Doritos preps late night menu in DTC play
Posted in: UncategorizedThe snack giant uses ghost kitchens for offerings including Doritos Flamin’ Hot Cool Ranch Corn Puppies.
The snack giant uses ghost kitchens for offerings including Doritos Flamin’ Hot Cool Ranch Corn Puppies.
There’s a scene from the Golden Girls–season 1, episode 22–in which Blanche (Rue McClanahan), Dorothy (Bea Arthur) and Rose (Betty White) are commiserating at the kitchen table. Raiding the refrigerator for a suitable late-night snack, Blanche pulls out a chocolate cheesecake. The staccato exchange that follows was a signature element of the show. “You bought…
Ad partners such as Dentsu Creative may have to cough up money through clawbacks.
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Discord allows server creators to add roles to their servers that can be assigned to specific users. For instance, they can create a “Moderator” role and assign this role to users who are responsible for moderating content in the server. Our guide will show you how to create server roles in the Discord desktop application….
Tasha Dean is charged with reinventing how the agency gets paid for its intellectual property.
Consumer shopping and buying patterns never remain stagnant. As a business, you need to keep up with shifts in the marketplace. Otherwise, you can quickly start to lag behind and lose sales to your competitors.
Nowhere was the changeability of consumer behaviors more clear than during and after the pandemic. Consumers pivoted quickly to more digital lifestyles, and as noted by Deloitte, many of those choices have stuck post-pandemic. They worked from home. They had merchandise and groceries delivered rather than going to stores. They streamed more content through their devices. Companies that stayed attuned to these trends won market share. Companies that tried to do the same-old thing lost momentum–and revenue.
The difficulty, though, is figuring out how exactly to keep an eye on what’s happening in the consumer realm. It’s not enough to just recognize that consumer habits are taking a 180-degree turn. Businesses have to be able to react and evolve to those turns. That’s not always easy to do, especially for startups and smaller enterprises with limited staff resources.
This is where investing in strategic partnerships can help. Partnering with the right entities can help any business (including yours) ride the wave of consumer trends. There are four types of providers that can give your organization the edge you want.
1. Fast-moving Marketing Firms
Ideally, the way to ensure a firm will be an asset to you is to look for one that keeps evolving. After all, if a marketing firm isn’t willing to shift its own paradigms, it certainly won’t be able to help you shift yours.
Of course, you need to be sure you’re getting the best marketing firm you can afford. Ask about case studies, portfolio pieces, and other collateral from at least two or three potential partners. Check out their contracts, too. The last thing you want is to get locked in with a marketing firm that doesn’t guarantee what you need, such as consistency or speed. Those attributes are necessary for you to be able to make quick, accurate decisions based on your target customer base.
Certainly, it can be challenging to find a marketing partner that stands out and offers fresh perspectives and options. Rest assured that the right firm is out there.
For instance, say you want flexibility with your contractual arrangement. That’s relatively unusual because most marketing firms aim for long-term relationships. However, Hawke Media is one of the few that bucks the system. Hawke Media offers unique month-to-month, “outsourced CMO” contracts. Their a la carte style contract tailored to clients’ needs is a differentiator in the traditional marketing agency realm. It’s also a prime example of how varied marketing firms can be.
2. Constantly Updated XaaS Providers
Chances are strong that you work with plenty of XaaS providers. The most notable are likely all the SaaS companies that enable you to tap into advanced tech. But is the tech you’re getting as top-line as you need? Not necessarily.
Some SaaS providers rarely make changes in their software. This can leave you working with last year’s models. Ultimately, your people miss out on having access to the latest developments or tools. So be sure to vet all SaaS providers. Seek out ones known as leaders and innovators in their industries. (That’s why they’re leaders, after all.)
A great example of an XaaS company that keeps bumping up the bar is Salesforce. It’s hard to deny that Salesforce has been a driving force in the field of CRM and other databases. Even though it has competition, it’s remained aggressively innovative. This gives the company plenty of clout which could be beneficial if you’re not sure about the chops of your current database.
3. Automated Social Media Tech Platforms
Nowhere is consumer trending behaviors more evident than on social media. Frequently, you can spot a trend right away on social… but only if you’re looking for it. And that’s the concern. With a limited number of staff, you can’t pay someone to scour Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok all day. Fortunately, you don’t have to.
Many companies now offer a bevy of social media tools that automate the trend-seeking process. These tools can essentially be your company’s eyes and ears on social. For example, you can set a social media tool like Sprout Social to pay attention to keyword-specific hashtags. When those hashtags are used, your team gets an alert. Social media tools can also help you deploy messaging at appropriate times.
One note of caution: Not all social media management platform providers work with all social media sites. Make sure you choose a continuously improving partner that specializes in the sites relevant to your brand.
4. Broad-Functioning Data Management Resource Partners
Data is your friend when it comes to keeping up with the consumers you serve. However, you can’t do anything with your data if you don’t have a place to keep it or a way to examine it. This is where data management becomes critical.
How can you go about managing the incoming data and making certain it can be used to inform your marketing and sales moves? First, have a single, centralized location for all your data to go. Next, find out how to use your data to spot trends as early as you can. The quicker you notice a consumer trend, the quicker you can react. Finally, be sure that your data is constantly updated and scrubbed.
Many data management resource partners specialize in working within specific industries like healthcare or e-commerce. An example of this would be Harmony Health IT, that helps manage healthcare data. So don’t hesitate to find out what your competition is using, particularly your strongest competitors. If another business in your sector always seems to get the jump on you trend-wise, find out the data management tools that the business uses.
Being last in line isn’t a viable option for your company if you plan to grow and scale. You need to work with partners that will offer accurate consumer insight solutions.
Over the last two years, as the value of the cryptocurrency market reached dizzying new heights, publishers that covered the industry shared briefly in its wealth, with exchanges like Coinbase, Crypto.com and FTX spending lavishly on advertising to acquire new customers. But since April, declining adoption and waning consumer trust in the technology have led…
Domino’s salutes the “carryout heroes” who offer to pick up the pizza in a spot that promotes the chain’s continuing “Carryout Tips” promotion.
PLANÈTE B by Gwenola Wagon, an artist and professor in the Art Department of the Université de Paris 8. Published by éditions 369. The book is in French and this review will try and translate its ideas and nightmares.
Starting with the publisher’s presentation of the book: B runs a digital company called “A”. A is about to obtain the monopoly of sales on a planetary scale. It is, in a way, a total company. Along with its sales business, A revives NASA’s fantasies of the 1970s: building colonies and warehouses in space. And B sees himself as the pilot of the Enterprise, the Star Trek spaceship.
Why is the most prominent digital multinational, which controls so many products, secretly whipping up a huge plan to escape to space? A establishes a supernaturally efficient logistical infrastructure that radically transforms our relationship to the world.
In reality, it is not about B as an individual, nor is it about a society whose name starts with the first letter of the alphabet. It is neither about Jeff Bezos nor Amazon. B is no one in particular. A is a symptom.
Planet B is an essay that operates cross-checks and invents metaphors in order to apprehend a rapidly expanding monster. It tells the story of “planet B”, this hypermarket world generated by low resolution and by the speed of information propagation applied to everything. Like an outlet, Gwenola Wagon probes with seriousness and humour a logic which, through its delirious scale, escapes us.
Archizoom Associati, No-Stop City (Scale model), 1969-2001. Photo: © Philippe Magnon
Blue Origin’s coat of arms. Gradatim Ferociter, “Step by Step, Ferociously”
In her book, Gwenola Wagon mixes research, reflections and speculations to narrate the logic and absurdities of Planète B. She unfolds what she calls the “poison system”, a system that spread its tentacles in all directions and generates nefarious consequences at all levels.
We already know a lot about A and B. The mastership in tax evasion, the pavlovian signals the platform sends us, the devouring of smaller companies, etc. When A is not a shop, a provider of data hosting for governments and corporations, the owner of a legendary newspaper, a domestic security provider or the promoter of space tourism, it is a signifier of deplorable labour conditions, hyper profitability, unpaid taxes, hideous utilitarian warehouses, frenzied resource destruction, ransacked urban fabric, etc.
Wagon mentions the scandals and stories that we already know and recalls the ones we’ve forgotten about (that Whiskas Dash Button!) The reason why I’m reviewing her book is that the author also puts the story of A and B in a broader, even more bizarre context, conjuring the ideas of Shoshana Zuboff, Ray Bradbury, Philip K Dick, Rem Koolhaas, Archizoom to make sense (or not) of A’s trajectory and drawing parallels between B and the figures of marketing executive Bernardo Trujillo, analyst and futurologist Herman Kahn, navigator Captain Cook, lemurs and H. Irving Hancock in his fight against “bodily slovenliness.”
Physical training for business men. Basic rules and simple exercises for gaining assured control of the physical self, 1917 by Harrie Irving Hancock
Physical training for business men. Basic rules and simple exercises for gaining assured control of the physical self, 1917 by Harrie Irving Hancock
The book is sharp, funny and even Wagon’s most outrageous speculations appear as perfectly logical if you follow A and B’s itinerary. It is also agonising to see how we (valued A customers) fit into this sad story. In the Jamesbondeification chapter, for example, Wagon shows how a new Jeffy has emerged fitter and richer from the pandemic. The no-frill, beige and boring Jeff of the olden days is now showing off his biceps, baroque fashion taste, beautiful girlfriend and jet ski skills. Meanwhile, his company is demonstrating what trickle-down economics looks like: A’s employees are offered warm-up sessions before starting their working day. As for us, we are given the opportunity to fulfil our dreams of eternal abundance, revelling in drone-dropped Oreos and plastic pet toys from the voluptuous comfort of our own sofa. Any future desire we might have is second-guessed by algorithms. They take care of everything. That is A’s theory at least. As a result of these quick gratifications, we are now surrounded by cheap goods made from cheap non-recyclable materials. Most of them are useless, toxic and damaging to our health and the environment. Wagon writes that we now suffer from syllogomania: Compulsive hoarding. Even though Marie Kondo’s books are among the most popular items in the A catalogue, we still have an irresistible urge to accumulate often useless objects that we are unable to throw away.
Interestingly, B has launched all sorts of services to make our life easier but he never designed any that would help us deal with this overabundance of objects. Probably because he suffers from a different mental disorder. Wagon calls it claustroglobophobia, the syndrome of the globe too narrow, the feeling of being a prisoner of the Earth. He has, of course, a remedy for his ailment: escaping to a new and improved version of the Earth.
His plans and values are at odds with today’s biggest challenges. B’s vision of life in space is based on physicist Gerard O’Neill 1970s grandiose and much-idealised design projects for living in space. The vision not just looks dated, it also disregards the Space Treaty, ignores the physical laws of space and relies on even more extractivism. Just like building more and bigger warehouses means replacing precious soils with tarmac leading to even more resource depletion, building such space colonies means taking ownership of space resources and in particular of the minerals we are now relying on for the digital and energy transition. Not content to accelerate planet destruction by turning it into a giant warehouse, B plans to use the Earth as the take-off runway for his razzle-dazzle space programme.
Stéphane Degoutin and Gwenola Wagon, Atlas of the Cloud, 2021
Floor plans attached to alcohol permits explain a micro fulfilment center in the back of the house. Source: City of Los Angeles, via HNGRY
Gwenola Wagon closes her alarming portrayal of the A universe with a “happy ending”. In a few years, A will start its descent into total chaos. Disgruntled customers, exhausted employees, neglected drivers and a young generation of open-eyed citizens will converge, revolt and start an international court case against A which will lead to its dismantling and atomisation. Planète B certainly demonstrates that the day can’t come too soon.
Spreads from the book:
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