Blade runs crosstown helicopter service to bypass papal gridlock – Luxury Daily
Luxury Daily today - Blade runs crosstown helicopter service to bypass papal gridlock; Dior redefines fragrance application for consumer exploration boost.
Luxury Daily today - Blade runs crosstown helicopter service to bypass papal gridlock; Dior redefines fragrance application for consumer exploration boost.
GE, Disney, Saturday Night Live and Mountain Dew are among the slew of brands that have quickly made use of Facebook’s new 360 video feature, pointing to virtual reality's growing role in marketing.
Marketers flooded social media on the first day of fall with engagement-driven posts, but their efforts mostly fell flat due to a lack of originality.
Only 29 percent of application users will become inactive if marketers can successfully encourage them to have three sessions in the first three days after downloading an app, according to new research from Localytics.
Mobile Commerce Daily today - Ad-blocking renders some retail sites unusable on iPhone; Boston Retail Partners exec: Do not wait to tie mobile to bricks-and-mortar.
Today in mobile marketing – Vertical video pays off for Snapchat; Apple lists top 25 apps hit by malware; Samsung touts mobile payment success; The fake traffic schemes that are rotting the Internet.
Mobile Commerce Daily today - Mobile’s significant influence on in-store sales overlooked by many retailers: Deloitte; Pizza Hut adds zest to in-store dining with beacon rollout.
Luxury Daily today - Connected consumers push retailers to adopt seamless, personalized shopping experience: report; Chanel revamps iconic shoe for a new generation through relatable vignettes.
Today in mobile marketing – The Washington Post and Facebook: Smart strategy or deal with the devil?; Meet Pebble Time Round, Pebble's seriously thin, circular smartwatch; Facebook brings 360 videos to news feed; Pandora co-founder: Royalties win is important, but....
While Amazon takes top honors as a social media leader in its industry, the title is more attributable to the inherently shareable nature of its products and posts rather than a segmented mobile strategy, according to a report from Brandwatch.