Riboli Wines’ Jenna Steele on Reinventing Wine for the Digital Consumer
Wine’s comeback depends on getting ecommerce and messaging right.Read More
Wine’s comeback depends on getting ecommerce and messaging right.Read More
Analyzing the two major exec moves that shook up the ad industry this summer.Read More

Are you looking for ways to leverage AI that go beyond basic text generation? Wondering how to turn mountains of content and notes into actionable insights and marketing materials without spending countless hours reading and analyzing? Unlike ChatGPT or Claude, NotebookLM doesn’t pull from the internet. It pulls from your documents, your files, and your […]
The post Advanced NotebookLM Use Cases You Can Apply Today appeared first on Social Media Examiner.
She also alerted viewers that she pre-recorded some content and will still be on the Morning Xtra for the next couple of weeks.Read More
A while ago, I ate in a restaurant that had no menu. The waiter simply walked over to the table and said, “what do you want?” As bold as statement as this is, it made many diners uncomfortable and often led to people ordering without much imagination.
Around the same time, I found myself in an out-of-the-way diner that had an 29 page menu. It took our group a long time to figure out what to order (and then we discovered they were out of just about everything.)
A menu (not just in a restaurant) serves many functions. It’s not simply a list of what you have, it’s also a prompt for what you believe in, want to do or contribute. The menu gives the customer an opportunity to respond, not simply to initiate.
When a prospect asks, “what do you have?” and the answer is “what do you need?” we haven’t made much progress.
Adobe Photoshop is hitting a real menu problem when it comes to AI. Every week, it seems, they announce powerful new features. But they’ve lost whatever coherent menu structure they used to have, and worse, the typical user can’t imagine what to do next.
A disciplined menu structure doesn’t limit user choice, it increases it.
Criteo’s commerce signals and WPP Media’s Open Intelligence pair up to allow advertisers to enhance reach and effectiveness in CTV.Read More
MSNBC finished in second place in total viewers, and CNN took the No. 2 spot in the demo.Read More
Casual engagement is exactly what keeps your brand from becoming essential.Read More

Proton VPN has become the UK’s most downloaded free app, as Britons rush to bypass a new law requiring users to verify their age before accessing websites hosting adult content. Proton VPN reported a staggering 1,400% surge in UK sign-ups almost immediately after the Online Safety Act came into effect. It is now Britain’s most downloaded free app, overtaking ChatGPT, according to Apple’s App Store rankings. The Switzerland-based virtual private network (VPN) said in a post on X that the surge in interest has been “sustained.” This contrasts with recent short-term spikes, such as when people in France temporarily lost…
This story continues at The Next WebRead More