Here's The FTC's Solution For Twitter Advertisers Who Can't Fit Legal Disclaimers Into Tweets [THE BRIEF]
Dario Sanches / Flickr, CCThe FTC has a solution for Twitter advertisers who have been freaking out at the idea of trying to squish legal disclaimers into tweets. Just use "Ad:" at the beginning of a tweet.
Twitter launched a big update to its ad center, which marketers use to see the performance of the campaigns.
Vodafone has ended its sponsorship of Formula 1 racing.
Uh oh: There's now a Yelp for ad agencies where CMOs can rank and rate their marketing vendors. Members include Kim Fell of OfficeMax, James Brown of Shell, Julie Lyle of Prudential and Susan Helstab of Four Seasons hotels.
Ford claims it's America's best-selling brand, when in fact it's not.
[x+1]'s Origin data management platform is the first to fully integrate with Google's DoubleClick Bid Manager buying platform. The company says this makes [x+1] the only data management platform with direct access into every major demand side platform (DSP) for buying online web ads in real-time bidding auctions. This means marketers can target audiences across all inventory, regardless of which DSP it is managed by, the company tells us.
Everyone who gets a job at Red Tettemer gets his or her likeness carved onto a crayon.
Poland has a fake George Clooney who appears in ads for brands too cheap to pay for the real one.
You didn't know you needed to see HBO's 1995 version of Game of Thrones.
Previously on Business Insider:
- Samsung's Advertising For The Galaxy S4 Has Been Weirdly — Deliberately? — Cheesy
- Jeff Gordon Puts On A Disguise, Takes Innocent Car Salesman On A Suicidal Test Drive
- A Friend Calls at 3AM, Needing $400 For A Gambling Debt To Some Thugs. Do You Help?
- Head Of World's Largest Ad Buyer Says Not Everything His Agency Does Should Be 'Fully Disclosed' To Clients
- Hooters Campaign To Persuade Women To Like It More Is Working (Kinda)
- General Motors Is Poised To Fire Its Ad Agency [THE BRIEF]
- LinkedIn Tells All: How Businesses Engage Users And Build A Following
- Extreme Anti-Islam Ads Are Now Running On San Francisco's Buses