đ Hot perk: Basic office supplies
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The big idea | |
Gen Z creators are making money on FanfixA platform for Gen Z creators says its users average ~$70k a year. 2023-04-04T00:00:00Z Juliet Bennett Ryla |
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As a potential TikTok ban looms, Fanfix is successfully courting Gen Z creators looking to monetize their fan bases. Fanfix was founded by Harry Gestetner, Simon Pompan, and influencer Cameron Dallas in 2021, and acquired by SuperOrdinary â which connects brands, creators, and buyers â in 2022 for $65m. Creators who already have 10k+ followers can apply and, if accepted, charge fans $5-$50/mo. for paywalled content, or up to $500 for private DMs. Creators keep 80%, per TechCrunch. Fanfix is akin to Patreon or OnlyFans, except it targets fans 13-24, so thereâs absolutely no nudity allowed and moderators review DMs. Do people really pay up?Itâs hard for me â a cranky millennial â to see why anyone would pay to watch strangers â even hot strangers â go to Starbucks. But Gestetner told Forbes that Gen Z has grown up with a deluge of free content and now craves exclusivity. Creator Savannah Demers (who tells good dad jokes, btw) told TechCrunch her ~2.1k fans have earned her ~$13.5k per month at $8/mo. â not including tips or messages. Netflix starts at $6.99/mo. Fanflix also claims:
The SuperOrdinary acquisition didnât hurt eitherSuperOrdinary partners with 140+ brands and has an influencer-curated ecommerce platform, GalaGala. Basically, theyâre going all-in on the Gen Z creator economy â and it appears to be working. |
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TRENDING | ||
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SNIPPETS |
Stunner: The UFC and WWE are merging into a $21.4B company. For a sense of the new entertainment giantâs scale, UFCâs YouTube following is more than the NFL and MLB combined â and WWE has 6x as many subscribers as UFC. Critical hit: Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thievesâ global box-office haul totaled $71m, but the fantasy adventure couldnât quite topple Level 20 Rogue John Wickâs box-office reign. Speaking of movies, Regal parent Cineworld announced a restructuring plan with lenders to emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy. CEO Mooky Greidinger expressed confidence in the deal, plus the post-pandemic movie resurgence. Locked and loaded: There will soon be a new US storage kingpin â Extra Space Storage, which will combine with rival Life Storage in a $12.7B deal. Adding to the drama: Life Storage recently rejected a bid from current top dog Public Storage. Face lifted: Walmart rolled out a redesigned website experience to counter Amazonâs ecommerce dominance â with an interface that looks eerily similar to Amazon. We honestly canât wait till Walmart CEO Doug McMillon shaves his head to look more like Jeff Bezos. Google Searchâs new features include a flight price guarantee badge on what Google thinks is the lowest price. If you book with Google and the price drops, youâll be refunded the difference. Savvy moves? As Saudi Arabiaâs government seeks economic engines outside of oil, gaming is a leading target. The Saudi national fundâs Savvy Gaming Group is expected to invest $38B by 2030 to develop, publish, and acquire games. Shoot the moon: NASA named the four astronauts who will travel around the moon and back as soon as next fall. Weâll assume we are understudies for Artemis II, the first lunar mission in 50+ years, unless told otherwise. Rue the day: Paris will ban e-scooters following a vote that saw 90% of Parisians in favor. Complaints include clutter and safety, with 459 related accidents in 2022 alone. Keep on trucking: Phenomenal news for people who love the word âtorqueâ â leading ad forecaster Magna expects to see a 10%-15% increase in ad spending from car dealers and brands this year. 50 interview questions:  A pack of proper asks to prep you for success, upgrade your competence, and, hopefully, help you hop on payroll. |
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Zachary Crockett | |
Chai-ching: Bubble tea is brewing up serious profits in the USThe beverageâs entry into the US market appears to be a boba-fide success. 2023-04-04T00:00:00Z Jacob Cohen |
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The Dot-Com Bubble. The Housing Bubble. The⊠Bubble Bubble? Bubble tea, or boba, has been the hottest tea trend in America over the last decade, and though the tapioca treats have been expanding across the nation at a rapid rate, this is one craze that doesnât appear to be at risk of popping anytime soon. Steeped in successAmericansâ interest in bubble tea, originally concocted in Taiwan in the 1980s, has gotten steamy hot in recent years, according to Bloomberg. In 2023, the US market for the drink â uh, food, uh, drink, uh⊠â is estimated to be worth $640m. A decade from now, estimates rise to $2.2B. In 2022, with some 30.5m kilograms in the trunk, tapioca-based foods beat out frozen tilapia and sugar confectioneries as the most-valued US food import from Taiwan, rising to ~$50m from less than ~$15m in 2020. Globally, Taiwanâs tapioca export value passed the $100m mark in 2021, up 23%. Really milking itBubble tea franchises are growing quickly:
Think they threw a tea party to celebrate? |
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Free Resource |
Will AI replace marketers? Search engines? |
Hereâs a doozy: Thanks to the ground breaking going on in generative AI, Goldman Sachs estimates that two-thirds of jobs in the US and Europe are exposed to automation (as per Financial Times). That prompts some intense questions â like, am I such an expendable being? And, is my Googling experience on the cusp of improving buckets? We spoke to Jasperâs Head of Enterprise Marketing Samyutha Reddy, who remains admirably optimistic. Thoughts from the HubSpot blog:
Weâve said it before, weâll say it again â time to put âem to work. |
Is generative AI a threat? â |
Supplies In Demand | |
Tale of the tape: Google dispenses with office suppliesLiving on a tight budget? Challenging. Living on a tight budget at a tech giant? Challenging and weird. 2023-04-04T00:00:00Z Ben Berkley |
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Time to add another workplace acronym to your glossary: BYOS â Bring Your Own Stapler. Cost-cutting efforts are continuing at Alphabet after Googleâs parent company eliminated 12k jobs in January, and per CNBC, austerity measures include saving on staplers and tape dispensers. Internal memos warn basic supplies will no longer be provided at print stations, with San Francisco employees directed to borrow them from the receptionist desk as needed. Saving on office supplies is a familiar tune in budget-conscious offices worldwide. So if this werenât Google, it wouldnât feel surprising⊠⊠but it is Google.They have long been a standard bearer for benefits and office perks. (Though, in fairness to Alphabet, operating efficiently with ~175k employees is a tall task.) Other ongoing efforts to rein in costs:
Prompting internal outcry, Google also did not pay out remaining time for employees laid off while on maternity and medical leave. Perks and raises were already in troubleEmployees at one of the worldâs most valuable companies struggling to find staplers is⊠well, itâs sobering. A recent executive survey shows 47% of companies are planning to trim benefits this year, per Fortune. Commuter benefits and adoption and fertility assistance are common targets.
But if weâre looking for a positive here, at least this viral PSA about tape dispensers can claim another moment in the sun? |
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AROUND THE WEB |
đ·ïž On this day: In 2013, scientists discovered the Poecilotheria rajaei â a tarantula with a leg span of up to eight inches â in Sri Lanka. Wired reported it was âabout the size of your face.â No, thanks! đ” Thatâs interesting: The history of the shuffle button â and what Adele and Spotify have to do with it. đ§ Haha: Even Nissan has a lofi beats player now (h/t Land of Random). đŠ Cure boredom: For April Foolsâ, Sega released a Sonic the Hedgehog murder mystery game. But itâs not quite a joke because you can play it for free on Steam. đ Aww: And now, a very good volleyball player. |
Meme |
AI can take all our money, but they can never take all our sadness. Yay? (Link.) |
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Editing by: Ben âMr. Teaâ Berkley.
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