Why marketing is selling mobile short
It is time to not simply move mobile onto center-stage of our marketing plans or advertising budgets.
It is time to not simply move mobile onto center-stage of our marketing plans or advertising budgets.
Bain & Co.’s declaration of a complete luxury market recovery was overstated as the economy is still encumbered by low consumer demand for high-end goods, according to a reputed industry analyst.
St. Regis Hotels & Resorts doubled its global footprint in the past two years in spite of an economic downturn that left many travelers tightfisted with their finances.
Audi of America was the title sponsor of the first Eunice Kennedy Shriver Challenge – a run-walk-and-cycling benefit event hosted by Best Buddies International and Special Olympics.
Fashion designer Gucci has extended its mobile application to the iPad to let consumers view content such as high-quality photos and live feeds of fashion shows on the device’s large canvas.
Few affluent consumers plan to change their spending habits in the future while most others intend to cut back because of the dim economic outlook, according to the American Affluence Research Center.
Today in luxury marketing – 16-year-old Lindsey Wixson stars in Versace’s Vanitas fragrance ads; BMW to collaborate with Peugeot on hybrid system for FWD cars.
As the marketing clock inches closer to Thanksgiving and the holidays, the rush is on to bring out yet another mobile app – which has become almost as ubiquitous as the mobile device itself.