12/13/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/13/2024 13:18
Welcome to The Week in Data Marketing, MarTechand AI, a weekly roundup from Quad Insights that sums up the latest news surrounding the technology-driven transformation of marketing.
As the holiday season nears its peak, leading technology companies are racing to unwrap their latest AI offerings. Among them:
More on AI
Sophisticated new ways of capturing data will fuel another year of growth in direct mail in 2025, a new white paper predicts. An estimated 80% of U.S. brands say they are planning to spend more on direct mail in the new year, according to Winterberry Group's "Delivering Performance 2024: Direct, Digital and the Dynamics Shaping the Future of Omnichannel Marketing,"which was sponsored by the U.S. Postal Service. The increase comes as brands are "leveraging techniques such as retargeting based on digital media, third-party marketing tech integration, direct mail triggers and QR codes."Winterberry Group specifically cites improvements in connecting household addresses to digital identifiers. (See also: "Data marketing's game-changer: How household addressability can transform your brand's connection with consumers,"from Quad Insights.)
That's the share of brands that cited availability of better data as a primary factor in their decision to spend more on direct mail, according to a Winterberry Group survey.
More on direct mail and channel mix
This week's Forbes CMO newsletterhighlights a study that offers fresh data on the effectiveness of omnichannel marketing campaigns. The Out of Home Advertising Association of America, working with The Harris Poll, found that two-thirds of consumers remember noticing online or social media elements - a handle, hashtag, contest, promotion code or QR code - in OOH ads. Half of all respondents (52%) say they are more likely to engage with a brand after viewing an ad that integrates one of those elements. The Harris Poll survey polled 2,035 U.S. adults.
More on omnichannel marketing
10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. That's 10 septillion years to you and me - the amount of time it currently takes the fastest supercomputer to perform a benchmark computation designed to test the capabilities of quantum computing. (For now.)
Google just reported that its new Willow computer processor solved the same problem in five minutes- a game-changer as researchers explore quantum computing applicationsin areas such as drug discovery, financial modeling, cybersecurity, sustainability and fundamental physics.
(No word yet on the ramifications for first-party data.)
More far-out AI news