The Lessons of Nauru
Bob Garfield, Co-host of On the Media and MediaPost
columnist
Nauru: was wealthy; phosphate resource from centuries of
built up guano was valuable, but only took 50 years to destroy, and now poverty
is endemic.
[came in on the middle] The advertorial: “Borrowed
interest”: most advertisers have been willing to label, relying on format and
proximity to real ads. Never a really
big revenue generator or ethical problem in the newspaper days.
That was then.
Atlantic/Scientology: the most incriminating example of media
prostitution. Actually less worrisome
than far less lurid publisher-advertiser dalliances, because this was so over
the top that it was instantly pounced on. The real danger is what’s
undetected. The Atlantic also ran an IBM
ad “Why
Social Media Matters for Your Business,” but consumer wouldn’t be likely to
recognize it as an ad. Doesn’t the reader have the right to know whose
interests are being served by the content? Media means in between; the whole
point is to have a third party at arm’s length. If IBM is such an authoritative
source, why the charade? Why not proudly slap their authoritative logo over
everything? Well, then it would be an ad that no one would read; that’s the
central truth that can’t be rationalized away. It’s all based on consumer
confusion. IPG MediaLab/Sharethrough study found that study subjects were 25%
more likely to look at a native ad than a banner; they’re proud of this! Native ad isn’t merely a deception, it’s a
conspiracy. Even worse: the fake link/clickbait headlines as if editorially
generated. Wrappers for get rich quick
schemes.
Maybe you think these are suckers, or that an entire
industry shouldn’t be condemned for a few bad apples. But the stakes are
higher. Native ad from Forbes, one of
the most aggressive but also straightforward—type mimics rest of publication,
but brand voice logo is prominent and at least there’s an explanation if you
care to click through. “The New ‘4Ps’ of
Social Business Marketing.” That content migrates. Within 8 hours of hosting, it had also shown
up on 162 sites, and as far as those were concerned the source was simply
Forbes. The internet doesn’t know you’re
a dog, and it doesn’t know you’re an ad. And here we are talking about this as
if it were some sort of a savior. 73% of online publishers association already
accept native ads, and 17% more to come soon!
Even though as currently deployed it violates the most basic publishing
ethics.
Why? Existential crisis is always a bull market for noble
ends invoked to justify dubious means. Save journalism from destruction! If the police are underfunded, we do not
think that a good idea is to sell badges and uniforms to whoever wants to buy
them, on the theory that it will produce revenue and some of the ‘cops’ might
deter crime by virtue of hanging around.
Trust is not meant to be a barter item. If trappings of trust can be
purchased, public is exposed to deception. WGN’s “High Dividend Stocks of 2013”
aren’t really from WGN. We aren’t being
saved. To the contrary, Edward Wasserman,
dean of Grad School of Journalism at Berkeley: accelerating towards more
sponsored content will only deepen confusion and intensify mistrust. Back to Nauru: Publishers are getting rid of
their most valuable resource, one boatload of shit at a time.
Panel 2: Consumer Recognition and Understanding of Native Advertisements
Moderator: Michael Ostheimer, Staff Attorney, Division of
Advertising Practices, FTC
Panelists:
Chris Jay Hoofnagle, Lecturer in Residence and Director of
Information Privacy Programs, Berkeley Law & Technology Center
We’re testing deceptiveness.
Advertorials can be understood as deception by omission/manipulation of
schema. Do native ads cause people to be
confused about source of information? Is
lack of disclosure misleading?
Methods: online survey, inherently not random. Extrapolation is an issue. Studying targeted advertising. Bought lists
of consumers. One tranche: consumers vulnerable because of situational factors.
Another: consumers who had some underlying condition. Another: subscribers to
financial journals. A control group of
randomly selected internet users.
We put a native ad in context of a health blog. Disclosure “sponsored report.” Not clear who the speaker is. Manipulated
background; lacked indicia of being health professional. Asked respondents was
the material on diet pills written by journalists/editors, someone else, or
didn’t know? 27% said journalists/editors, 43% someone else, 29% didn’t know;
no significant differences between groups.
David J. Franklyn, Professor, Director of the McCarthy
Institute for IP and Technology Law, University of San Francisco School of Law
Studied what people understand about paid/unpaid ads. Asked
questions, showed screenshots of actual search results. Over 10,000 people in
several countries. People often skip over labels without even noticing them; a
majority didn’t know what “sponsored” meant.
Even when there’s a pop up. The notion that everyone knows, from this
morning, is not true—we don’t have homogeneous consumers in terms of what they
know or what they want. 60-66% people couldn’t identify paid and unpaid areas
of the search results. People remember labels that have never been there.
Highly conditioned to see what they’ve been conditioned to see through graphic context.
Context matters more than labels. When it looks like a story, people think it’s
a story. Context was a different matter online than offline, and it’s different
mobile v. laptop.
1/3 of people say they don’t care; 1/3 say they’d click on
something more readily if it was an ad. Protecting the consumer from what? If
they want to be entertained by a paid placement and don’t care about
differentiating—we found real differences in consumer preferences.
We also tested disclosures/disclaimers. They’re highly
context specific and wording dependent.
As a general matter, initial attention is higher to labels at the top
and left. We continue to find consistently,
in Europe and the US, deep confusion about paid and unpaid.
Jamie Cole, Creative Director, Red Barn Media Group
We do branded magazines for brands. Leverage content out to
social media channels. Product is sometimes presented as solving problems but
only when the brand owner wants it. Magazine
is presented as a benefit of being a customer, not a sales or promotion tool.
Paper on audience
reactions to brand journalism: looked at print journals only. Looked at product involvement to make sure
our variables weren’t affected by previous product involvement. Four groups presented with four articles.
Commercial frame with corporate source quoted, corporate name on magazine all
the way to noncommercial. Least commercial frame with peer source quoted rated
as the most credible; credibility decreased as commerciality increased. Product
involvement was the biggest driving factor for any variable. Relevance:
difficulty of recognition was one of the biggest issues in our research. Major
limitation—how to make the cues clear enough so that participants understand
commercial v. editorial. Only 2/3 recognized visual cues for commerciality
despite lab setting and clear instruction. More were able to recognize
corporate v. peer source but not near 100%. Likely that consumers can’t do it.
Unless explicitly made aware of subtleties, weren’t aware of them at all.
Jeff Johnson, Principal Consultant, UI Wizards
Human visual perception and ad-spotting. High-res only in
center 1% of visual field; perception is active, goal directed and attention
limited; color discrimination is limited; visual hierarchy indicates
connection; common vision problems can affect ad spotting.
Everywhere but center, eye has very low resolution: you are
legally blind in the periphery. Hold out
your hand and hold up your thumb: that’s the area where you have high
resolution. At periphery, you perceive 3
dots per foot (compared to 300 dpi at center).
Our eyes jump; while they move, they see nothing; when they stop, they
see mainly one word and nothing else.
Strongly goal oriented. Where our eyes move is strongly
determined by what we’re trying to do. Things unrelated to goal may not be
noticed, like labels on ads.
Optimized to see contrasts: edges
and changes, not absolute levels. Content designers shouldn’t rely on
color/shade. Use redundantly with other cues.
Visual
hierarchy segments page into different parts. Stronger hierarchy = easier to
understand what goes with what. “Sponsored links” can look like a peer item and
not an overarching label.
Many common vision problems hinder ability to spot ad. Looking at mobile outside or high sensitivity
to glare, ad markers can disappeared.
Buzzfeed: marks ads with color background/gray labels—but if we have
yellowing in lens due to lifetime of exposure to UV (over 45) that may be very
hard to see.
Dan Greenberg, Chief Executive Officer, Sharethrough,
Co-Chair of Interactive Advertising Bureau’s Native Advertising Taskforce
Mostly people aren’t trying to trick you. Macro shift from
obnoxious interruption to meaningful content.
(Can’t you be tricked with meaningful content? I thought that was really
the point of the disclosure that it’s an ad.) Sponsored stories on FB, promoted
Tweets, and everyone else is catching on.
Our ads always say “advertisement,” “sponsored,” or “promoted,” but we’re
not wedded to those words. If research says more is needed we’ll find a way to
get that into the placements.
Preliminary results from research: does language used in
disclosure have an impact on whether or not consumer perceives a story as being
paid for? Visuals and context will matter too but we looked at language.
Preliminary data: statistical significance in the differences. One case showed
a generalized website, some with no ad.
Even if nothing is paid for on the page, a significant percentage of
users will say yes to “is there any item on this page that was paid for by a
brand?” Sad state of editorial: people would say that a story about Miley Cyrus
was “paid for.” People may not know what a brand was.
Tested mobile and desktop.
Context has a major impact on perception. Didn’t test demographics. Can’t decouple from this data whether they
didn’t notice something or whether they didn’t notice it was an ad. Even when we tested “this is an ad paid for
by a brand,” we only got up to 70% recognition that it was paid content—but other
terms did a lot worse. Even with just
language there are a lot of questions about where to put it.
Michelle De Mooy, Senior Associate, National Priorities,
Consumer Action
Non-English speakers are rapidly growing US audience and
especially vulnerable to things like ID theft. Trust is vital for consumers—source
really matters.
Chris Pedigo, Vice President, Government Affairs, Online
Publishers Association
Represent 60+ premium publishers, visited by 100% of online
population each month. By the end of this year, 90% will offer some form of
native advertising. 70% heard no
complaints about their native advertising; 20% only had a few. Our member companies go to great lengths to
label/differentiate. They look at native
ads as another way to provide value to the consumer. They know the audience and
work with advertiser to produce content that’s appealing.
Moderator: do consumers perceive ads differently?
Franklyn: there are pluralities. Some consumers say it doesn’t
matter to them to know more about whether something is paid/unpaid in terms of
trust, clicks. 40% say they want more clear and conspicuous differentiation and
that they’d click on paid content less, or go back to it less if they knew the
difference. One takeaway: we now have
immersed ourselves so much in this commercial world that many consumers don’t
care and enjoy it. They (not all) enjoy the hyperstimulation of ads, want to
sift through it.
Cole: we did see increased credibility from
noncommerciality, but previous experience with brand influences that. Atlantic/Scientology:
credibility would be affected by previous notions about Scientology, and that
would be important regardless of visual cues. Perceptions about brand are
longlasting and stable; they don’t change much.
From where is consumer drawing this idea of credibility? Is it from the
info itself—well-done, helpful? Is it from previous engagement of brand? Is it
from mere appearance/look and feel? Is it from credibility of material around
the content?
De Mooy: we don’t often talk about the content that’s
missing. WebMD has traditionally been unbiased and has started to use native
ads. In that case, along with other financial/health, that missing info has
real costs.
Moderator: are there reasons to think some ways are
more/less effective in distinguishing?
Greenberg: yes, it’s incredibly important to figure out
which way to do it. On FB, people know
enough to be annoyed by Sponsored Stories.
Instagram—promoted photos. Comment
threads are all about the fact that these are ads (though many probably saw and
didn’t react/didn’t know) but context matters.
Signals used on one site aren’t used on others.
Johnson: Strong visual hierarchies, like container
widgets. You have to show someone that
there’s a scope in which the stuff inside is sponsored. Strong v. weak visual
hierarchy as example.
Moderator: when an ad is designed to look editorial, are
there reasons to believe even clear disclaimers won’t work?
Hoofnagle: even a disclosure in the title left 27% confused
in our study. There are underlying issues: 27% is a sufficient number to be
considered a reasonable consumer. Are these likely to mislead a reasonable
consumer to her detriment? There are large gulfs between how publishers and
advertisers are talking about consumers and how consumers perceive these
disclosures. We heard publishers say their readers are smart. This is no doubt
true but in some sense irrelevant because the question is whether some
percentage of reasonable people are confused; even smart people may come to
different conclusions about what “sponsored by” means. When he thinks of
sponsorship, he thinks of PBS. He does not think that BP told the McNeil-Lehrer
hour what stories to run; rather he thinks BP provided underwriting. But this
morning he learned that advertisers say that stories should be compatible with
their products. That’s a completely opposite mental model. Finds that totally confusing—if the direction
of the story comes from advertiser to publisher, rather than the other way
around, that doesn’t seem like “sponsorship.”
Franklyn: there’s been an inversion in the relation between
content and advertising; what people might have thought it meant before no
longer does. We recently tested pop up disclosures by search engines. Roughly
44% of people thought “sponsored” made them more confused about relationship
between paid and unpaid content on the page.
Pedigo: not an attempt to deceive consumers. Our audiences
are engaged and will speak up about a change in font. In our survey, 71% of
members haven’t heard any complaints because they’re doing a lot around
transparency and because it’s attractive content. (I can’t tell how deliberately he’s not
listening to the evidence being presented.)
De Mooy: how do you complain about that? To whom?
Pedigo: Oh, they find a way.
De Mooy: Many lower-income people use low-bandwidth, small
devices—perception difficulties are already inherent, then add in language
difficulties—many disclosures will be useless.
Franklyn: the winner in terms of clarity was “commercial ads”;
others grouped. Had to be sufficiently
large lettering, in the right place. Didn’t win by a ton—13% compared to
6%. Native ads have come on a platform
of monetization of search from ten blue links to up to 70-80% of the page ads,
some of which say “ads” and some of which say “sponsored.” People have to find
what they want in that soup. When you ask them to disaggregate which signals
tell them what’s going on, it’s difficult because they’re already conditioned.
Trust isn’t that important practically/in a business way.
What’s important is migration of consumers with the brand through new
iterations—you can make a very successful business with very partial trust, and
that truth needs to be told. You can’t rely on the promise we kept hearing this
morning that “we have to be trustworthy or it would be bad for business.”
Johnson: In studies, many people just didn’t see the labels.
Everyone here should sit through a usability study of people asked to do a
specific task online. You will be amazed at what they don’t see when their
brain is engaged in that task. That’s where a lot of the study noise comes
from: people don’t see 90% of what’s on the pages they visit/click on.
Greenberg: historically advertising proclaims itself as
advertising through interruption. No
choice but to realize it—if there’s a homepage takeover, or a
preroll/interstitial (especially on mobile).
What happens when ads aren’t as obnoxious?
De Mooy: language is practically worthless; not even worth
FTC’s time. It’s design, context, and straightforwardness of commercial
advertising as interruption. That’s the way to move forward.
We’re used to advertisers paying for the shell; people can
understand that they paid for the presentation of the content, but not for the
subject matter/the content itself.
Franklyn: we will test if consumers understand/care about
who wrote the content. “Sponsored by,”
he thinks, won’t materially increase that sort of awareness.
(someone) no silver bullet for different platforms, kinds of
audiences. Terms work differently for
16-year-old girl than for Home & Garden reader; publishers know their
audiences, and can work with advertisers.
Hoofnagle: Many companies that used “sponsored by” used a
grey color and a smaller font; this is important. Also think about how people
think about “partnership.” HuffPo
Partner Studio: the claim is this clearly discloses to consumers that this is
an ad. I wouldn’t think that at all!
Lawyers don’t think that. Partners aren’t at arm’s length, but we had
one panelist this morning say “we worked with a partner at arm’s length.” Also,
intent doesn’t matter. FTC doesn’t have to prove intent to deceive the public.
So you may not be setting out to deceive; the question is whether you are
misleading consumers to their detriment.
Franklyn: there is detriment to some people. Who will you
choose to protect?
De Mooy: sometimes the issue is what content is
missing. Pharmacos pay for pills, but no
one pays to educate consumers about holistic methods.
Q: Use of labels like “what’s this?” to ID native
advertising. Or ads only ID’d by Ad
Choices logo—does that work?
Franklyn: only 11% are likely to roll over icon for
explanation, and of those 44% were more confused when they did. Icon rollover is a low baseline for getting
attention.
Greenberg: think of conversion funnels. Traditionally 100%
of people who saw an interruptive ad realized it because there was no
conversion funnel. In a FB feed, you see the ad, then your brain recognizes the
story before you recognize it’s an ad; disclosure is maybe needed before I
decide to click. Only 50% read the story
they clicked on, if that. Now you’re
down to a much smaller percentage who sees the ad, much less realizes it’s an
ad.
Johnson: the icon was never intended to convey meaning to
those who didn’t know what it meant. Its intent was to remind you of the
function that you already know about—like printing, deleting, whatever; it’s
extremely difficult for any graphic artist, no matter how talented, to create
an icon that conveys meaning without prior knowledge.
Q: what design techniques might make it more or less clear
that something is an ad?
Johnson: strong visual hierarchy, boldness—all they can do
is increase probabilities; they can’t guarantee anything. Eyes move
semi-randomly according to people’s goals. Movement will move eyes in the direction of
movement (periphery needs to check for danger).
Cole: context—if you’re trying to make content look as much
like the content around it, the less you disclose the more effective it will
be.
De Mooy: doesn’t that mean you’ve effectively tricked people?
Cole: yep.
Franklyn: if you’re talking about internet search, we found
that chopping up the page in a more clear way—ads are only going to be on the
right side, algorithmic results only on the left—if you could have
architecturally mandated segmentation, then people can learn what things are. How
that applies to native advertising is unclear because it’s deliberately mashed
together. Architecture is not a solution for that fully paid page. Pop up warning you’re on a paid page? If the
goal is clear differentiation/consumer understanding, that’s very hard because
the market has overwhelmingly blurred lines and consumers have accepted it
largely because search is free and it’s stimulating. 3- or 4- or 5-sided
market; consumer acquiesces in use of personal info for targeted advertising,
and as long as that bargain is on it will be very hard to regulate.
De Mooy: some analogy to Do Not Track: bring it out of the
shadows.
Pedigo: consumers do have choice. If they feel they’re being
duped by native ads, there are a million other websites for any other content. Our
members are very sensitive to this. If they lose consumer trust, they lose out
completely to Joe Blow blogger down the street.
(I’m with Franklyn on this one. Moralistic and convenient to say, hard
to believe.)
Hoofnagle: Homo economicus does not surf the internet. Real
people don’t have that perfect option weighing available to them. There’s not a real market where they can
understand the price and incorporate that into their decisions—cf. FTC
guidelines on use of the word “free,” which discuss its powerful psychological
effects on the listener.
Q: will certain populations have more trouble recognizing
native ads?
Answers: seniors; lower socioeconomic status groups; varies
based on race.
De Mooy: poorer people have smaller devices, slower download
times; unfamiliar language. Spanish language sites are often aggregators of
translated information; very unclear where information comes from. Hard to tell
even how to figure out where it came from. We know that people in underserved
communities are at more financial risk of fraud online. They deserve special
consideration in regulation. Financial advice and health impact are special
categories.
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