Advertise With Us
TechStreet offers advertising opportunities for brands, tools, services, and businesses that are genuinely relevant to our audience. We focus on cybersecurity, website health, domain intelligence, digital operations, and trust-oriented online tools. Our readers and visitors come to us looking for practical value, not clutter, so we approach advertising with a high standard for fit, transparency, and presentation quality. If you want to advertise with us, this page explains the kinds of opportunities we may offer and the rules we expect advertisers to respect.
Our goal is to build an environment where commercial messages can appear without damaging trust. That means we do not want advertising that feels deceptive, spammy, unrelated, or poorly disclosed. We care about the long-term health of the platform more than short-term ad volume. Brands that work best with us usually understand this and are comfortable building campaigns around clarity, professionalism, and audience relevance.
1. Who Should Advertise With Us
We may be a strong fit for companies and professionals serving website owners, security-focused teams, technical marketers, agencies, developers, WordPress users, SaaS buyers, hosting customers, and digital decision-makers. This can include cybersecurity services, monitoring tools, SaaS platforms, hosting companies, infrastructure providers, digital agencies, online business software, developer tools, and selected educational products or services related to our audience.
We are generally not interested in promotions that are misleading, low-quality, unrelated to our niche, or likely to create unnecessary user distrust. We may reject offers involving unrealistic claims, non-transparent pricing, unsafe downloads, weak landing pages, questionable business models, aggressive pop-up behavior, misleading security promises, or products that conflict with our platform standards.
2. Advertising Formats We May Consider
Depending on fit, we may consider homepage placement, resource-page placement, sponsored sections, newsletter mentions, feature highlights, native placements with clear labels, co-branded campaign pages, content sponsorships, category sponsorships, strategic product mentions, or other commercial formats. Some opportunities may be fixed-term placements, while others may be campaign-based or tied to specific launches.
Not every advertiser will be suitable for every format. The right format depends on relevance, audience fit, creative quality, budget, campaign goals, and how the placement affects the user experience across desktop and mobile. We reserve the right to recommend a different format than the one originally requested if we think it will perform better or protect the platform more effectively.
3. Transparency and Disclosure Standards
We take disclosure seriously. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission’s guidance on native advertising and endorsements emphasizes that advertising should not mislead consumers about its commercial nature and that disclosures should be clear and conspicuous where needed. We agree with that standard and apply it in principle to how we handle sponsored or paid promotional material. If a placement is paid, sponsored, promoted, or otherwise commercially connected, we may label it clearly and structure it in a way that helps users understand what they are looking at.
Advertisers working with us should be comfortable with transparent presentation. We do not support arrangements that depend on hiding sponsorship, disguising ads as independent editorial judgment, or creating confusion about whether content is promotional. Trust is worth more than clever formatting that risks misleading visitors.
4. Claim Quality and Substantiation
Advertisers are responsible for the truthfulness, legality, and substantiation of their claims, offers, product descriptions, endorsements, screenshots, guarantees, and performance statements. If you make a factual claim, you should be able to support it. If a claim needs disclosure or qualification, that should be handled clearly. If testimonials or endorsements involve material connections, those relationships should be disclosed in a way that is consistent with applicable advertising rules and good publishing practice.
We may reject or request revisions to claims that appear exaggerated, unsupported, vague, or likely to create the wrong impression. We may also refuse creative assets that look low trust, perform poorly on mobile, or conflict with our design direction.
5. What a Strong Advertising Inquiry Includes
The best advertising inquiries are specific and well prepared. Please tell us who you are, what you want to promote, who your target audience is, what kind of placement you are interested in, your preferred timing, and your budget range if you have one. It also helps to include your landing page, sample creative, value proposition, and any goals or performance metrics that matter to you.
If your campaign depends on a seasonal launch, affiliate structure, limited-time promotion, or technical integration, say that clearly from the start. If your product requires legal disclaimers, trial terms, or restrictions, include those early as well. The more complete your initial inquiry is, the faster and more accurately we can evaluate fit.
6. Creative and User Experience Standards
We care about how ads look and feel. Creative should be readable, brand-safe, mobile-friendly, and respectful of the site experience. We may reject units that are visually noisy, deceptive in appearance, overloaded with claims, difficult to read, or incompatible with our layout. We may also adjust spacing, hierarchy, labeling, button text, placement, or disclosure language to preserve the quality of the page.
Our audience responds better to professional presentation than to pressure tactics. Strong campaigns usually communicate a clear value proposition, direct next step, and honest positioning. We prefer that over fake urgency, cluttered banners, or exaggerated promises.
7. Editorial Independence
Advertising does not automatically grant editorial control. We reserve the right to separate paid promotion from independent editorial content and to decide how sponsored material is labeled, positioned, or contextualized on the Site. We may decline campaigns that attempt to influence unrelated editorial coverage or create confusion between independent content and paid placement.
If a campaign includes advertorial or sponsored content, we may require disclosure language, formatting adjustments, or review procedures before publication. That protects both our audience and the advertiser by reducing confusion about what is promotional and what is not.
8. Campaign Review, Approval, and Removal
We reserve the right to review all advertising materials before publication and to request changes where necessary. Acceptance of an inquiry does not guarantee acceptance of final creative. We may reject, pause, revise, or remove a campaign if the content becomes inaccurate, the landing page changes materially, the offer becomes misleading, the campaign creates technical issues, or the relationship otherwise conflicts with platform standards or applicable law.
We may also decline campaigns that appear likely to generate poor user experience, weak conversion quality, reputational risk, or compliance concerns. Not every brand is the right fit, and we prefer to be selective.
9. Contact Us to Advertise
If you want to discuss advertising on TechStreet, please contact us through https://staging.techstreetlabs.com/contact-us with the subject line “Advertising Inquiry.” Include your company name, website, proposed offer, audience, preferred placement type, timing, and any sample assets or campaign notes. If your campaign includes endorsements, sponsorship, affiliate tracking, or native placements, mention that early so we can review the structure properly.
We welcome advertisers who respect trust, value relevance, and want to show up on a cybersecurity platform in a way that feels professional rather than intrusive.
