Native Advertising Survey: Facebook, Twitter Considered Least Effective
Content Marketing
November 19, 2013 -- A new survey by native advertising exchange Hexagram and Spada gathers input from publishers, brands, and agencies on the use of native advertising, its effectiveness and more.
The survey was carried out over a 10-week period in September 2013 with over 1,000 respondents from the U.S., U.K., and around the world.
DEFINING NATIVE ADVERTISING
Many are confused about what exactly 'native advertising' is. Respondents consider a variety of advertising content to fall under the category, with the most popular definition being ‘sponsored content’ (53%).
Definitions of Native Advertising |
|
Definition |
% of Respondents |
Sponsored content |
53% |
Featured content |
47% |
Content “brought to you by…” |
45% |
Company branded pages |
38% |
Micro sites |
25% |
Source: Hexagram, November 2013 |
WHOSE DRIVING USE
Publishers are the main users of sponsored content, with 62% of publishers currently offering native advertising and another 16% planning to do so within the year.
Use of the marketing form is growing among brands and agencies -- 41% of brands and 34% of agencies currently use native advertising; 20% of brands and 12% of agencies planning to begin using it within the year.
The majority of publishers (84%), agencies (81%), and brands (78%) believe that native advertising adds value for consumers.
POPULARITY AND EFFECTIVENESS OF VARIOUS FORMS RANKED
Blog posts, articles and videos are among the most popular forms of native advertising and considered the most effective.
Facebook sponsored stories and Twitter sponsored tweets were deemed among the least effective.
Native Advertising Format | Most Popular (% of publisher respondents) |
Most Effective (% of publisher respondents) |
Blog posts | 65% | 58% |
Articles | 63% | 56% |
56% | 34% | |
Videos | 52% | 53% |
Tweets | 46% | 25% |
Infographics | 35% | 31% |
Source: Hexagram, November 2013 |
WHAT MOTIVATES USE OF NATIVE ADVERTISING
Respondents were asked the motivations for using native advertising over more traditional forms of advertising.
- Provide a more relevant message (67%)
- Increase consumer engagement (63%)
- Generate awareness or buzz (62%)
- Create word of mouth (48%)
- Combat ‘banner blindness’ (43%)
IDENTIFYING SPONSORED CONTENT FOR THE CONSUMER
The survey asked publishers whether they clearly label native advertising campaigns to distinguish them from editorial content -- 79% state they do.
The most popular way of indicating ad content was ‘Sponsored’ (64%), followed by ‘Brought to you by’ (34%) and/or ‘Featured’ (29%).
FUTURE USE
The findings show that 85% of publishers believe native advertising represents a new revenue stream.
Publishers expect native advertising revenues to increase by approximately 10% within a year; Publishers that use native advertising estimate that a mean 20.4% of their revenue currently comes from native ad campaigns and expect that an average of 30.1% of their revenue will come from native ad campaigns in one year.
About: The survey was carried out over a 10-week period in September 2013 with over 1,000 respondents from the U.S., U.K., and around the world. The survey invitation was sent multiple times to email distribution lists sourced from Hexagram’s contacts and 35,000 brands, agencies and publishers in September 2013. The process yielded a total of 1013 completed surveys (374 individuals working in publishing, 302 working in advertising or PR agencies, and 337 in marketing/ brand management). The firm states they believe that the survey sample looks similar to the demographics of the publisher, brand, and agency populations overall; however, men (76%) and U.S.-based companies (73%) might be over represented. Respondents come from a range of small to large companies, with the plurality (47%) working in small companies with 1 – 9 employees, 32% working in midsize companies with 10 – 250 employees, and 21% in large companies with over 250 employees.
Source: Hexagram, The State of Native Advertising 2014, accessed Nov. 19, 2013.