Showrooming fears displaced by Webrooming cheers: L2 – Luxury Daily
Luxury Daily today - Showrooming fears displaced by Webrooming cheers: L2; Dior enters partnership with Princess Grace Foundation to show dedication to arts.
Luxury Daily today - Showrooming fears displaced by Webrooming cheers: L2; Dior enters partnership with Princess Grace Foundation to show dedication to arts.
Today in mobile marketing - Samsung delays new smartphone; Facebook to shut down Gifts service in latest ecommerce shift; Microsoft gives employees sneak peek at new selfie phone; Instagram just unveiled Bolt, its answer to Snapchat.
More consumers than ever find mobile ads helpful, with relevancy a key factor in driving engagement, according to a new report from xAd and Telmetrics.
Mobile Commerce Daily today - Coca-Cola launches Tweet-a-Coke as trackable social coupons gain; Mobile drives prioritization of unified retail supply chains: report.
Luxury Daily today - BMW stokes in-game Gran Turismo interaction; The “Next 15″ will drive 80pc of emerging market growth by 2025: report.
Today in mobile marketing - Facebook moves all mobile chat to Messenger app; Rhapsody teams with T-Mobile to battle music-streaming giants; Restaurant owners differ on merits of mobile tech; The truth about mobile advertising? It’s a house of cards.
The increasing demand inside organizations for mobile marketing solutions is complicating the relationship between top marketing executives and their counterparts in the technology silo, but there are ways for the two departments to work together bette...
Twitter’s moves to enhance its mobile advertising offerings are resonating with brands such as Budweiser and Coca-Cola, helping to drive a 124 percent increase in revenues during the second quarter.
As wearables gain momentum, developers are recognizing the need for fashionable appeal, leading to partnerships between technology companies and fashion brands.
Privacy concerns would keep half of consumers from permitting retail mobile trackers to know their location, although more than a quarter would allow tracking if given the right incentives, according to a survey by the PunchTab marketing firm.