WING integrated into Grey NY
The winds of change have once again impacted one of our key Hispanic & Multicultural ad agencies. At the end of 2018, WPP parent corporation of Grey decided based on pressure from key clients like Proctor & Gamble, that multicultural talent needs to be integrated in all vertical and horizontal levels in the agency structure. WING employees and talent will be integrated under the Grey New York agency and will not function as an separate division within the WPP and Grey Network.

Advertisers across industries share a common challenge: how to know which marketing activities are actually driving profit and which are wasting spend. One way to answer these questions is a measurement approach called marketing mix modeling. Marketing mix modeling calculates the total effect that every marketing channel and its key dimensions, such as product and geography, have on sales and other performance metrics, while controlling for exogenous factors such as weather and seasonality that impact business performance.
Twenty-seven million Americans are starting or running new businesses, based on data reported in the 2017 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor United States Report: National Entrepreneurial Assessment for the United States of America released by Babson College.
Media consumption trends show U.S. Hispanics are first adopters when it comes to hot new tech. How can broadcasters that wish to target these consumers best invest in the tech tools and advancements that will help leverage their brands, and extend them in ways that will ensure continued relevancy in the years ahead? That’s the topic of conversation in this fresh Hispanic Radio Podcast.
Univision Communications unveiled its digital and social media programming slate for the new season of “Mira Quién Baila All Stars” (Look Who’s Dancing or MQB), the megahit reality competition series starring celebrities showing off their best dance moves for good causes.
Telemundo announces sponsors NBCUniversal Telemundo Enterprises announced the integrated sponsors for the first-ever Spanish-language version of NBC’s hit series The Voice, which will be premiering on Telemundo on Sunday, January 13 at 9 p.m./8C. Sprint, State Farm and Toyota have signed on to produce creative show integration segments
“Vida y Salud” will air in two-hour episodes every morning from Monday through Friday in the United States and in Latin America on AZ Mundo, a TV Azteca International Pay TV network. Segments of the program on specific topics will also be available for the global market via the new Spanish-language health website www.VidaySalud.com.
The future of real estate will be significantly influenced by women, millennials and Hispanics, according to realtor.com’s analysis of first names on 2018 home sales deeds.
TurboTax, from Intuit Inc, announced that its TurboTax Blog will now be available in both Spanish and English, making it one of the most comprehensive free tax information resources available to U.S. Spanish-speaking audiences.
Over the years, the TV commercial has become a favorite whipping post, under attack from TV “visionaries,” agencies and marketers sounding off in the press, or at the hands of consumer outrage on social platforms.
Thanks to social media, hundreds of millions of individuals are liking, commenting on, and sharing content throughout the course their day. However, as last year’s Fullscreen report “Understanding Multigenerational Youth Audiences” revealed, gen Zers admit to spending “way too much time” with social media or that “it was a problem.” Even a recent survey by Pew Research found that more than half of young people say they would “have a hard time” giving up social media.
The advertising industry lost a pioneer and friend on January 1, when Cynthia-Perkins Roberts passed away. Cynthia was VP of diversity marketing and business development at our sister industry trade association, the Video Advertising Bureau (VAB).
Chapter One: Melting Pots, Multiculturalism, and Marketing to the New America Early in his 2016 U.S. presidential campaign, Republican candidate and billionaire real estate mogul, Donald Trump, won popular support promising to build a wall along the Mexican border, throw the Mexicans back, and ban Muslim immigration. In support of Trump, self-described “race realists” popped up on conservative talk radio, television, and internet decrying blacks for “playing the race card” and accusing President Barack Obama of policies favoring blacks to the detriment of whites. Said one Long Island housewife in a New York Times interview, “Everyone’s sticking together in their groups, so white people have to, too.” By David Morse / New America Dimensions
























