Why more brands are rethinking influencer marketing with gamified micro-creator programs (5 minute read)
Brands are leaning into gamified micro-creator programs that reward consistent content, moving away from one-off influencer deals. Programs like Urban Outfitters' Me@UO and Sephora's creator ecosystem give smaller creators commissions, access, and perks, while allowing brands to guide content and shape engagement. These programs increase loyalty and let creators contribute to product and campaign decisions. They also act as low-lift entry points for emerging creators and can lead to bigger collaborations with brands.
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Social media plays 'huge role' in promoting traditional gender views (4 minute read)
Social media exposes young men to messages about dominance and young women to traditional femininity. Gen Z men are more likely to support traditional gender roles. 31% believe a wife should obey her husband compared to 13% of men over 60. Among women, 18% of Gen Z agreed versus 6% of older women. Beliefs vary by country, from 4% in Sweden to 66% in Indonesia, and 80% in Thailand feel women's equality has gone too far. These influences are shaping attitudes even as most people hold progressive views.
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Stop the Mother's Day opt-out emails (2 minute read)
Mother's Day opt-out emails started as a thoughtful gesture but lost their impact once brands flooded inboxes with identical messages. Email has no algorithm to filter trends, so people receive every version. Instead of sending a separate opt-out email, design campaigns around customer behavior by using purchase history and intent signals to exclude irrelevant audiences. If you offer an opt-out, place a simple link at the top of the campaign so one click adds them to a Mother's Day exclusion segment.
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Get yourself a "hype monkey" (4 minute read)
A growing tactic in B2B marketing is assigning a dedicated social personality to post humorous or relatable content from a personal LinkedIn account, creating daily visibility with target prospects. By connecting with potential buyers and having internal teams engage with each post, companies trigger LinkedIn's algorithm to repeatedly surface that content in prospect feeds. The goal is to build familiarity and positive sentiment long before a sales conversation begins.
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What Clickable Reels Links and Hashtag Limits Mean for Your 2026 Instagram Strategy (9 minute read)
Instagram is shifting discovery from hashtag tactics to AI interpretation, introducing follower-only early access Reels, clickable in-video links, expanded analytics in the Edits app, AI comment sentiment summaries, and a reduced hashtag cap. Brands should treat early access posts as loyalty content or launch moments, use link overlays to move viewers between episodes or tutorial steps, and track the lowest skip rate metric to identify which opening visuals retain viewers. With fewer hashtags allowed, distribution now depends on clear on-screen language and strong audience retention signals.
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How to turn Claude Code into your SEO command center (9 minute read)
Claude Code can act as a centralized SEO analysis hub by pulling data from Google Search Console, GA4, Google Ads, and AI search sources into one project. This allows you to analyze SEO data through natural language queries. The setup takes about an hour and replaces hours of manual spreadsheet work by automatically cross-referencing datasets such as search queries, traffic, and ad performance. In one example, the system found 2,742 search terms that generated ad impressions but zero clicks, 351 opportunities to reduce paid spend where organic rankings were already strong, and 41 content gaps where ads were the only visibility. The workflow uses small Python scripts to fetch data into JSON files, which Claude Code reads to generate insights or reports in seconds. It speeds up analysis but still requires human review because AI can produce incorrect numbers and strategic decisions still depend on marketing expertise.
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Snapchat is the New Destination for B2B Marketing (2 minute read)
Snapchat reaches a large group of business decision makers and professionals who influence company spending and strategy. A survey of 2,254 professionals in the US found that Snapchat users are more likely to be executives, founders, or responsible for marketing decisions than non-users. These professionals show strong entrepreneurial behavior and are 2x more likely than non-users to run or start a side business. Social media is the top source of inspiration for new tools and ideas among this audience, and many show strong interest in AI for business solutions. About 60% of Snapchat users believe the platform could play a larger role in helping small businesses and entrepreneurs grow.
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The case for building lore (not telling your story) (5 minute read)
Telling an origin story grabs attention, but building lore creates a sense of belonging. Lore is the layered world behind content with consistent visuals, tone, formats, running jokes, or recurring mechanics that make audiences feel inside a universe. It accumulates over time and is discovered rather than explained. Instead of evaluating a single post, consider whether it adds a layer to the larger world. Stories capture interest while lore builds identity and loyalty.
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Why LTK Launched an AI Chatbot (6 minute read)
LTK launched LTK AI to meet growing shopper demand for chat-based experiences while ensuring creators are credited and earn commissions. The chatbot recommends products from verified creators. It uses context like location and weather, and aims to combine AI convenience with the discovery experience of social commerce. It also positions LTK competitively against other AI shopping tools and creator-driven platforms, recognizing that shoppers still trust creators more than AI alone.
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Your New Job Is to Onboard AI Agents: How AI Native Companies Actually Operate (6 minute read)
Managing and onboarding AI agents is becoming the core responsibility across roles at AI native companies. At Linear, agents act as first-class teammates that summarize customer data, create most tickets, and handle many bugs, while humans stay accountable for results. Ramp shows company-wide adoption by pushing employees through four AI proficiency levels and achieving over 500 shipped features and $1B revenue in 2025 with only 25 PMs. Factory builds fully around agents by hiring product engineers, preparing codebases for agent use, and encoding expert knowledge into reusable skills that any employee or agent can invoke. The common playbook is to default teams to AI tools, measure and enforce adoption, and treat agents like new hires that need context and oversight.
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