Today in Digital Marketing - The Influencers That Never Have a Scandal
Episode Date: April 11, 2025Here is your wrap-up of the last week in the digital marketing space..📰 Get our free daily newsletter🌍 Follow us on social media or contact us📈 Advertising: Reach Thousands of Marketing Decis...ion-Makers.GO PREMIUM!Get these exclusive benefits when you upgrade:✅ Listen ad-free✅ Back catalog of 20+ marketing science interviews✅ Get the show earlier than the free version✅ Member-only monthly livestreams with TodAnd a lot more! Check it out: todayindigital.com/premium✨ Premium tools: Update Credit Card • Cancel.MORE🆘 Need help with your social media? Check us out: engageQ digital🌟 Rate and Review Us🤝 Our Slack.UPGRADE YOUR SKILLSGoogle Ads for Beginners with Jyll Saskin GalesInside Google Ads: Advanced with Jyll Saskin GalesFoxwell Slack Group and Courses.Today in Digital Marketing is hosted by Tod Maffin and produced by engageQ digital on the traditional territories of the Snuneymuxw First Nation on Vancouver Island, Canada. Associate producer: Steph Gunn.Some links in these show notes may provide affiliate revenue to us.Our Sponsors:* Check out Kinsta: https://kinsta.comPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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Ends 430-2025. Jeep is a registered trademark of FCA US LLC. It is Friday, April 11th, I'm Todd Maffin, here is your Friday Wrap-Up of the Week in
Digital Marketing.
We start as always with the advertising news that broke this week.
Meta is now adding automatic UTM parameters to all ads even if you don't manually
provide them.
This is useful because it's often difficult to track website results back to specific
campaigns and ads if those UTM parameters are forgotten.
These parameters will let you track results in external analytics tools like Google Analytics.
Snapchat launched sponsored AI lenses this week, a new generative AI ad format that lets users integrate themselves into branded AI-generated visuals using the front-facing camera on their phone.
Brands collaborate with Snap's production team to create prompts, themes, and poses with up to 10 different transformations per lens. Perlens. Be Real, once an anti-ad platform, has now launched its ad business in the US
under former TikTok executive Ben Moore. With more than 200 international advertisers already
on board, Be Real is entering the ad space at a time when TikTok's future in the US
is still uncertain.
And Google announced some new performance max updates this week. First, new customer
lifecycle goals and reporting.
Retention goals are now available.
This lets you bid more for lapsed customers.
Plus customer acquisition cost reporting can now be found in a new column in campaign reporting.
You can automatically source images from landing pages for more variety and some new image
enhancements can create additional versions of your images, and the
campaign-level negative keyword limit has been increased from 100 to 10,000.
The American President Donald Trump announced a 90-day pause on all the reciprocal tariffs,
with the exception of China, which will see tariffs increase to 125%.
As potential tariffs on Chinese imports approach,
online sellers are quickly adjusting. Many are hiking prices on Amazon and DTC sites
with some even adding cheeky Trump liberation tariff fees at checkout. Others are pausing
inventory orders and planning more price increases in the coming weeks as trade policy uncertainty
grows. The $1.2 trillion US e-commerce
industry is bracing for wider disruption across digital ads, logistics, and more. The European
Union could impose new taxes on American tech companies like Google and Meta if US and Europe
cannot get their trade talks sorted. The EU Commission president said that retaliatory
measures including a potential levy on digital
ad revenues, are being considered.
Amazon has reportedly cancelled orders for various products made in China, including
beach chairs, scooters, and air conditioners, as the ongoing trade war between China and
the US escalates.
And consumer sentiment fell for the fourth straight month, dropping 11% from March down more than 30% since December of last year.
The decline was broad across all demographics and political affiliations,
reflecting growing concerns over trade tensions and inflation.
Alright, some Google updates for you. inflation.
Alright, some Google updates for you.
And for the first time since 2015, Google's global search market share fell below 90%.
It happened in Q4 of last year with the trend continuing into this year except for a brief
spike in February where it went to 90.15%.
The shift signaling growing competition and changing user behavior.
The dip suggests it's not just a blip, but a sign of increasing pressure on Google's
once untouchable position.
Other search engines of course are gaining ground.
Yahoo is holding at 1.33%, Yandex at about 2.5%, and the privacy-focused DuckDuckGo,
which actually uses Bing's results, capturing just
about four-fifths of one percent of the market.
The rest?
Probably AI.
Google has updated its Shopping Tab listings report, now called the Merchant Opportunities
Report.
It has added some new details about payment methods and store ratings.
The report offers recommendations for improving how your online store appears on Google, specifically
for eligible sites selling physical goods.
If you've connected your Merchant Center account to Search Console, you will see suggestions
such as shipping info, setting up store ratings, updating payment methods, and so on.
And Google has made several updates to its Merchant Center product data specifications
with changes effective as of April 8th and
more coming on July 1st.
These include new rules for down payment price attributes, energy efficiency class attributes,
and they've added shopping attributes, some guidance for member pricing, and a bunch more.
To the world of social media now, and news today that TikTok has laid off employees
from its US-based e-commerce global governance and experience team.
This is its second round of cuts this year, following February layoffs to the Trust and
Safety team.
This new team oversees production listings, seller compliance, and IP protection within
TikTok shop.
The number of layoffs has not been confirmed but
the move obviously signaling mounting pressure on the unit. Reports suggest that
some employees have received low performance review scores and were
placed on improvement plans while others were just fired outright. TikTok,
Instagram, and YouTube all show view counts but what they view as a view
varies widely.
Some counts a few seconds of watch time,
while others include auto plays.
Experts warn that these numbers mislead audiences
and advertisers, making it hard to compare real performance
across platforms.
The Verge this week had a great piece about this,
if you're interested.
LinkedIn is testing a video trends feature in the US
to highlight popular videos across topics.
It is trying to help users discover relevant content and keep creators informed about what's resonating.
And a new report has found that LinkedIn is driving more engagement for brands with video impressions up nearly 75%
and poll posts driving a 200% boost in reach. Across the board, the company says its company pages, both large and small, are seeing a
rise in overall impression counts.
And YouTube is expanding its AI music creation tool within Creator Music, letting brands
and users generate custom songs in stream.
For those with access, creators can describe the type of music they want, and the AI tool will generate a track based on that description. YouTube then says
the music can be downloaded and used in videos without copyright concerns.
CapCut, which is owned by TikTok's parent company, has had this for a few months now.
Staying with AI for a moment, and this isn't creepy at all, Shopify's CEO is requiring
teams to prove that work can't be carried out by AI tools in order for those teams to
receive more budget or headcount, according to the information website.
In a company-wide memo, which he also posted publicly on X for some reason, he told staff
that worker performance will be assessed
in part on how well they can use AI tools.
And virtual influencers,
those are AI created characters with social media followings
are gaining popularity.
Studies show people can feel real emotional connections
with them even if they know they're fake.
These influencers cost less of course,
they stay on message, they don't have scandals,
making them attractive to brands seeking reliable,
engaging spokespeople.
So marketing science news now in a new study
has found that when brands apologize, their sales go up.
Researchers showed that sincere, timely apologies can rebuild trust and drive conversions.
Customers respond positively to accountability, especially when paired with action or compensation.
The findings suggest honesty may boost both image and revenue.
And a new study in the Journal of Marketing has found that bold, saturated colors like vivid
reds and deep blues can make consumers believe a product is more effective even when it's
not.
Consumers tend to associate bright colors with potency, often resulting in overuse or waste.
This perception extends to product packaging and advertising.
According to the researchers, to promote product efficacy,
consider using highly saturated colors,
but if sustainability is more your goal,
reserve those colors for products prone to overuse.
And finally, marketers are bringing mascots back,
hoping nostalgia and personality can boost brand recall.
Characters like Tony the Tiger and the Kool-Aid Man are making returns as companies seek emotional
appeal and easy recognition.
Experts say mascots offer timeless familiarity that the new digital tactics often lack.
Well, those were the top digital marketing stories.
Over the last five days, you would have gotten all of this news earlier
if you were signed up to our email newsletter,
which comes out every weekday at 5 o'clock Eastern time
and is completely free.
You can sign up at todayindigital.com slash newsletter.
I'm Todd Mapp and thanks for listening.
Have a restful weekend.
I'll see you again next week.
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