Banner ads were the go-to format for just about everything. Awareness campaigns, retargeting, direct response, you name it, someone was running a banner about it. What’s changed? People got really, really good at ignoring them. Not skipping past them or quickly closing them, but, like, not even registering that they’re there. When you’re trying to get someone from “maybe interested” to “actually considering this,” that’s a surefire way to fail.
The mid-funnel is the interesting part. Your audience knows you exist. They’ve been to your website, read an article, or heard someone talk about you. They’re no longer strangers but they aren’t ready to purchase from you, either. This is where native advertising begins to distinguish itself from traditional display and why that gap continues to grow.
The Mid-Funnel Issue That Traditional Display Cannot Solve
Traditional display ads are meant for distraction. They sit in a sidebar, float over content or take space from the top of the page. The entire function is to grab attention and redirect it. That’s good for awareness, you’re hoping people just see you, but when someone already knows you’re there but isn’t even close to pulling out their credit card, overwhelming them again doesn’t help move the needle.
The mid-funnel needs something different. It’s not about shouting louder than everyone else on the page. It’s about giving value, answering questions and creating trust. That’s difficult to do when people fail to even read a bright yellow box that says “THIS IS AN AD.”
That’s not the case with native ads, though. They match form and function with content surrounding them. If someone is reading a blog about project management productivity tools, a native ad recommending management software doesn’t feel out of place. It feels relevant. Relevance is the name of the game in the middle funnel approach.
Why Format Matters More than You Think
The format itself is a signal. A banner ad lets people know that you paid to interrupt their experience. A native ad lets people know you have something worth reading that fits seamlessly into what they’re already doing. It’s a subtle but crucial distinction that changes how people are willing to engage with the message.
Consider how you digest information online. When you’re trying to read something and a display ad pops up in front of your face, your brain classifies it as something to ignore or work around. But when you see a suggested article or a sponsored piece that matches the style of content already provided for you, you at least consider whether it might be interesting enough to click. And if the headline resonates, you might just do it.
For advertisers who go through native ads networks, this distinguishes mid-funnel conversion metrics from display because there are better engagement rates during the consideration stage. People spend more time reading it since they aren’t trained to immediately tune something out due to their preconceived notions about traditional display ads. But that time is crucial when explaining complex products, demonstrating value and answering objections.
Native Trust
Mid-funnel conversions hinge on trust. If someone is considering your product or service, they’re actively vetting you for credibility. Traditional display ads do little to help here because everyone knows that’s paid placement, helping you sell your product. It doesn’t mean that it’s dishonest, it just means that it lacks inherent credibility for your audience.
With native ads, however, there’s something called “contextual trust” where your content placed on a reputable site in similar format to editorial-like content gives cache from the site to you. It’s assumed that if someone trustworthy has your content on their site, then most likely you should be paid attention to as well. It’s not misleading, it’s simply human nature, we often vet things based upon where we find it.
Publishers recognize this and therefore, native placements generally boast stricter quality standards than display placements. It actually has to be useful. It has to fit with the writing style of the publication. It cannot be a thinly veiled attempt at a sales pitch. Thus, there’s a higher barrier to entry, making it more successful in creating the trust needed for mid-funnel conversions, and simultaneously making it easier for native ads to outperform bolstered expectations from necessary hoops to jump through (because they make sense).
Performance Indicates Positive Results
Statistics prove this true, as well. Native ads have better conversion rates than display ads during the consideration stage all across the board. Time spent with them is longer. Scroll depth is deeper. In short, people are actually reading it instead of quickly glancing and scrolling away (which does literally nothing).
But beyond that, the quality of traffic is often better. If a person clicks on a native ad and spends three minutes on the page reading your content, there’s a far better likelihood than an individual who merely clicked on an unintentionally presented banner while attempting to close it out. That first example shows genuine interest and consideration, exactly what you want in the mid-funnel stage of conversion, and displays why native ads work better.
Higher conversion rates also prove this relative difference true, as well as the fact that while native might not net the highest volume of clicks overall from its peer platforms, the clicks it does receive are inherently more meaningful, sign ups for newsletters or requests for demos/content downloads that aim towards mid-funnel conversion success are greater with the native format as well.
The Content Experience Advantage
Native advertising requires you to think differently about your approach; you can’t just slap a graphic together and throw in a call-to-action button, you need something people actually want to engage with; this often means value upfront as opposed to simply leading with selling intentions, which lines up perfectly with mid-funnel thinking because this stage is where people are doing research, they’re comparing their options, they’re reading reviews and articles and trying to figure out what’s best for them.
If your content can help explain concepts or break down options or simply provide insights that others aren’t willing or able to give without bias, then you’ve contributed positively from mid-funnel relevance to this idea of consideration as compared to traditional display content that simply promotes some kind of product value or incentivized sale; there’s a time and place for that – but not necessarily in the consideration stage when people need more context and information before they’re ready for a hard sell.
Placement Flexibility and Audience Targeting
Native ads benefit from better placement opportunities, within feed content, recommended articles, between paragraphs of editorial-like content and discovery widgets as well as various strategies, meaning you can match placement with audience tendencies at this stage, someone reading an extensive article versus scrolling through headlines has two dramatically different mindsets, and if there’s an opportunity for them to click on a relevant native format versus content displaced by traditional means, then your offering becomes part of their natural intent rather than something interrupting quality momentum.
Targeting helps modern audiences, too; advanced native platforms have access to destination potential segmented by consumption patterns, meaning people can reach based upon what they’re reading on a page level versus demographic merit, and since greater levels of precision benefit mid-funnel campaigns where relevance is key, this helps push forward convictions only native formats can deliver better than traditional counterparts.
The Practical Reality for Advertisers
This doesn’t mean that traditional display ads are worthless; they certainly have their place especially for retargeting campaigns or direct response efforts, but when it comes time for people who could truly use help getting through the consideration phase, native formats have proven themselves increasingly more effective.
It’s about what you’re trying to achieve; if you need max reach and frequency at the awareness level stage, sure, display might still make sense, but if you’re trying to change minds for those who are already actively weighing pros and cons, native advertising delivers far greater results because the format becomes part of the message, as it should, respected enough for an audience’s time and intelligence to foster real value rather than cheap noise sounding like desperate salesmanship.






