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Published in B&T Latest News 20 May, 2024 by The bizandtech.net Newswire Staff

What’s next for smartphone displays — tandem OLED, microLED and more

Display specs are taking on added importance as phone makers look to make their devices stand out.

Published in B&T Latest News 20 May, 2024 by The bizandtech.net Newswire Staff

How to watch ‘Dune: Part Two’ online — stream from anywhere

Long live the fighters — here’s how to watch ‘Dune: Part Two’ online no matter where in the world you are.

Published in B&T Latest News 20 May, 2024 by The bizandtech.net Newswire Staff

New on Netflix: 5 movies and shows to watch this week (May 20-26)

Each and every new Netflix TV show and movie hitting Netflix this week, including ‘Atlas’.

Published in B&T Latest News · Business Features 20 May, 2024 by The bizandtech.net Newswire Staff

AI Briefing: How Lexicon researches its approach to AI naming strategies

In cluttered and noisy industries, naming companies and products has often been part of the strategy for standing out. That continues to be the case when it comes to AI, but there isn’t yet the same depth of research that exists in other categories.

Lexicon — the naming agency behind numerous famous names like Blackberry, Apple’s Powerbook and Adobe inDesign — is hoping to change that as AI names become increasingly important.

Last week, Lexicon released its initial findings from a survey that explores what consumers and developers think about AI. Surveying 150 consumers in the U.S. and another 150 in Germany, the agency asked a range of questions about which industries people think will be positively impacted by AI. The top industries mentioned were telecommunications and health care — which were named by about half of respondents — followed by education, entertainment and security. The lowest were banking, hospitality and travel, retail, and legal services. Another 21% said none of the above.

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Published in B&T Latest News 20 May, 2024 by The bizandtech.net Newswire Staff

Media Buying Briefing: How the upfront has changed over the last 30 years

As the cable reporter for now-defunct Mediaweek from 1993 until 1998 when I became an editor, I learned about the TV ad marketplace down to a level of granularity I had no idea existed. It’s when I first heard the term “upfront” used in a way that had nothing to do with where I stood at a concert or in line.

In those days, hardly anyone knew what the Internet was, four broadcast networks dominated the upfront marketplace, and syndication (remember that?) and basic cable networks scratched out revenue totals that barely added to half a billion dollars — less than Google generates in less than two weeks today.

There was no programmatic selling — it was all about relationships between the ad sales chiefs and their teams, and the titans of the media agency world (when the likes of Irwin Gotlieb and Jon Mandel made or broke the business). And each of the sales teams had their own style — where the MTV Networks sales team in the late 1990s resembled a family straight out of “The Sopranos” central casting, the Turner sales team felt more akin to “Mad Men.”

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Published in B&T Latest News 20 May, 2024 by The bizandtech.net Newswire Staff

Behind closed doors: the intrigue and reality of platform marketer councils

On the surface, things seemed tense back then. 

CMOs were out there on stages and in interviews, wagging their fingers at Meta execs, accusing them of caring more about cash than the disharmony it fueled. But behind closed doors, it was all hugs and handshakes as they cozied up to the bigwigs, letting their concerns fade into the background.

Fast forward four years, and it feels like déjà vu.

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Published in B&T Latest News 20 May, 2024 by The bizandtech.net Newswire Staff

The Washington Post adds AI-generated audio to three newsletters

On Monday, The Washington Post added AI-generated audio to its three politics- and policy-focused newsletters to give readers the ability to listen to those emails.

Solventum and PhRMA are launch sponsors for the newsletters this week, which will also contain AI-generated audio ads for the first time. Each audio newsletter edition will have pre- and post-roll audio ads inserted dynamically each day.

The audio versions of the newsletters are available by clicking through from the emailed newsletters to The Post’s site — but the focus for the initiative is the experience of listening to the audio in the Listen tab in The Washington Post’s app, which debuted last November, said Renita Jablonski, The Post’s director of audio. The tab allows users to create a playlist of audio offerings from The Post, such as podcasts, morning briefings and other articles.

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Published in B&T Latest News 20 May, 2024 by The bizandtech.net Newswire Staff

Why Exverus’ head of strategy is marrying performance with brand in programmatic

There’s been a pendulum swing in the marketing industry, where marketers who were overly focused on performance have started investing in brand building — via streaming, audio and experiential — to stand out in the crowded digital marketplace. 

This has meant updating KPIs and client expectations when it comes to measuring campaign effectiveness, which is exactly why independent boutique agency Exverus Media is reshaping what KPIs look like in streaming, audio and experiential channels that aren’t necessarily direct response channels.

“Where the industry is going, what we’re seeing from all of our marketing clients is that they’re being held to increasingly revenue-focused metrics,” Talia Arnold, head of strategy and planning at Exverus, said on stage at the Digiday Programmatic Marketing Summit in Palm Springs, California, on Wednesday. “How do we set up a measurement plan and KPIs that we can take action against and that go back to proving out a business outcome?”

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