Patagonia is preparing for life without Facebook. Last year, the advertiser spent $6.2 million on the social platform's paid ads, but now, it has pulled all paid ads from Facebook and Instagram until at least the end of July. And the boycott will extend if the advertiser doesn't see three specific changes to how the social network handles hate speech, according to a top marketing exec for Patagonia. Read more below. Other things to know about - We’ll go deep on everything from how to generate DTC site traffic from Amazon to what the best course of action for your omnichannel approach is at the Amazon Advertising Strategies Virtual Forum. Reserve your spot today to join us for an interactive discussion with leaders from Sellwin Consulting, Belkin International, Purple and others.
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Marketing on Facebook | | Patagonia has pulled all paid ads from Facebook and Instagram until at least the end of July. The boycott will extend if the advertiser has seen three specific changes to how the social network handles hate speech. | |
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howdy! Business of TV | | The first half of 2020 saw streaming viewership surge, the remaking of TV’s upfront market, production shut down and Quibi’s debut. | |
Sponsored by Zeotap | | Marketers are turning to the promise of universal IDs — a shared, persistent identifier to trace users across supply chains, link customer identities and unify siloed assets without the clunkiness of cookies or the risks of operating system IDs. | |
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howdy! Marketing on Facebook | | To get a sense of how much advertisers are pulling back from Facebook, Digiday reached out to ad-tracking firm Pathmatics. The company provided estimates for how much advertisers spent on the platform during July 2019 as well as from July 2019 to 2020. | |
Sponsored by GeoEdge | | As the digital ecosystem shifts, publishers are racing to retain users, maximize ad revenue and track demographic and behavioral changes in their audiences. Here’s how they’re doing it. | |
howdy! Future of Work | | As the media ecosystem contracts amid coronavirus, Substack has been thrust into an uncomfortable role — that of a savior. | |
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howdy! Coronavirus Fallout | | Ad refreshing, especially automatic ad refreshing, carries a stigma since publishers historically used it to prioritize revenue over user experience. | |
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| | Bloomberg Media Group CEO Justin Smith doesn't see the advertising business collapsing due to the pandemic. "We've historically been an advertising-led business media company," Smith said at the Digiday Publishing Summit. But his outlook for future revenue lies in subscriptions and live events. |
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