Companies are laying off and furloughing employees, retraining staff, and doubling down on e-commerce.
Observers predict more digital media companies will be sold in 2020 as many small, independent outlets still face a sour business climate.
McDonald's agency pitched a playable record made of bacon. Sources called it an example of why the agency's relationship with the company broke down.
Disney Plus is drawing interest from potential US subscribers, a new UBS survey shows. But most people won't abandon Netflix as they sign up.
Facebook's "clear-history" tool, which lets people clear their Facebook history, will limit one of advertisers' most powerful targeting tools.
Thomas Ranese's appointment comes on the heels of Uber laying off 400 employees from its global marketing team at the end of July.
CBS has agreed to buy Viacom, and employees at the takeover target are hoping their turnaround efforts will be enough to save their jobs.
CBS has agreed to buy Viacom, and employees at the takeover target are hoping their turnaround efforts will be enough to save their jobs.
Jeff Green said Amazon has an "objectivity problem" with advertisers that sell on its platform, which could limit its growth.
The YouTube creator Preston Arsement used his success online to invest and further monetize his brand, from merchandise to game development.
The news of ad agency Barton F. Graf shutting down has highlighted the seismic shifts facing the industry.
YouTube creator Preston Arsement used his success online to invest and further monetize his brand, from merchandise to game development.
Disney's third-quarter earnings miss underscores the long and messy road that lies ahead of it as it pivots to streaming video.
Thalberg's departure comes just as Yum Brands reported its second quarter earnings this week, and named former Adidas exec Mark King as its new CEO.
The company's new leaders said they see a big opportunity for contextual-based advertising as marketers prepare for regulation and privacy laws.
Investors including Alan Patricof, Peter Pham, and Tim Armstrong are pouring money into DTC brands like Dirty Lemon, Bev, and Liquid Death.
Norman de Greve said clients want a single point of contact at an agency who understands their business and can help grow it.
Business Insider obtained a pitch deck that Xandr presented to agencies in June that shows its growing ad-tech pipes.
Critics say agencies that own data businesses will give preferential treatment to their own clients and cut off access to non-clients.
Along with committing PR snafus, the company has failed to keep its marketing up to date, say branding experts.