Why Publisher Sponsorship Requests Are Just RFPs in Disguise — and Why Brands Keep Losing Them
When a municipality needs a construction contractor, it issues a Request for Proposals. Every qualified firm gets the same specs, the same timeline, the same criteria. The process is designed for fairness — which means it's also designed to produce commodity outcomes. Most publishers and podcasts run their sponsorship programs the same way, whether they call it that or not. The media kit goes out to every brand in the category simultaneously. Everybody gets the same options at the same price. And brands keep participating, cycle after cycle, wondering why the results feel thin.
What "Engaged Audience" Actually Means — and How to Tell if a Publisher Has One
Every publisher will tell you their audience is engaged. The media kit will show impressive monthly page view numbers, a demographic breakdown that matches your target buyer perfectly, and a rate card positioned to make the investment feel like a bargain. What the media kit will not show you is whether any of those numbers reflect genuine audience loyalty — or whether the trust that makes publisher partnerships valuable actually exists.
What Trade Publications Got Right That Social Media Never Could
Before Google. Before Facebook. Before the entire architecture of digital advertising was built around the premise that reach was the variable that mattered most, there was a simpler and more durable model for how brands reached the people they needed to reach. That model worked for most of the twentieth century. Then social media scaled, performance marketing took over, and the logic behind it got buried. It's now more relevant than ever — and most brands are still missing it.
Why Smart Brands Are Ditching Google Ads for Exclusive Publisher Partnerships
You've got a $10,000 to $50,000 ad budget. The instinct is to hand it to Google and watch the leads roll in. That instinct is costing you more than you think — not just in dollars, but in the kind of market position that paid search simply cannot build no matter how much you spend. There's a different model worth understanding, and the brands that figure it out early tend to dominate their category in ways that their competitors, busy optimizing ad spend, never catch up to.