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7 Lessons Every Marketer Can Learn From The CrossFit Instagram Crisis

MaccaPR

and Pepsi’s “ Black Lives Matter’’ TV ad bungle with Kendall Jenner – it would be easy to miss one of the smaller yet most portentous PR crisis of this year: The CrossFit Gym Member-Shaming Instagram Fail. The gym owner insisted these acts were “light hearted and fun” and defended his posts on radio as “we were having fun.we

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Letter from Middlesbrough: 13 lessons from Mary Meeker’s 2019 report

Stephen Waddington

2 Popular platforms The most popular platforms by daily usage are Facebook (30%), YouTube (27%), WhatsApp (25%), WeChat (23%) and Instagram (19%). Instagram and YouTube are growing fastest, up from 13% and 22% in 2017 respectively. Radio is under indexed (12% vs 8%) and print is over indexed (3% vs 7%). #4

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Targeted Advertising: Does it Actually Work?

Contently - Strategy

While scrolling through Instagram, I recently stumbled on an advertisement for a hoodie. More likely, though, a firm bought data from Instagram parent Meta (formerly known as Facebook) and advertised to me a product based on my Facebook profile. privacy is moving to the forefront of ad targeting,” he adds.

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Media and behaviour insights from Ofcom 2018 report

Stephen Waddington

O fcom’s latest report is packed with consumer data and analysis. 1 Internet uptake driven by mobile: connected consumer While take-up of fixed broadband has plateaued at 80%, accessing the internet on a mobile phone continues to grow from 66% in 2017 to 72% in 2018. UK consumers spend more than 24 hours per week online.

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Future of PR and social media for International Air Transport Association crisis communications conference

Stuart Bruce

That means you’re welcome to tweet, Instagram, Vine or Snapchat at will. It’s 86% for Twitter, 98% for Instagram or 100% for Snapchat. But why be afraid of big government when we freely provide our life story to social networks and give up our privacy to airlines in return for a bribe of a few more air miles.