Apple spooks tech rivals with surprise launch event: A "scary" event promises new Mac laptop unveilings and potential chip developments, stirring excitement ahead of holiday shopping.
Robust growth in Microsoft's latest quarter: Strategic acquisitions and AI integrations position the tech giant for success in the quarter ahead.
Spotify has a surprise return to profitability: The company posted strong advertising and subscription revenue growth after a year of cost-cutting.
41 states and DC are suing Meta for violating children’s privacy laws. A deluge of fines and possible bans could follow if addictive algorithms aren’t altered.
On today's podcast episode, in our "Retail Me This, Retail Me That" segment, we discuss how Amazon's second Prime Day performed and whether it's really a holiday sale. Then for "Red-Hot Retail," our analysts give us some spicy predictions about the 2023 holiday season. Join our analyst Sara Lebow as she hosts director of Briefings Jeremy Goldman and analyst Zak Stambor.
Mattel’s strong Q3 suggests the company’s IP-focused strategy is working: The Barbie movie helped consumer demand for the company’s products grow in the quarter.
To keep campaigns new and relevant, Poshmark leans on AI to enhance product images and refresh video assets. The fashion resale platform has also employed AI to help it translate TV ads into different languages to scale campaigns across countries.
Google shines on ad revenue but high AI expenses disappoint: Its Q3 earnings fell short in cloud revenue amid heavy AI investments. Investors seek clarity on generative AI profitability.
Customer loyalty comes with strings attached: As shoppers become more fickle, discounts and other incentives play a driving role in keeping consumers tied to a brand or retailer.
Retailers look to redefine the customer experience: That’s leading them to invest in immersive experiences such as AR, VR, gamified social shopping, and AI-enabled personalization.
TikTok video length is still creeping up: The app announced it’s testing 15-minute uploads as it searches for more diverse ad offerings.
What does the local ad market look like beyond politics? With political spending out of the picture, the local ad market will grow 2.2% next year.
Marketers, publishers, and media and tech companies have known for years that the third-party cookies and mobile IDs on which they built a thriving ad business would eventually disappear. What may have seemed like an abstraction in 2016 is now a looming reality: Google has said it will fully phase out Chrome cookies and potentially mobile IDs in late 2024. Google has repeatedly delayed this timeline, but even if the dates shift, it’s game time for the ad industry to accept and embrace the cookieless future.
Customer loyalty comes with strings attached: As shoppers become more fickle, discounts and other incentives play a driving role in keeping consumers tied to a brand or retailer.
Puma pushed past Europe’s macroeconomic and geopolitical headwinds in Q3: The company’s sales rose 9.9% in the EMEA region, and 6.0% overall.
Ram Trucks was the No. 1 automotive brand by estimated TV ad spend in August 2023, surpassing Subaru, Chevrolet, Kia, and Jeep, per iSpot.tv as cited by MediaPost.
Consumers aren’t trading down from Coca-Cola products: The company’s volumes rose, which speaks to the strength of its brands—including its namesake soda, Simply juice, and Powerade.
Nvidia wants to take its chip market dominance to the next level: It’s adding CPUs to its chip portfolio to rival Intel. It could shake up the PC landscape.
Some AI chatbots reveal racial biases: Medical discrimination against minority patients isn’t new. But if large language models are flawed and relied on in healthcare, the problem could get worse.
Boomers like their doctors: People over 65 are the most positive about their primary care physician—more than adults between 50 and 64. But they’re also more likely to see their doctor.