+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

Silicon Valley is falling in love with ads again and tech CEOs are acting weirdly

Jun 26, 2021, 18:24 IST
Business Insider
Photo By David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile via Getty Images

Hello, and welcome to this week's edition of the Insider Tech newsletter, where we break down the biggest news in tech, including:

Advertisement

Did someone forward this newsletter to you? Sign up here.

This week: Silicon Valley is falling in love with ads ... again

The great reopening is here, and with it, the opening of the purse strings for corporate marketing dollars.

That's good news for tech companies whose business models rely on digital advertising, like Google and Facebook. But there's a growing number of other tech companies you might not think of as advertising businesses who are looking to get in on the action.

Shopify, the $182 billion Canadian ecommerce powerhouse, is readying a new tool to let merchants tap into its data so they can target ads to potential customers on Facebook and Google, Insider reported.

Advertisement

  • The tool, called Shopify Audiences, could be a first step in a broader push into advertising by Shopify that could ultimately involve selling ads on its own platform.

And Instacart, the grocery delivery startup poised for an IPO, has been quietly building an ad business that Insider's Tom Dotan reported is on track to generate $1 billion by 2022.

The rush to bolt on advertising business may seem counterintuitive given the well-publicized privacy changes on iPhones that make it tougher for app makers to track users and target ads at them. But those restrictions apply to the data that apps collect by tracking users on iPhones. Platforms with their own audiences can treat their data however they want. In fact, with Apple's clampdown, the demand for data from the likes of Shopify seems likely to only become more valuable.

If you're into ads, make sure to sign up for Insider Advertising, the newsletter that brings together our best scoops and reporting on the media and advertising industry.

The summer of tech mogul weirdness

Facebook

It's tough to say exactly what's driving the trend, but the captains of the tech industry have been acting ... differently, of late. Maybe it's the result of 16 months in lockdown, or maybe it's something in the Silicon Valley water. Whatever the cause, consider these recent incidents:

Advertisement

Who knows what to expect next as the summer heats up.

Snapshot: The $28 million chair

It looks like the kind of thing a sadistic dentist might try to strap you into, but this curious reclining chair and wraparound headrest is actually a coveted seat on Jeff Bezos' spacecraft - the Blue Origin New Shepard - scheduled for takeoff in T minus 24 days.

Blue Origin

There are six of these seats in the rocket's capsule, but only four will be filled on the first ride: One for Bezos, one for his brother Mark, and two for a pair of unidentified passengers, one of whom ponied up $28 million for the privilege of the ride.

The seats are positioned next to giant windows so the passengers can relax and enjoy the celestial views. But the ride will be bumpy - the seats are designed to absorb some of the impact as the capsule soars more than 62 miles above sea level, with a force three times stronger than gravity that will pin the passengers to their chairs, and then plummets back down to Earth for a landing in the Texas desert.

Advertisement

One thing missing from the picture is a bucket, which might come in handy since first-time fliers apparently often throw-up during launch or landing.

Quote of the week:

Ashish Toshniwal is the founder and CEO of Y Media Labs. Ashish Toshniwal

"Almost no company has the resources to combat every social issue, and while making firm stances on social issues is great, creating real change requires diving deeply into a single issue, becoming educated, and taking concrete steps to combat the problem."

- Ashish Toshniwal, Founder and CEO of Y Media Labs, describing how his company approached the challenge of effectively using its resources to drive social change.

You're invited: Join us Tuesday at 12 p.m ET for a virtual event presented by PwC, spotlighting the biggest trends CEOs will focus on in the next 12 months. Register here.

Recommended readings:

Amazon pays struggling employees as much as $30,000 to leave and never work at the company again, leaked documents show

Advertisement

Augmented reality is waiting for its 2007 iPhone moment, according to the lead investor in the AR startup bought by Snap for $500 million

Leaked memo: Google is spinning up a new internal group focused on machine learning in a push to make 'substantial gains' in AI

We read all 323 pages of 23andMe's SPAC filing. Here are the 5 biggest obstacles it faces after its public debut.

These 10 AI startups raised the biggest Series A and B rounds of the last 2 years and are poised to boom

Andreessen Horowitz partner Martin Casado says the cost of cloud computing is a $100 billion drag on the biggest software companies, sparking a huge debate across the industry

Advertisement

The head of Toyota's VC arm has $300 million to spend on startups. Here's what he's looking for before he offers terms.

Not necessarily in tech:

Insider investigation reveals officials helped sell access to California public schools to Chinese elite

Thanks for reading, and if you like this newsletter, tell your friends and colleagues they can sign up here to receive it.

- Alexei

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article