You've correctly spotted the issue with the answer, i.e. the author failed to explicitly disclose their affiliation in the text of the answer. The help page on How not to be a spammer doesn't make this part as clear as it could. It's not unreasonable to assume that the username and linked website matching exactly counts as disclosure, and in fact, users make this mistake fairly frequently, and correct it once it's pointed out to them.
Disclosure needs to be explicit - this doesn't have to be anything formal, just a "I wrote the article here <link>" is sufficient. Without this disclosure, the post is technically spam, and should be treated as such from a review queue. The particular answer you've linked clearly lacks explicit disclosure and so it's actually a fairly clear review audit.
In the wild, it often makes sense to leave a comment pointing out the missing disclosure rather than raising a spam flag directly (though such a flag is likely to be marked helpful). There's a standard comment that's frequently used in these situations (which also mentions the need to be explicit about the affiliation):
When linking to your own site or content (or content that you are affiliated with), you must disclose your affiliation in the answer in order for it not to be considered spam. Having the same text in your username as the URL or mentioning it in your profile is not considered sufficient disclosure under Stack Exchange policy.