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Advertisers face a fraught start to the year

Jan 20, 2021, 05:47 IST
Business Insider
Virginia National Guard soldiers are issued their M4 rifles and live ammunition on the east front of the U.S. Capitol on January 17, 2021 in Washington, D.C.Samuel Corum/Getty Images

Hi and welcome to this weekly edition of Insider Advertising, where we track the big stories in media and advertising. I'm Lucia Moses, deputy editor.

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Remember you can sign up to get this newsletter daily here.

This week: Advertisers are in the hot seat, the rise of Newsmax's Greg Kelly, and creators warm to Instagram Reels.

Advertisers are back in the hot seat

The inauguration, once a time for brands to show patriotism and unity, has become fraught with risk.

Some big advertisers are getting pressured by investors to lean on the big platforms for their role in spreading conspiracies and hate that led to the Capitol riots.

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And backers of last summer's ad boycott of Facebook are talking of resuming their pressure campaign on advertisers to stop spending on the platform.

As the boycott showed, advertisers are loath to quit the platforms they think are essential to their business.

Many advertisers eventually tiptoed back onto Facebook, with carefully worded statements that it was doing better at curbing hate and misinformation. The boycott barely impacted Facebook because advertisers are too fragmented a group to make an impact with their dollars.

But the riots have drawn attention to other enablers of extremism, from the Silicon Valley giants that provided the pipes for right-wing platform Parler to cable companies that distribute pro-Trump content. The boycott organizers are back, demanding the platforms permanently ban Trump.

So while most of the scrutiny has been on the tech giants for their role in enabling toxic content, advertisers are likely to stay in the spotlight of this storm.

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Read more here:

Newsmax; Samantha Lee/Insider

Inside the rise of Newsmax's Greg Kelly

Aaron Short profiled the lively local morning show host-turned-far-right defender of Donald Trump.

He's the face of Newsmax, a fringe cable network that aims to compete with Fox News for conservative viewers.

From Aaron's story:

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Read the rest here: Ridiculed, overlooked, and under-estimated. As Newsmax's biggest Trump booster, Greg Kelly may finally be getting his revenge on the 'fake news' establishment

Instagram ReelsCHRIS DELMAS/AFP via Getty Images

Creators warm to Instagram's Reels

Instagram's TikTok competitor launched in August 2020 to mixed reviews, with The New York Times famously calling it a "dud."

It may be too soon to write off what might have seemed like yet another failed copycat attempt by Instagram parent Facebook. Some creators are telling Sydney Bradley that they've cracked the code on using it to grow their audience and many are calling it a "magic bullet."

The change could be in part because Instagram has been whispering in creators' ears, telling them how to optimize the algo.

Still, it's not a zero sum game - creators realize it's important to keep using both apps.

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"I think that's one of the most crucial things that you need to do as a creator," said one. "You have to diversify."

Read more: Instagram creators say they're getting supercharged audience growth by posting Reels: 'I haven't had this growth in a long time'

More stories we're reading:

Thanks for reading, and see you back here next week.

- Lucia

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