Endless Coffee Cup
Early this year, Dutch publisher Nederlandse Publieke Omroep stopped using third-party cookies and went to contextual-only advertising on their network of websites. In doing so, they saw a 62% increase in ad revenue compared to the prior year!
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Nolan Higdon, author of The Anatomy of Fake News, joins Matt again to talk about the post-election analysis of clickbait, fake news, and issues of digital literacy. This conversation reaches into many related facets, such as critical thinking, content marketing, ad fraud, and logical fallacies. Listen in to hear why Matt speculates that the “straw-man” fallacy no longer exists!
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Have you ever stopped to think about all of the “free” things that you use every day?
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Are marketers and marketing media ignoring the economic realities of the pandemic? At the time of this recording, the United States unemployment rate is 7.9% with 10.7 million jobs lost since the start of the lockdowns.
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In this podcast, an interview with Nolan Higdon, author of The Anatomy of Fake News.
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Keywords are the foundation for digital marketing.
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Is the Traditional Sales Funnel an Effective Tool in Modern Digital Marketing?
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Can we trust studies that claim to decode Google? Many SEO companies employ tests and studies to understand the nuances of Google's algorithm. However, are these studies valid or do they have any statistical significance?
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My guest is Dr Augustine Fou, an Ad Fraud expert. If you don’t follow his updates and content on LinkedIn, then I highly recommend that you do, as it will simply blow your mind how much ad spend is wasted on bots, inflated views, and networks of fraudulent websites.
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Matt and Ashley met up and recorded a socially-distanced podcast a few weeks ago. Of course, the conversation turned to the overwhelming amount of fake news surrounding COVID-19. But beyond fake news, there is a substantial problem in people’s ability to discern what is true and what is false information online.
info_outlineHave you ever stopped to think about all of the “free” things that you use every day?
Email, Search, Web Browsers, Social Media, Apps, News & Information?
All of these things cost someone, and they have to be paid for somehow.
Unfortunately, according to John Marshall’s new book, Free is Bad, you are paying for these services, just not in the traditional way. What all of these “free” things have in common is that they are supported by the ad-tech system. By using these, you are not the customer. The advertiser is the customer, and because of this relationship, the makers of these products answer to the advertisers, not to you.
This has created a dilemma that many people are starting to realize. Our information is being acquired, stored, and used to allow advertisers to provide is with increasing and more intrusive advertising. The ad-driven internet is operating based on our willingness to use these ”free” tools.
However, according to Marshall. It doesn’t have to be that way!