The spread of ad-blocking technology affects more than advertisers alone. Lost revenue could threaten careers and signal the decline of entire industries. In December, the video game and
entertainment news publisher IGN revealed that 40% of its audience was using ad-blocking software.
Better creative is one place to start. But even stellar ads get blocked if they are delivered via
traditional means to users who have already installed ad-blocking technology.
If it’s too late to rely solely on a better creative experience, then we must also provide smarter
distribution. This means exemplary brand content served across channels that are unaffected by ad blocking.
This prompts an exploration into native advertising, which has grown over the past
several years as a way for brands to distribute branded content, at scale, without any hindrance from ad blockers. But “native” has become a catchall term used to describe everything from
advertorials to recommendation engines to sponsored posts.
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The idea of better brand content delivered across channels, without fear of ad blocking could be referred to as “pure
native,” and it requires brands to think beyond the basics of advertising.
This isn’t about developing a dynamic display ad and using programmatic pipes to chase the audience.
It’s about producing sought-after content, purely native content, which requires five crucial elements:
- Quality: Effective messaging depends
on insight-driven content customized for your target audience.
- Voice: The content must be produced in an authentic voice that a brand’s audience trusts.
- Context: To be truly effective, the content must be distributed in the edit well of relevant sites, in an organic format.
- Process: This can’t look like the
kind of advertising that led to ad blocking, so it’s important to look beyond the advertising industry. This content should be published by editors and content specialists that already generate
the online content users seek out.
- Performance: This is the piece that makes all the difference, because even ads that aren’t blocked can fall flat. Brands should seek
elevated brand awareness, engagement rates, higher time spent, and positive brand sentiment from these kinds of messages.
Adopting this content-rich strategy to address ad blocking
demands new and more engaging creative, which will spur agencies to produce more groundbreaking work than ever.
The industry can no longer think about producing ads – it’s now
about making compelling brand content.
Perhaps the biggest change here is the way the ad message is pushed to the consumer. Rather than relying on ad servers that promise scale and reach via
traditional display placements, brands need to find alternative channels that still reach their target audience.
The ability to place a branded content message in the edit well of a site will
help circumvent ad blocking software.
What we’re talking about is facing ad blocking, rather than fighting it. This requires the ad industry to essentially admit its error and move on to
fresh tactics.
Addressing ad blocking in this fashion has the potential to save careers and revitalize online advertising. Simply fighting it through lawyers or PSAs won’t have the same
result.