The power of native advertising
A company is always trying to think up new and exciting ways to get and keep the audience’s attention. Native advertising is the perfect solution for this conundrum.

There are many benefits of writing native advertising. Some of these benefits include pulling a higher click-through rate because the articles are relevant to what is already on the page. Your audience is more enticed to click on a native article. Engagement is another huge benefit of using native advertising. Companies are able to reach out to their audience in a way that will not feel overbearing so the person reading the content will stay and interact longer with the site.
In case these benefits did not completely convince you on why your company should be using native advertising here is a statistic that might change your mind. According to a Business Insider (BI) headline, “Native ads will drive 74% of all revenue by 2021.”
The future is native advertising, why not look forward to it and give the people what they want; native articles.
Frightened by the thought of using native articles? Here is some useful information for when your company wants to pursue writing a native article. You may be asking yourself what even is a native article?
Native articles are content that is considered educational, humorous, inspirational, historical, or biographical. This may seem like native articles need a lot of information in them but one way to think of a native article is as an article that can last on a website for months at a time.
In order to make creating a native article incredibly easy here are some items that should not be included if it is to be considered a true native article.
Items to Not Include:
- Do not use a daily news story
- Do not make it an opinion or commentary piece
- Do not have an article that is considered self-promoting
- Do not have an article that is slandering competitors
- Do not have anything stating a specific sales event
- It should never be offensive or pornographic
The point of a true native article is to give out information that will keep people interested and for a client to be able to spend a long time without ever changing the article. A native article is written in a way that keeps people intrigued and that is easy for them to understand.
Some Ways Native Articles Do This is by:
- Using a list-style article
- Cite at least one or two sources
- Be accurate
- Tell a story; don’t just list off facts or the reader will get bored and move onto a more stimulating article instead
- When writing a native article start with the climax, make the story sound exciting because it is and the reader will spend more time on your content
When writing a native article there are certain requirements. Most native articles are 500 to 700 words long, the use of third-person narrative is preferred, and when writing the article use the inverted pyramid style.
Now that you understand more about the importance of native advertising hopefully these helpful hints will give your business the confidence to try writing a native article.

If you've been orbiting the digital marketing world for long, you'll know all about Google's plans to abandon the third-party cookie by 2022. The rules for cookies have already started to change thanks to the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). Visit any website, and you'll get a "do you accept this cookie" pop-up. The fight for privacy and owning your data on the internet is just beginning. But what does it mean for marketers?
First, this only affects third-party cookies. Websites that track abandoned shopping carts or where you have chosen to log in will still be active and working. ( x) Those effective ads that follow you around to remind you to come back and buy? They are here to stay!
Second, even though we're losing access to visitors’ individual data, Google already has a plan in place to target ads effectively. Google created the Federated Learning of Cohorts (FLoC)for this very purpose. The goal of the FLoC is to "provide an effective replacement signal for third-party cookies." ( x) Any Google device or product you use will still file away your internet habits for advertising purposes; it will just be less precise. The idea is to shift people from individuals into broader categories. Those categories are what marketers will be targeting moving forward. If you're looking up how to replace a car battery on YouTube, you'll most likely be shifted into the "repairs vehicles" category and served ads accordingly. If we've learned anything from Facebook's targeting practices, it's that they can get very granular with those categories.
The main takeaway from the loss of the cookie is that marketers everywhere will have to be more strategic about their targeting plans. Utilizing advertising avenues that never relied on cookies is a great place to start. Paid search, emails, and social media are just a few areas of focus that generate clicks and customers while not relying on cookies. Leveraging traditional media alongside digital will also be vital to help grow your audience and brand awareness. As always, you can reach out to our digital marketing team of experts to help you navigate the change.
The cookie might be dead, but personalized digital marketing is still alive and well.







