Sponsored post
A sponsored post, also known as a promoted post, is a post to any community-driven notification-oriented website which is explicitly sponsored as an advertisement by a particular company in order to draw a large amount of popularity through user promotion and moderation to the most active or most viewed page on the website. The model has become adopted by various ad-supported but community-driven websites as an addition, substitute or replacement of other pay-per-click advertisement formats, such as web banners, text and rich media. Sites and services which utilize sponsored posts include Digg,[1] Reddit,[2] Twitter[3] and Instagram.[4]
Specifically referring to context of blogs, "sponsored posts" were defined by Mutum and Wang (2010) as "promoted blog entries or posts that contain links that point to the home page or specific product pages of the website of the sponsor for which the blogger receives compensation in the form of money, products, services or in other ways".[5] They are also known as paid posts or sponsored reviews.
Sponsored posts can also serve as a means of curtailing the possibility of companies paying individuals to moderate a submitted link or media to the front page of the website, which often violates the spirit or letter of a site's Terms of Service.
See also
- Grey propaganda
- Self-serve advertising
- Hypertargeting
References
- ↑ Ads You Can Digg…or Bury
- ↑ use our self-serve advertising tool
- ↑ Hello World
- ↑ Crabbe, Lauren (November 1, 2013). "Fashion designer brand Michael Kors becomes the first to run ads on Instagram". The Next Web. Retrieved September 17, 2014.
- ↑ Mutum, Dilip; Wang, Qing (2010). "Consumer Generated Advertising in Blogs". In Neal M. Burns; Terry Daugherty; Matthew S. Eastin. Handbook of Research on Digital Media and Advertising: User Generated Content Consumption. 1. IGI Global. pp. 248–261.