—also bedevil the use of native advertising for content marketing. Tellingly, respondents
named quality of leads (51%) and website traffic (44%) as the top two methods used to measure the
effectiveness of native advertising—yet these are hardly the best ways to measure progress on the stated goals
of creating brand awareness, building a subscriber base, and producing brand engagement. Clearly, a key task
for marketers using native advertising going forward is to understand and develop appropriate performance
metrics—and to educate stakeholders about how to properly measure the impact of native advertising.
Finally: Is native advertising growing as dramatically as the projections suggest? We asked nonusers how
likely they were to use native advertising for content marketing in the next 12 months. Only 11% said
extremely or very likely. Still, another 36% said they were somewhat likely to deploy native advertising.
If half of that total of 47% do begin using native advertising next year, it would represent roughly a 30%
increase in usage for our sample—which is almost exactly the growth in native advertising spending that
BI Intelligence predicts from 2015 to 2016.12
0 10 20 30 40 50
Lack of staff/bandwidth
Lack of budget
Inability to measure ROI
Identifying native advertising opportunities
44%
41%
37%
24%
Figure 9: Top Challenges Marketers Face
When Using Native Advertising
14. 14
RECOMMENDATIONS
Resistance is Futile, Participation is the Key to Customer Engagement
Make no mistake: Native advertising is not just hype, and it is not a temporary fad. Native advertising
is here to stay. It has been embraced by publishers because it tends to put them back into a direct
relationship with the advertising brand. Whereas ad networks, and especially programmatic advertising,
threaten to reduce publishers to a “dumb screen” (mere undifferentiated real estate for an ad
placement), native advertising returns the ad buyer relationship to the publisher. That’s a fundamental
business model incentive that will encourage publishers to weather both consumer confusion about
native advertising content and the pressure from ad networks on the volume side of the business.13
But, make no mistake again: Native advertising does not displace digital banner advertising, nor does
it subsume content marketing initiatives. Native may be the next big thing—in terms of interest from
publishers and advertisers—but it is and will remain just one tool in the arsenal available to content
marketers.
Building Audiences With Native
For content marketers, the challenge is to strike the right balance—given a particular audience and
the goals of the campaign—between paid advertising (traditional ad placement), paid media (native
advertising), and owned media (content marketing on your own properties). In the past, this often has
been a question of splitting up the available budget and resources, which can lead to fragmenting the
effort and diminishing the impact. We believe that, going forward, marketers increasingly should aim to
use all three elements together, “dialing-in” the appropriate mix according to the specific project (see
Figure 10). For example, for your early efforts at native advertising-sponsored articles, you might want to
spend more on banner advertisements that draw attention and traffic to the paid media.
Native advertising does not displace digital banner
advertising, nor does it subsume content marketing
initiatives. Native may be the next big thing—in
terms of interest from publishers and advertisers—
but it is and will remain just one tool in the arsenal
available to content marketers.
15. 15
The key to this kind of
interrelated, holistic effort
is to ensure what we call
“continuity of voice” across
every element in the mix. This
means that all of the content—
whether banner ad, sponsored
feature article, or content
marketing blog post—should
maintain a consistent (but not
necessarily identical) tone,
messaging, and underlying
brand identity. As Brian Clark,
founder of Copyblogger and CEO of Rainmaker Digital, has noted, “People expect continuity in the
information trails they travel.”14
Since native advertising aims to mimic the publisher’s editorial
content, this expectation will greatly influence what types of native placements are appropriate for
a given brand. Pharmaceutical companies are not a great match for the irreverent tone of VICE, just
as a brand aimed at teens would be out of place in The Atlantic. In other words, although it is true
that great native content is itself great journalism, it stills needs to be a kind of journalism, and a
type of publisher, that is appropriate to the advertiser’s core brand identity.
How to Get Going Native
As with most other areas of content marketing (and customer experience management, more
broadly), native advertising is a learn-as-you-go process. Now is already the time to get started.
There is ample evidence showing how other companies have successfully used native advertising,
and publishers are no longer shy about the services they offer.
Figure 10: “Dialing-In” the Right Mix of Banner, Native,
and Content Marketing
PAID AD PAID MEDIA OWNED MEDIA
MARKETING
ASSET
PURPOSE
EFFECT
Banner Ad Native
Advertising
Provides
Objective Value
Promotes
Native Ad
Drives Attention
to Owned
Content Marketing
Highlights Brand
as “Trusted
Advisor”
Owned Content
Marketing
Efforts
Builds Audience
and Subscribers
Leads to
Conversion
16. 16
Moreover, we believe that it is foolhardy to wait for “best practices” to emerge.
First, because the native advertising dynamic is so new, and changing so quickly, any “proven”
templates or guidelines you choose to follow will likely be out of date before you start. Second, even
if the best practices do retain some validity, they can’t lead to a competitive differentiation. As we
have previously noted at the CMI blog:
“Too often, marketers’ fear of failure in the short term stands in the way of the learning—even the
breakthrough new practice—we might achieve in the longer term.”15
Still, that doesn’t mean you should dive blindly into an expensive native advertising campaign.
Because it contributes to the content marketing strategy (which itself is part of the overall
marketing and customer experience strategy), your first uses of native should be carefully selected,
and have clearly defined goals. Of course, that raises the shadow of proving ROI, one of the key
inhibitors to the use of native advertising, according to our survey.
So the question is, what do you want the native content
to achieve? Broadly speaking, the answer falls into two
categories: engagement and action. Unlike the banner ad,
you’re not hoping that consumers will simply glance at the
content and perhaps click on it. Native advertising (like the
content in content marketing in general) is meant to be
consumed—you want people to gorge themselves on it,
appreciate it, and tell others about it. Fortunately, digital
media allow us to deeply measure this kind of engagement—
and far beyond the page containing native content. For example, Netflix-sponsored content on
WIRED (about the evolution of television) and The New York Times (on women in prison, to promote
“Orange is the New Black”) included numerous interactive graphics and design elements.16
Besides
adding to the information and entertainment value of the article, such interactive features provide
deep insight into the engagement of readers with the content.
Native advertising (like
the content in content
marketing in general) is
meant to be consumed—
you want people to
gorge themselves on it,
appreciate it, and tell
others about it.
17. 17
Perhaps most importantly, what behaviors are we aiming to provoke? Again, since native ads are supposed
to feel and act like articles (that is, they should provide information or entertainment that is valuable in its
own right), a product pitch or sales message is inappropriate (and probably wouldn’t be allowed by the
publisher anyway). Instead, the natural (and, from the consumer’s perspective, welcome) thing to do is
conclude the native ad with an offer . . . to get additional valuable information from your company or brand.
The action you want to trigger is to deepen the consumer’s conviction that you are a “trusted
authority.” As Brian Clark notes, “The best thing to sell with the kind of content that makes an
advertisement ‘native’ is more information [emphasis added]. Provide independent value in your
native advertisement that inherently creates a desire to discover even more.”17
Of course, as shown
in Figure 10, the point is to move readers from the property that you’re “renting” from the publisher
to one that you own (your ongoing content marketing properties), so that you can build a sustained
and valuable relationship with the audience.
Finally, what about budget and resource constraints (the other prime barriers to using native advertising,
according to the survey respondents)? Frankly, one reason publishers have embraced native advertising
products and services is so they can price them at a premium compared to ad space (which they may be
selling in bulk to ad networks). What’s more, when produced in-house (as it is for most of the companies
taking part in the survey), native content may be even more time-consuming and costly to produce
because it has to be crafted to match the tone of the publisher’s editorial content.
In short, native won’t come cheaply. We don’t know of any magic wand that can increase marketing
budgets and allow content marketers to use more native advertising. Except . . . as we noted at
the outset, it’s not a coincidence that native advertising opportunities are becoming available and
attractive just as more advertising budget moves online and as marketers seek to understand the
optimal mix of display ads, content marketing, and native advertising. That mix will, of course, vary
according to your given campaign, audience, and goals—but it does mean that your native advertising
efforts could be supported by reallocated resources rather than new resources.
Put that together with the potential of native advertising to accelerate your existing (and, hopefully,
very productive) content marketing efforts, and native could indeed be the new black outfit in your
content marketing wardrobe.
Even if it’s orange.
18. 18
ENDNOTES
1
The Guinness Guide to Oysters was the first ad created by Ogilvy, who up to that point had evidently exhibited no great ability for creative
thought. You can view the ad, along with a brief history and analysis, at http://swiped.co/file/guinness-guide-to-oysters-by-david-ogilvy/.
2
These figures are from a 2014 report by BI Intelligence. See http://uk.businessinsider.com/spending-on-native-ads-will-soar-as-
publishers-and-advertisers-take-notice-2014-11.
3
For a report on mobile consumption exceeding fixed browsers, see http://www.smartinsights.com/mobile-marketing/mobile-marketing-
analytics/mobile-marketing-statistics/.
4
For a review of BuzzFeed’s struggle to strike the right balance between editorial and advertising within their native model, see http://
adage.com/article/digitalnext/buzzfeed-s-editorial-fumble-a-buzzkill/298386/.
5
See an analysis of The Wall Street Journal’s approach to native advertising and “custom content” at http://digiday.com/publishers/wall-
street-journals-native-approach-looks-like-puff-piece-nobodys-going-read/.
6
Another 17% said they were considering offering native ads. Only one out of 10 publishers had no plans for native in 2013. See http://
www.emarketer.com/Article/How-Native-Ad-Campaigns-Shaping-Up/1010064.
7
Roper Public Affairs and the Customer Content Council surveyed 1,005 adult Americans in March 2011. They found that 74% said “they
prefer to get information about a company in a collection of articles, rather than in an ad.” See http://www.ascendintegratedmedia.com/
wp-content/uploads/2013/09/63402297-Consumers-Attitude-Towards-Custom-Content-2011.pdf.
8
The quote is from Dominic Good, FT’s global advertising sales director. See http://digiday.com/publishers/financial-times-readies-paid-
posts-advertisers/.
9
For a discussion about the differences between content marketing and native advertising, see Joe Pulizzi’s “Native Advertising is not
Content Marketing” at http://contentmarketinginstitute.com/2015/08/native-advertising-content-marketing/.
10
Geoffrey Moore is popularly associated with the adoption curve due to his 1991 book, Crossing the Chasm. However, the adoption curve
was initially developed by John Bohlen, George Beal, and Everett Rogers in the 1970s. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technology_
adoption_lifecycle.
11
John Oliver’s rant on “Last Week Tonight” is the most (in)famous critique of native advertising. See https://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=E_F5GxCwizc. A calm overview of native’s inevitability (which begins with “Sorry, John Oliver, native ads aren’t going anywhere”)
from Tessa Wegert, can be found at: https://contently.com/strategist/2015/02/09/5-tips-for-launching-a-native-ad-offering-from-5-top-
publishers/.
12
Specifically, the usage of native advertising for content marketing in our survey population would increase by 31.7%; BI Intelligence (see
note 2) predicts a 29% growth in native advertising spending from 2015 to 2016.
13
For a discussion of consumer confusion about native advertising versus editorial content, see http://fortune.com/2014/07/09/readers-
dislike-sponsored-content-native-ads/.
14
See Brian Clark’s article, “Don’t Waste Your Time With Native Advertising (Do This Instead),” at http://www.saydaily.com/2014/02/dont-
waste-your-time-with-native-advertising-do-this-instead.
15
See Robert Rose’s deconstruction of best practices at http://contentmarketinginstitute.com/2011/10/best-practices-mediocre-results/.
16
These articles are analyzed in “Nine Examples of Native Ads People Actually Enjoyed Reading,” available at http://blog.hubspot.com/
marketing/native-advertising-examples.
17
See note 14.
19. 19
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