<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <rss version="2.0"> <channel> <title>Marketing Remote Jobs | Find Remote Marketing Positions</title> <link>https://www.marketingremotejobs.app</link> <description>Discover top remote marketing jobs worldwide. Find remote positions in digital marketing, content, SEO, social media, and more. Apply to work-from-home marketing roles today.</description> <lastBuildDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 19:18:34 GMT</lastBuildDate> <docs>https://validator.w3.org/feed/docs/rss2.html</docs> <generator>https://github.com/jpmonette/feed</generator> <language>en</language> <image> <title>Marketing Remote Jobs | Find Remote Marketing Positions</title> <url>https://www.marketingremotejobs.app/images/logo-512.png</url> <link>https://www.marketingremotejobs.app</link> </image> <copyright>All rights reserved 2024, MarketingRemoteJobs.app</copyright> <category>Bitcoin News</category> <item> <title><![CDATA[Dominica's New Marketing Chief: A Strategic Move to Boost Tourism]]></title> <link>https://www.marketingremotejobs.app/article/dominicas-new-marketing-chief-a-strategic-move-to-boost-tourism</link> <guid>dominicas-new-marketing-chief-a-strategic-move-to-boost-tourism</guid> <pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2026 08:00:49 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[The **Discover Dominica Authority** has appointed **Wendy Lake** as its new **Destination Marketing Manager**, effective June 1, 2026. This strategic hire aims to strengthen Dominica's international profile and drive sustainable growth in visitor arrivals. ### Who is Wendy Lake? Lake brings **16 years of experience** in the Caribbean tourism industry. Her background includes **destination branding**, **market analysis**, **stakeholder relations**, and developing targeted marketing campaigns. She holds a **Master of Science in International Strategic Marketing with Distinction** from the University of the West Indies, St. Augustine campus, along with a Bachelor's degree in Management Studies and a professional certification. ### What Will She Do? As Destination Marketing Manager, Lake will lead the Authority's central marketing team, focusing on: - **Brand development** - **Trade partnerships** - **Data-driven marketing strategies** across key tourism markets - Enhancing Dominica's appeal to visitors - Coordinating promotional efforts regionally and internationally ### Why Now? Dominica is experiencing **increasing interest** from travelers seeking **nature-based**, **wellness**, and **adventure tourism** experiences. The appointment aligns with ongoing international marketing efforts to capitalize on this trend. ### Leadership Perspective **Marva Williams**, CEO and Director of Tourism, expressed confidence: "Wendy's appointment brings valuable marketing leadership... Her deep industry insight and collaborative approach will be instrumental in building impactful partnerships, enhancing our brand presence and positioning the destination effectively in a dynamic global market." ### Lake's Vision "I am excited and truly honoured to begin a new chapter... I look forward to contributing to the promotion and marketing of beautiful Dominica, showcasing its rich culture, breathtaking natural beauty, authentic experience, and warm people to the world," said Lake. The Discover Dominica Authority remains focused on strategic marketing initiatives to strengthen competitiveness, increase visitor arrivals, and create lasting benefits for the local tourism industry.]]></description> <author>contact@marketingremotejobs.app (MarketingRemoteJobs.app)</author> <category>destinationmarketing</category> <category>tourism</category> <category>dominica</category> <category>marketingstrategy</category> <category>caribbean</category> <enclosure url="https://dominicanewsonline.com/news/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Image-of-Wendy-Lake-e1780514055414.jpeg" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[Why Automating These SEO Tasks with AI Could Be Your Biggest Mistake]]></title> <link>https://www.marketingremotejobs.app/article/why-automating-these-seo-tasks-with-ai-could-be-your-biggest-mistake</link> <guid>why-automating-these-seo-tasks-with-ai-could-be-your-biggest-mistake</guid> <pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 16:00:42 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[When AI arrived in the marketing mainstream, it was accompanied by a persistent and scary narrative: [the machines are coming for our jobs](https://www.searchenginejournal.com/this-is-why-ai-wont-take-your-job-yet/548765/). On the surface, those fears might appear well-founded. According to the [Content Marketing Institute](https://eu-assets.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt663d10211b43b0ca/blt7a1ac440b8695461/69d521e7570dfe08688bdd59/cmi-marketing-careers-salary-2026.pdf), **43% of surveyed marketers** said their organization had laid off marketing employees within the last year – a staggering 30% increase from 2024. For organizations with 1,000 or more employees, this number rises to **62%**. But a single stat can never give us the full picture. One thing we have in abundance right now is research papers, reports, and surveys trying to understand AI’s impact on business, on consumers, on creativity, on cybercrime, and, of course, on the workplace – from how we work to *if* we work. Taken together, these studies reveal a far more complicated story. Anthropic recently published its report on the [Labor Market Impacts of AI](https://cdn.sanity.io/files/4zrzovbb/website/2b5bbaf2c1eb81dbf6e6fb813c1a24e35a64d376.pdf) (March 2026), which found “no systematic increase in unemployment for highly exposed workers since late 2022.” And the [World Economic Forum](https://reports.weforum.org/docs/WEF_Future_of_Jobs_Report_2025.pdf) predicts that, while AI and information process technologies will displace about 9 million jobs by 2030, it will also create about 11 million new jobs. It seems AI might eventually drive a net gain in jobs. Of course, stats like these are no reassurance to anyone who [finds themselves “displaced” by AI](https://www.searchenginejournal.com/which-marketing-jobs-are-most-affected-by-ai/552351/) in the interim. Anthropic’s report also ranked the 10 occupations with the greatest potential exposure to AI. Computer programmers (74%) top the list, while **marketing specialists (64.8%)** come fifth, which should leave us in no doubt that [SEO as a profession is extremely exposed to AI disruption](https://www.searchenginejournal.com/new-ai-jobs-index-ranks-784-occupations-by-loss-risk/570867/). So, should we be worried or not? The question isn’t how much you can automate or safely delegate to AI, or how small a team you can get away with. As it turns out, **some of the most mundane or repetitive jobs, many of which might seem ripe for automation, may be far more valuable retained as manual, human-led tasks**. Just because it’s easy or even cheaper to automate something doesn’t necessarily mean you should. ## Augmented Versus Autonomous AI Anthropic also publishes a quarterly Economic Index report, analyzing Claude usage data to track how people are working with AI in professional settings. At the time of writing, the most recent report, [Learning Curves](https://www.anthropic.com/research/economic-index-march-2026-report), came out in March and draws on data from February 2026. It found that **more than half (53%) of all interactions on Claude.ai are now “augmented”** – [human-in-the-loop interactions](https://www.searchenginejournal.com/is-the-seo-job-market-undergoing-a-major-shift/546433/) where the user learns, collaborates, and iterates on a task with Claude. Automated use – defined as interactions where the user delegates tasks entirely to Claude with little back-and-forth – has fallen to 44%. So, is this more efficient? The January edition, [Economic Primitives](https://www.anthropic.com/research/anthropic-economic-index-january-2026-report), delves deeper into questions of task complexity, completion speed, and success rates – and this is where things get complicated. It turns out that more complex tasks benefit from greater time savings. Working with AI can help users to complete tasks that would typically require a high-school education 9x faster, 12x faster for tasks requiring a college degree. But these huge time savings come with a trade-off – and it’s a biggie. The same report found that **basic queries or tasks** currently achieve a **70% success rate**. For more complex tasks, the success rate falls to just **66% for college-level work**. While that’s only a 4% difference, I’d argue neither result is particularly encouraging. To put it another way, **the outputs from Claude aren’t up to snuff approximately one-third of the time**. One area where this low success rate has the potential to create issues is in code generation, which currently makes up 35% of all Claude usage. Research from code review platform [CodeRabbit](https://www.coderabbit.ai/blog/state-of-ai-vs-human-code-generation-report) found that **AI-generated code produces roughly 1.7 times more issues than human-written code**, including logic errors, readability problems, and, perhaps most concerning, security vulnerabilities. If you’re an experienced developer, you’re more likely to spot the errors and improve on what AI has given you, treating Claude’s output as rough prototype rather than a finished product. But what if you’re not? This is the dilemma: [AI is not a replacement for genuine expertise](https://www.searchenginejournal.com/will-ai-replace-seo-specialists/509934/). On the contrary, it appears a level of expertise is essential to using AI effectively. Ironically, the people who would once have carried out a lot of these routine tasks – juniors or entry-level hires – lack the experience to assess what AI gives them. That’s why I strongly believe [no one should delegate a task to AI that they couldn’t do themselves](https://www.searchenginejournal.com/new-ai-models-make-more-mistakes-creating-risk-for-marketers/546319/). Once someone has learned a task, and developed a deep understanding of the concepts involved, then [AI becomes a tool to speed up the process](https://www.searchenginejournal.com/how-to-use-ai-to-streamline-time-consuming-seo-tasks/566499/). ## The Deskilling Trap If expertise is vital to working with AI effectively, then it follows that businesses should focus on hiring people with the necessary skills and experience. And multiple studies suggest this is exactly what’s happening. * Entry-level job postings have [declined ~35%](https://www.reveliolabs.com/news/macro/is-ai-responsible-for-the-rise-in-entry-level-unemployment/) across the U.S. economy since January 2023, with AI cited as a significant contributing factor. * In tech companies, hiring of new graduates with less than a year of experience has [declined 50%](https://www.signalfire.com/blog/signalfire-state-of-talent-report-2025) since 2019. Grads now account for only 7% of hires. * [One in three companies](https://eu-assets.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt663d10211b43b0ca/blt7a1ac440b8695461/69d521e7570dfe08688bdd59/cmi-marketing-careers-salary-2026.pdf) has pulled back on hiring entry-level marketers, nearly 2.5 times more than those increasing entry-level hiring. At the same time, organizations appear to be increasing, rather than decreasing, their overall hiring of marketing talent by a significant margin. * With a hiring net score of +22.3 points (% increasing – % decreasing), [organizations are net-positive on growing their overall teams](https://eu-assets.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt663d10211b43b0ca/blt7a1ac440b8695461/69d521e7570dfe08688bdd59/cmi-marketing-careers-salary-2026.pdf) in 2026. * [59% of all SEO job postings](https://www.semrush.com/blog/seo-job-market-study/) are for senior leadership roles, with mid-level roles accounting for just 25%. This suggests organizations aren’t laying off staff or cutting back on junior hires to shrink their teams, but to reshape them. They’re hiring more senior, skilled, and experienced marketing talent who, as the CMI report puts it, “can direct, oversee, and – when necessary – rebut AI rather than compete with it.” But is that conclusion supported by the data? Both the Anthropic Labor Impacts report and the [Revelio Labs](https://www.reveliolabs.com/news/macro/is-ai-responsible-for-the-rise-in-entry-level-unemployment/) research attempted to answer this question by comparing entry-level hiring patterns in industries and occupations with differing levels of exposure to AI disruption. The Anthropic findings, based on tracking the monthly job-start rate for younger workers (aged 22-25), were suggestive but not conclusive. However, the Revelio Labs data focused on advertised entry-level job openings across four categories, finding that AI exposure has had a clear impact on entry-level demand: * **40% decline** in highly exposed entry-level jobs. * **33% decline** in lowly exposed entry-level jobs. * **27% decline** in highly exposed non-entry-level jobs. * **16% decline** in lowly exposed non-entry-level jobs. Taking all the evidence together, the picture we’re left with is of a skills market in crisis. **Most of the demand is now concentrated at the top, while the bottom of the pipeline thins out.** There’s a crunch coming. ## The Qanat Problem These days, talk of AI “transforming the landscape” has become an overused cliche. But around 2,500 years ago in ancient Persia, qanats were an equally revolutionary technology that quite literally transformed the landscape. Qanats are precisely engineered underground channels, each one dug by hand by skilled workers called muqannis, using gravity alone to carry water over great distances from the mountains to the deserts. Farms flourished. Cities grew. Persia bloomed. Like AI, the benefits were huge, but the infrastructure was largely invisible. People became accustomed to drinking and bathing and irrigating their gardens with little regard for how the water got there. Well-maintained, there is absolutely no reason why a qanat could not continue bringing water for hundreds, even thousands of years. In fact, some ancient qanats are still active even today, with 11 of these systems collectively designated as a [UNESCO World Heritage Site](https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1506/). Even if a qanat fell into disrepair through neglect – shafts left uncleared, tunnel walls allowed to crumble, silt left to accumulate – or if other, deeper wells extracted too much groundwater, lowering the water table below the level of the qanat, the consequences weren’t always immediate. Water would continue to flow for a while, but it would gradually decrease over time, until the flow became a trickle, then a dribble, and eventually … nothing. Right now, businesses are happily drawing as much metaphorical water as they can from AI. However, the consequences of overuse and poor planning – such as applying AI to the wrong tasks – might not become apparent for some time. For now, the water still flows – but that doesn’t mean there’s no damage. Many of today’s entry-level hires will go on to become the mid-level and senior talent of tomorrow. But without a constant flow of new blood entering the industry and gradually learning the craft, that skilled talent pool will soon shrink. And with demand for senior marketing expertise on the increase, you can expect the cost of hiring that talent to go up. By then, it’ll already be too late to start hiring and training the next generation of marketers. ## What Not To Automate The default approach to AI adoption seems to be to identify any tasks that are repetitive, time-consuming, or mechanical, and automate them – or at least as much of the process as possible. This isn’t necessarily wrong, and there are plenty of such tasks that can easily be delegated to AI without stealing valuable experience from someone, like downloading files, formatting documents, or aggregating data from multiple sources. There’s little to no value to be gained from expending human effort on these. However, some repetitive tasks do generate value, even if, on paper, manually completing the task looks like cost and inefficiency. These are the tasks, which, over time, imbue an understanding of *why* something works. **The value is in the investment you are making in your team’s development.** You might already have some form of staff development program or provide support to employees wanting to take up training courses. But this isn’t about sending your devs on a two-week course in JavaScript. This is about mastering the everyday stuff no course or textbook can teach you. **Keyword research** is a good example of a task where SEO theory turns into practical understanding. Yes, AI can produce a keyword list faster than anyone, clustered by intent, filtered by difficulty, and mapped to the funnel. You could generate the complete report in the time it takes a junior to open a spreadsheet. But by conducting keyword research for a wide variety of clients in different verticals and targeting different customers, a fledgling SEO will gradually acquire and hone their commercial instincts. Why are certain keywords more valuable than others? How do factors such as intent, geographic location, or even the time of year impact the results? Which keywords represent the strongest opportunities for a client? It’s one thing to present a client with a neatly formatted document setting out a long list of viable keyword options, but it’s quite another to be able to answer the client’s questions, absorb feedback, and make further recommendations. Don’t approach AI in terms of roles or job titles. The key is to **audit your tasks and workflows to identify which activities don’t increase understanding and, more importantly, which ones do – and assign value accordingly.** This allows you to be deliberate and strategic about which activities to preserve as training infrastructure. ## Practice Makes Perfect The key to mastering any form of expertise is repetition – and there are no shortcuts. Want to play the clarinet? Perhaps, you dream of fronting a jazz band one day, creating music that clings to the soul. AI can play music. AI can even *create* music. But AI cannot make someone into a musician. It cannot replace the repetitive, tedious practice required for someone to develop genuine expertise. In SEO and marketing, all those routine, repetitive tasks aren’t inefficiencies to be automated away. **They are the scales. They are the learning to read sheet music.** You can’t magically imbue fresh-faced graduates with five years’ experience overnight. You need to give them five years working on the job, developing their skills, deepening their knowledge, and honing their instincts. That’s why it is vital for businesses to keep hiring and developing new talent. After all, it’s far cheaper to hire, nurture, and develop internal talent than it is to compete for senior expertise in a shrinking pool – with salary expectations to match. No one notices when a music student stops practicing, even more so if they never had the opportunity to start. But if too many budding musicians never master their instruments, there will be no one left to play in those jazz clubs and concert halls until, one day, the music stops.]]></description> <author>contact@marketingremotejobs.app (MarketingRemoteJobs.app)</author> <category>ai</category> <category>seo</category> <category>deskilling</category> <category>talentpipeline</category> <category>automation</category> <enclosure url="https://cdn.searchenginejournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/deskilling-trap-973.png" length="0" type="image/png"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[Tabcorp Bets Big on Dentsu: 30-Year OMD Era Ends in Media Agency Shake-Up]]></title> <link>https://www.marketingremotejobs.app/article/tabcorp-bets-big-on-dentsu-30-year-omd-era-ends-in-media-agency-shake-up</link> <guid>tabcorp-bets-big-on-dentsu-30-year-omd-era-ends-in-media-agency-shake-up</guid> <pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 08:00:36 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[Tabcorp has appointed **Dentsu** to lead its media planning and buying activities after a closed agency review that began at the start of the year. The move ends Tabcorp’s nearly **30-year relationship with OMD**. Tabcorp, Australia’s largest racing, sports, and wagering entertainment company, operates brands like **TAB**, **Sky Racing**, and **MAX**. Kent Madders, Tabcorp’s General Manager of Marketing, praised Dentsu’s innovative approach to client partnerships, stating: > "Dentsu has a long history of helping some of Australia’s biggest brands grow… we were impressed with the strategic approach Dentsu presented to navigate the changing advertising landscape within wagering and enhance Tabcorp’s brand positioning." Madders also highlighted Dentsu’s **technology and automation capabilities** as key factors in optimizing media strategy for personalized customer communications. This win is significant for Dentsu and its new media practice lead, **Chris Ernst**, making Tabcorp one of Dentsu’s largest media accounts after Woolworths. Ernst commented: > "We’re delighted to partner with Tabcorp on its next chapter of growth. The strong alignment between our teams was clear, as was the potential to bring our strategic capabilities to life at scale." Dentsu recently folded its media agency brands **Carat** and **iProspect** into a master brand under Ernst, a move that saw several leaders depart. Tabcorp’s selection of Dentsu ends its long-term partnership with OMD. Madders acknowledged OMD’s contributions: > "OMD’s contribution over a long period cannot be understated… We thank them for their support, professionalism, and expertise." Tabcorp is present in over **3,500 retail venues** nationally, while Sky Racing broadcasts **150,000+ live races annually** into more than one million homes via Foxtel and globally. It also holds broadcast rights for the **Melbourne Cup Carnival** and integrates with Nine and Seven’s racing coverage. This review is part of a series of high-profile media account moves, including **Asahi** (won by Mindshare) and **Samsung** (tipped to move to Publicis Groupe).]]></description> <author>contact@marketingremotejobs.app (MarketingRemoteJobs.app)</author> <category>tabcorp</category> <category>dentsu</category> <category>mediaagency</category> <category>marketingstrategy</category> <category>wagering</category> <enclosure url="https://www.bandt.com.au/information/uploads/2026/02/TAB.png" length="0" type="image/png"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[Duolingo's 'Creator Army' Is a Strategic Blunder: Why Killing the Unhinged Owl Will Backfire]]></title> <link>https://www.marketingremotejobs.app/article/duolingos-creator-army-is-a-strategic-blunder-why-killing-the-unhinged-owl-will-backfire</link> <guid>duolingos-creator-army-is-a-strategic-blunder-why-killing-the-unhinged-owl-will-backfire</guid> <pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 16:00:45 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[Duolingo, famously a brand that took flight on TikTok, is now citing an algorithmic change as a reason to emphasize an army of creators over its viral owl shenanigans. Mark Ritson issues a warning to its brand managers in a language they’ll surely understand. There is a special kind of stupid in marketing. It is not the ordinary stupid of bad creative or wasted budget. It is the **strategic stupid** – the kind that requires meetings, a reorg and a press release. I call it, Duolingo stupid. Last month, the company announced it was dialing back its famous “unhinged” marketing approach. Fewer butt jokes. More balance. A recalibration from “80% unhinged, 20% wholesome” toward something more corporate. More generic. More safe. The reason, according to Duolingo, is that organic reach on TikTok has declined, and the platform now wants brands to pay for it. So Duolingo is pivoting. Like most brands (especially at Unilever), it is now committed to influencers… sorry, creators… to use the current terminology. In May, Duolingo announced it was building what it called a “creator army.” According to Business Insider, it was reaching out to creators “to encourage them to become paid ambassadors and make new TikTok burner accounts for fun content about the Duolingo brand.” The brand that built the most effective social media presence in the recent history of corporate marketing – **17m TikTok followers, 472m likes** across five years, a following that made rival brands weep – has decided to abandon the thing that created all of that and pay strangers to pretend to like it on fake accounts instead. This is not going to work. To understand why, you have to go back to the beginning and understand what did work, and what, I argue, could still work. In 2021, a 23-year-old hire named **Zaria Parvez** decided that working in a big Manhattan agency sucked. She got a low-tier job at Duolingo because – brace yourself – she genuinely liked the company and its culture. Then she asked if she could do something with Duolingo’s dormant TikTok account. She had **no budget, no team and no brief**. What she did have was a shit ton of savvy, a tolerance for chaos and a stupid green owl mascot. She’s left the business now, which goes a long way to explaining the *new* direction. I hate the term “social first.” I hate any marketing term that ends in “first” because it invariably means putting the tactical horse before the strategic one; it always means someone is doing something wrong. But I’ll give it to Parvez. Her “social first” approach at Duolingo almost, *almost* made a cynical old man change his mind. She started posting in a manic, on-brand, off-the-radar kind of way. Duo stalked celebrities. Duo had public meltdowns. Duo took a shit and then sold its shit. Duo turned up at events uninvited and behaved badly. Within months, the account had millions of followers. By 2024, Duolingo’s own shareholder letters were crediting the “unhinged and viral marketing campaigns” with driving user growth. The company cited the **Dead Duo campaign** – killing off the mascot in February 2025 – as a key driver behind **49% daily active user growth** in Q1 2025. Forty-nine percent. For murdering an owl. It would be dismissive to call this just a social media tactic. It was **pure brand building of the highest order**. Consistent, distinctive, disruptive brand building, conducted through a medium that most companies use for corporate announcements and employee birthdays. Duo had personality. That personality was the brand. It was a textbook case of distinctiveness, delivered cheaply and with enormous effect. The results followed. **Daily active users grew 40% or above** for every single quarter from Q2 2022 through Q2 2025. Revenue was up 40% year on year through 2025. Paid subscribers passed 10m. These are not vanity metrics. That is a company making serious money, in part because its marketing made the product famous and beloved. So why change it? To understand Duolingo’s current anxiety, you have to understand what happened to the company in 2025. Growth that spectacular creates its own gravity. Investors get used to 40%-plus DAU growth. Analysts build it into their models. The business, rationally, starts looking for new levers to pull. We don’t say this enough: growth might be inherent to the system, but it is also a motherfucker. In that context, the marketing team suddenly faced two converging problems. The first was self-inflicted. In April 2025, Duolingo declared itself, ahem, “AI-first” and announced it was replacing contract workers with artificial intelligence. The internet, which had been Duolingo’s most enthusiastic collaborator, turned on it. The company reportedly lost **more than 400,000 TikTok followers** in weeks. Engagement collapsed. The brand that had built its entire appeal on feeling human, chaotic and authentic had just told its audience it was happy to automate the shit out of everything, including its humans. The audience noticed. They cared. They left. A word here. If you missed **Eric Schmidt getting booed** during his speech to graduates at the University of Arizona, you missed a big cultural insight. Not just a general distaste for billionaires, nothing new there, but the specific moment when he got booed by twentysomethings in Tucson: the bit where he got all passionate and sweaty about the impact of AI. Old men like Schmidt love the techno-efficiency ahead. But if you are 23 and looking at the worst job market since the Great Depression, you aren’t feeling it. There is a **generational divide in AI enthusiasm** that no one, yet, is talking about. And it’s the reverse of the usual revolutionary demographics. The old fuckers are in the vanguard. The kids are being left behind. The second Duolingo problem was structural. DAU growth decelerated throughout 2025, and Duolingo’s own shareholder letter in early 2026 acknowledged the company expected only **20% growth in 2026**, down from consistent 40%-plus growth for three years. Some of that deceleration was natural at scale. But some of it was the direct consequence of the AI announcement breaking the relationship the brand had spent four years building. When you are a public company and your growth rate halves, you look for explanations that are exogenous. That’s a $50 way of saying that if you work in finance, the answer can never be “we don’t know” or “we are a bit shit at the moment.” You have to find a bullshit excuse. The weather is the first and most relied upon option. FX is good too. So is consumer sentiment. When those hoary old options don’t play, you have to get a bit more creative. Duolingo went with the TikTok algo. Blame the medium rather than the message or, God forbid, the messengers. Facebook reach declined, said everyone in 2013. Actually, brands had stopped making content worth spreading. Email open rates are falling, said everyone in 2018. Actually, the emails had become terrible. TikTok wants brands to pay for reach, says Duolingo in 2026. Actually, Duolingo betrayed its audience and then killed the creative that had made them care in the first place. Nothing fundamental has changed about TikTok’s organic reach mechanics. The platform still makes unknown creators globally famous overnight on zero budget. The algorithm still rewards content that people want to watch. What changed is Duolingo went from creating content people wanted to watch to creating a corporate crisis, and then decided the problem was the platform. The **burner accounts proposal** makes this worse. The brand that built one of the most recognizable and genuine social presences on earth is now planning to obscure its involvement by having paid people pretend to be organic fans on anonymous profiles. That is **digital astroturfing**. And, in the current regulatory environment around undisclosed influencer payments, a slightly ropey approach that leaves a sticky residue. One of the most persistent pathologies in marketing is the inability to distinguish between what created a result and what merely accompanied it. Duolingo’s growth was driven by a **distinctive brand personality**, consistently expressed, on a platform its audience loved. The channel was TikTok. The driver was the brand. When performance dips, companies instinctively reach for the channel as the explanation. Re-platform. Buy more media. Build a creator army. Do what everyone else is doing. Do anything except confront the harder question, which is whether they have broken the thing that made them famous. The correct diagnosis in Duolingo’s case is not particularly complicated. The AI-first announcement was a **trust catastrophe** with exactly the audience that had been its most fervent advocate. It does not require fewer butt jokes and more brand ambassadors with fake accounts. That will make things worse. It needs senior managers to actually understand their brand as well as the consumers who have rejected it. **Duo does not need to grow up. Duo needs to remember what it was. Before it’s too late.** *Mark Ritson is a former marketing professor, brand consultant and seven-time PPA Columnist of the Year. He is the founder of the MiniMBA in Marketing.*]]></description> <author>contact@marketingremotejobs.app (MarketingRemoteJobs.app)</author> <category>duolingo</category> <category>brandstrategy</category> <category>socialmediamarketing</category> <category>influencermarketing</category> <category>tiktok</category> <enclosure url="https://thedrum-media.imgix.net/thedrum-user-assets-prod/s3/images/original/duo-smush-background.png?w=1280&ar=default&fit=crop&crop=faces&auto=format" length="0" type="image/png"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[Why Independent Agencies Are Winning: Inside the New Wave of Creative Agility]]></title> <link>https://www.marketingremotejobs.app/article/why-independent-agencies-are-winning-inside-the-new-wave-of-creative-agility</link> <guid>why-independent-agencies-are-winning-inside-the-new-wave-of-creative-agility</guid> <pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2026 08:00:44 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[**The New Wave** is Campaign Brief’s Q&A series spotlighting the next generation of independent creative companies and exploring how the indie model is evolving. From structure and speed to culture and capability, we unpack where these businesses are finding their edge and what’s driving client decisions today. Next up is Phil Smith and Suzy Smiley, Agency Partners at [Apparent](https://www.apparent.com.au/). ### 1. Who They Are Apparent is a world-class, independent, customer-centric Australian agency with a global footprint. They stand for **Undeniable Impact** – measurable and tailored to each client’s unique business context. In simple terms, they help brands find, get, keep, and grow customers. ### 2. Indies: Still Challengers or the Norm? Independents are no longer niche or scrappy underdogs – they’ve become a **mainstream competitive force**. The conversation today is less about whether indies can compete with holdcos and more about why clients wouldn’t choose one. Indies have matured, gaining access to capabilities and tools that were previously inaccessible. They operate with a challenger mindset: faster, founder-led, less political, and closer to commercial outcomes. <iframe src="https://player.vimeo.com/video/1195855622" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe> ### 3. Unfair Advantage Over Networks Their independence and global delivery footprint provide **freedom and agility** to shape commercial and delivery models around clients’ exact needs, without holding company mandates. They execute in most markets at speed with a bias for action. ### 4. Using AI to Compete Above Their Weight AI is elevating the impact, speed, and sophistication of their work. They apply AI at an application level with purpose, never for its own sake. **Human intelligence and curiosity** shape meaning and originality, while AI enables efficiency, creativity, and precision. Their proprietary LLM framework, **Leadership, Labs and Mavericks**, embeds AI adoption across the agency. Through partnerships with Google and early access to tools like Gemini AI Ultra, NanoBanana, and Veo3, they explore emerging technologies before market release. They’re already using AI for synthetic research agents, proprietary Gems for automation, AI-powered creative production, and Generative Engine Optimisation. <iframe src="https://player.vimeo.com/video/1195855664" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe> ### 5. Clients Choosing Indies Clients that want **true partnership** and closer integration with the people driving the work are choosing indies. They want senior leaders engaged, teams that understand commercial challenges, and agencies invested in delivering meaningful impact. Clients still want full-service capability but with greater adaptability, collaboration, and accountability. Indies now offer sophisticated thinking and access to advanced tools traditionally associated with larger networks. ### 6. What’s Next: Growth Apparent is on a growth trajectory – ranked No.2 agency in Australia for new business wins by TrinityP3. But growth only matters if they stay true to their culture and remain close to clients’ needs. The best growth comes from an environment where people thrive, clients see real impact, and the business grows as a result – a **win-win-win**.]]></description> <author>contact@marketingremotejobs.app (MarketingRemoteJobs.app)</author> <category>independentagencies</category> <category>creativeagility</category> <category>aiinmarketing</category> <category>agencyevolution</category> <category>clientpartnership</category> <enclosure url="https://campaignbrief.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Apparent-TNW.jpg" length="0" type="image/jpg"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[Cruise Boom in Mobile: Who Should Pay for Marketing as Carnival Demand Soars?]]></title> <link>https://www.marketingremotejobs.app/article/cruise-boom-in-mobile-who-should-pay-for-marketing-as-carnival-demand-soars</link> <guid>cruise-boom-in-mobile-who-should-pay-for-marketing-as-carnival-demand-soars</guid> <pubDate>Sun, 31 May 2026 16:00:30 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[Cruising out of Mobile is reaching new heights, with the **Carnival Spirit** consistently sailing at capacity with over 2,000 passengers. As the even larger **Carnival Valor** (3,000 passengers) prepares to arrive in 2027, city officials and Visit Mobile are locked in a debate over who should fund the marketing that fuels this growth. ### The Funding Dispute At the center of the discussion is a **$100,000 agreement** for the city to support cruise terminal marketing. City Councilman Ben Reynolds argues that with the city already funding capital improvements, marketing should come from tourism tax revenues, not the General Fund. “The City of Mobile is perceived with being flushed with cash,” Reynolds said, emphasizing that every dollar matters for essential services. ### Increased Tourism Revenues In March 2025, Mobile raised its lodging tax from 14% to 16%, boosting funding for tourism marketing. Visit Mobile’s share of hotel tax revenues increased from 33.5% to 37.5% under a five-year extension of the **Tourism Improvement District (TID)**. David Clark, CEO of Visit Mobile, notes that the $100,000 request is typical, with additional funds from TID and Visit Mobile covering the rest. ### Marketing vs. Operations Clark explains the distinction: **Carnival markets their ships and itineraries**, while Visit Mobile markets the destination. “They have a floating asset and they can go anywhere in the world if the demand is not there. As a destination, it shows confidence that we’re marketing this opportunity. It’s worked very well.” ### Councilman’s Concerns Reynolds wants Visit Mobile to absorb the cost, especially as the city faces upcoming expenses like replacing bollards for the larger Valor and potentially building a new parking deck. “We want the demand to be so high that we need to build another cruise terminal,” he said, acknowledging the economic benefits. ### Proven Demand Since the pandemic, seasonal sailings have been at or near capacity. Visit Mobile’s metrics show **over 250,000 active users** on cruise-related websites with a 64% engagement rate. Social media campaigns on Meta and Google target key markets along I-65, the Florida Panhandle, and west to Jackson, Mississippi. Clark is confident that growing resources will soon allow Visit Mobile to fully fund the marketing.]]></description> <author>contact@marketingremotejobs.app (MarketingRemoteJobs.app)</author> <category>mobile</category> <category>cruisetourism</category> <category>marketingfunding</category> <category>visitmobile</category> <category>carnival</category> <enclosure url="https://www.al.com/resizer/v2/TZO5NKXHQFHHDONOQS56RD3C6U.png?auth=e7ef653a8d7cb75556f0ec9e0bc20cf93d0d644152bbf799bd281d8ebcc49cf5&width=1280&smart=true&quality=90" length="0" type="image/png"/> </item> <item> <title><![CDATA[5 Key Lighting Industry Updates: AI, Acquisitions, and Marketing Fails]]></title> <link>https://www.marketingremotejobs.app/article/5-key-lighting-industry-updates-ai-acquisitions-and-marketing-fails</link> <guid>5-key-lighting-industry-updates-ai-acquisitions-and-marketing-fails</guid> <pubDate>Sun, 31 May 2026 08:00:29 GMT</pubDate> <description><![CDATA[Stay ahead with this week's top lighting industry news, covering major acquisitions, AI-driven innovations, community-led infrastructure, and a cautionary tale in marketing. ### 1. Visual Comfort Acquires Pooky **Visual Comfort** has acquired British lighting brand **Pooky**, marking a rare external acquisition for the company. The deal combines resources while allowing Pooky to operate independently. Pooky, founded in 2014, reported ~$53M in annual revenue with strong international growth. This highlights ongoing consolidation in the residential lighting sector. ### 2. Signify Bets Big on China's AI Momentum **Signify** is expanding in China, leveraging its manufacturing scale and AI adoption. Karl Yin, CEO of Signify Greater China, noted China produces ~60% of global lighting. The company is deploying AI-powered lighting in projects like Dalian High-Tech Industrial Zone, where generative AI manages thousands of connected streetlights. Signify operates eight factories in China and views it as an innovation hub. ### 3. Detroit Residents Shape $10M Lighting Initiative Detroit officials seek community feedback on a $10M plan to illuminate dark residential stretches. Building on a decade-long LED replacement project, the next phase adds ~3,000 lights near walking routes, parks, and schools. Pilot projects will start in each district, with installation expected this summer. ### 4. Govee Marketing Blunder: 'White Supremacy' Books in Ad Smart lighting maker **Govee** apologized after a marketing image showed books titled 'white supremacy' displayed above a child's bed. The image, from a third-party library, was removed. PR manager Connie Liu cited a failed review process and promised stronger oversight. ### 5. Corvi LED Secures $8M in Series B Funding Mumbai-based **Corvi LED** raised $8M from Enam Investments despite the mature LED market. The company plans to expand distribution, marketing, and product development. Corvi holds over 100 patents and exports to 20+ countries, focusing on energy efficiency and design. --- *For more insights, check out the video playlist from LEDucation 2026 below.* <iframe id="player" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" title="Dan from Red Sky Lighting: Just One Product at LEDucation 2026" width="750" height="422" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/?listType=playlist&list=PLXJp1Lihdpjs8xUV4EYNEiDkZ-FRHSCVi&autoplay=1&mute=1&modestbranding=1&enablejsapi=1&origin=https%3A%2F%2Finside.lighting&widgetid=1&forigin=https%3A%2F%2Finside.lighting%2Fnews%2F26-05%2F5-things-know-may-30&aoriginsup=1&gporigin=https%3A%2F%2Fnews.google.com%2F&vf=1"></iframe>]]></description> <author>contact@marketingremotejobs.app (MarketingRemoteJobs.app)</author> <category>lightingindustry</category> <category>acquisitions</category> <category>ai</category> <category>smartlighting</category> <category>led</category> <enclosure url="https://inside.lighting/application/files/7717/8017/3900/whiteboard_5_five_things_copy_-_2023-08-11T16-17-14.jpeg" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/> </item> </channel> </rss>