TLDR Marketing 2026-06-04
Meta’s CTV play 📺, limits of audience-first thinking 🧠, AI search tactics 🔍
"Lowest Consumer Sentiment" Is Good News? (2 minute read)
The University of Michigan consumer sentiment index hit 44.8, the lowest reading in the survey's history. The argument is that the data misreads the situation, since consumers are not broke but adapting, waiting longer on big purchases and trading goods for experiences. The deeper issue is a consumer balance sheet built for a declining nuclear-family model, with oversized homes, family-sized cars, and groceries aimed at households that increasingly do not exist.
Meta's CTV Play: What It Really Means for Advertisers (3 minute read)
Meta's move into CTV could make TV advertising accessible to millions of smaller advertisers by bringing streaming inventory into the same self-serve platform, targeting system, and optimization workflow they already use on Meta. The strategic opportunity is not winning large TV budgets but unlocking a new pool of advertisers that have never bought TV before. Success depends on whether Meta's performance algorithms can deliver results on third party CTV inventory that costs far more than social placements, since CTV CPMs average $20 to $40 versus $6 to $9 on Meta. Early evidence suggests unified audience management across CTV can drive strong outcomes, including 51% overdelivery on reach targets and a 342% lift in product searches. As streaming reaches 20.8 million UK households and accounts for 38% of TV viewing, Meta's ability to connect demand, targeting, and measurement across channels could become a major advantage.
3 ways to show up in AI search (1 minute read)
Treat your website as only one of many surfaces and actively build presence on platforms like Reddit, G2, and forums where AI pulls evidence. Manage sentiment because reviews and unresolved complaints become training signals and citations in future answers. Target platform-specific authority since different models favor different sources, such as Wikipedia and Reddit for ChatGPT or LinkedIn and G2 for Perplexity.
The llms.txt argument is the wrong argument (4 minute read)
This piece argues that llms.txt is often misunderstood because discovery and functionality are separate problems. It doesn't improve AI search visibility and shows no measurable impact in studies or testing, with very low real usage by AI crawlers. It can help in developer documentation where coding agents need simplified context, but offers little value for most sites. The real focus should be on agent-ready infrastructure like semantic HTML, accessibility, stable layouts, and emerging standards such as WebMCP that enable direct interaction with site functions.
Companies Are Using Reddit to Manipulate ChatGPT and Google AI Search (5 minute read)
Companies are increasingly spamming Reddit communities with content engineered to manipulate the answers that AI chatbots generate. Tools like ChatGPT and Google's AI search now rank Reddit among their most-cited sources, so marketing firms target it directly using bots, paid posters, and sock puppet accounts built to pass as human. The sophistication has escalated well beyond simple comment promotion, with agencies reverse-engineering the prompt patterns LLMs prioritize, seeding vague high-traction questions to farm engagement, then embedding brand mentions in seemingly organic ways.
Disagreeing with Rick Rubin: The limits of audience-first thinking (5 minute read)
Audience insight should guide marketing, but treating customer feedback as the sole source of direction often leads to safe, predictable work. The article argues that marketers should distinguish between three audiences: the imagined audience that drives self-censorship, the real audience that provides valuable customer insight, and the future audience that can only recognize innovation after it exists. Strong marketing comes from understanding real customer needs while leaving room for original ideas that audiences cannot yet articulate. Instead of asking what people say they want, marketers should focus on what resonates emotionally and creates a sense of relevance, challenge, relief, or delight. The practical takeaway is to balance audience understanding with conviction, especially when developing positioning, campaigns, and category-defining ideas that require leading customers rather than simply reflecting existing demand.
Is Email Production Moving into The Chat Box? (5 minute read)
Email production is moving into AI chat interfaces as marketers use generative tools to speed up workflows. Only 5% of teams are not using AI for email, and 76% now send campaigns within three days. However, chat alone cannot produce reliable, production-ready emails because it lacks access to brand systems and email client constraints. The emerging workflow connects AI to three layers: real campaign inspiration from large email libraries, a Figma-based design system with approved components, and ESP integrations via MCP that push finished HTML directly into sending tools.
Curated tactics 💡, trends 📈, and tools 🛠️ for cutting edge marketers
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