From Beta release of Collectives™ on Stack Overflow:
Articles: Collectives on Stack Overflow adds the ability to create , longer form content that lives on the collective page. We first introduced this feature within our Teams product last year, and we have seen strong adoption and usage. Articles give Recognized Members the opportunity to provide deeper knowledge and insights through how-to-guides, knowledge articles, or announcements.
and
We’ve also learned that organizations who are active on Stack Overflow have a strong appetite to add their specific knowledge. They want to have deeper interactions and provide a better experience to their current and potential users. Currently, they can’t do that with any of our products.
and from Town hall - Collectives™ on Stack Overflow:
The scope of an article should be broader than a regular Q&A. We envision it to be the content piece that is in between Q&A (specific problem, specific solution) and documentation (full description on how something works). An example would be a how-to guide on how to get started on a specific technology.
Emphasizes added by me.
To summarize all this:
Articles are thought to be broader and longer than regular Q&A providing deeper knowledge and insights in form of guides, knowledge resources and announcements that give organizations (and only them) that are currently craving to add their specific knowledge in forms of announcements or guides or longer, deeper and broader knowledge articles a way to directly interact with their users/customers on SO, which they couldn't do with the regular Q&A so far. Clear?
It's not just for promoting knowledge (then articles would just exist outside of Collectives), it's for promoting only specific knowledge offrom organizations only! A bit of a broadcasting/marketing channel, but with some voting on top.
Basically there is much more leeway about the content (although they also still have to be somewhat ontopic) and announcements for example are explicitly included. However, so far there are only a few and the length is also not much more than the average Q&A, but maybe this will change in the future.
It's too early to judge them really, but from the three examples my impression is that they are a bit more on the advertising side of knowledge transfer, and then it's maybe good that they are clearly marked as part of collectives.
Independently of this it might be a good idea to have articles available everywhere but then hopefully also with adapted rules like focused only on content and editable by everyone.