Digitas's 'The Boycott NewFront' Kicks Off in New York City
*By Christian Smith*
Companies need to take a stand on social issues if they're to remain relevant with their customers and have a place in the media landscape. That's the takeaway from this year's Digitas NewFront, where more than 200 marketing and branding executives met to discuss the issues facing their industries.
"It's no longer enough to just say 'Hey two pizzas $9.99.,'" said Scott Donaton, the chief content officer of Digitas, in an interview Thursday with Cheddar. "The brands that try to sit on the sidelines right now are are actually being dragged into these debates whether they want to or not."
Those debates include gun control, gender equality, and police brutality, topics that were on the agenda at the NewFront this week in New York.
You don't typically hear such discussions at most conferences like this, where content providers usually present new ideas for advertisers to decide where best to position their brands. But the Digitas NewFront is different. Each year organizers choose a theme affecting the marketing industry.
Michael Kahn, the global brand president at Digitas, said the company picked "The Boycott" as this year's theme because the internet "is no longer neutral."
"We are now in such a different world with digital communications and channels, and always being on," said Kahn. "People can't afford to sit on the sidelines anymore."
Digitas put on the first NewFront in 2008, when broadcast TV still reigned supreme and digital content was beginning to grow. Since then, Digitas has pulled in partners such as Hulu, Google, and OATH, which now hold their own NewFronts.
Karl Farmer, Vice President and Portfolio Managers at Rockland Trust Bank, breaks down why inflation and interest rates may stick at these levels, and why Bitcoin still carries some risks.
If you wince at the grocery store checkout, you’re not alone. Wall Street Journal reporter Jesse Newman breaks down why prices are so high – and not going down anytime soon.
An inflation gauge favored by the Federal Reserve increased in January, the latest sign that the slowdown in U.S. consumer price increases is occurring unevenly from month to month. (Getty Images)
Glen Smith, CIO at GDS Wealth Management, shares how investors can allocate their assets as the market broadens and why he’s eyeing June for the first potential rate cut.
After years of price increases for cars and trucks in the United States, costs are slowing and in some cases falling, helping cool overall inflation and giving frustrated Americans more hope of finding an affordable vehicle.
Missed out on the Nvidia wave? Oh course you did — you’re reading this article aren’t you, instead of luxuriating on a white-sand beaches of Bali. But here are at least four other promising semiconductor stocks to add to your portfolio.