AI Appreciate Ya - Carney
The Daily Carnage

AI Appreciate Ya

Have you tried these prompts?

Be in The Know

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🤖 This AI Appreciation day, Axios is appreciating AI for what it is — and what it’s not.

▶️ The long-form video format is on the comeback.

🏯 Disney’s internal Slack was leaked by hackers mad about AI.

📈 Report: Digital video ad spend sees 16% increase this year.

🔊 You can now add, overlap, and merge up to 20 audio tracks in a single Reel.

🛋 French startup Presti is using GenAI to replace costly furniture industry photo shoots.

🍦 “Treat yourself” is trending. Turkey Hill just dropped 7 new “Late Night Ice Cream” flavors.

Adobe Firefly Prompt: A bowl of ice cream in the glow of a television at night.

29 Marketing AI Prompts to Try

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In observation of AI Appreciation Day this week, let’s see how many of these prompts you’re using to boost your marketing efficiency and creativity:

  1. Identify trending topics in a specific industry for our next blog post.
  2. Suggest products for comparison to highlight our product’s unique features.
  3. Write a 500-word blog post on the benefits of a specific topic.
  4. Create three LinkedIn posts to promote our upcoming webinar.
  5. Write an introduction for the August newsletter highlighting product updates and customer success stories.
  6. Draft a guest blog post pitch on AI-driven marketing solutions for a specified website.
  7. Write an email to potential partners proposing content collaboration.
  8. Create a press release pitch about a new product.
  9. Summarize key themes from customer feedback about a new product line.
  10. Highlight top pain points mentioned by customers in reviews.
  11. Conduct sentiment analysis of customer feedback on social media.
  12. Perform a SWOT analysis of a main competitor.
  13. Compare our social media engagement metrics with top competitors.
  14. Develop detailed profiles of our target market.
  15. Map out the typical customer journey for our online store.
  16. Segment customers based on purchase history and engagement patterns.
  17. Create three variations of ad copy for a new product.
  18. Write ad copy showcasing features and benefits.
  19. Develop two versions of ad copy for a summer sale campaign.
  20. Suggest five catchy email subject lines for a product launch newsletter.
  21. Provide personalized product and content recommendations for customers.
  22. Draft dynamic and behavior-triggered email content.
  23. Generate a list of high-traffic and long-tail keywords for a specific topic.
  24. Write SEO-friendly meta descriptions for product pages and blog posts.
  25. Perform a backlink analysis for our website.
  26. Conduct an SEO audit and recommend improvements.
  27. Identify key performance metrics for tracking marketing campaigns.
  28. Generate ideas for infographics based on market research data.
  29. Write briefs for social media graphics and product launch campaigns.

Find something new to try? Check out the full guide from Atlassian.

Smash or Pass 👍/👎

Bath & Body Works and Crocs released a limited-edition gingham collection, complete with scented Jibbitz.

Bath and Body Crocs

Dupe Images

Dupe

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The problem with most royalty-free images available for creators is that overly processed and staged photography doesn’t exactly do numbers on social anymore.

Dupe is a bank of royalty-free images, organized by aesthetic, that appeal to the current digital aesthetic: authentic, improvised, not-too-serious. It’s like having your trendy intern on-call.

Classifieds

Place a Classified Ad in a Friday edition of The Daily Carnage for just $99.

What you get:

  • 200 characters 📣
  • An internal link 🔗
  • Your ad lives on our site indefinitely 💛

Let’s get it on the calendar.

Mountain Dew Mountain Dude

Mountain Dude

A new character just dropped.

Mountain Dew’s “Mountain Dude” is a bearded, groovy figure who helps the chronically online get off their literal asses and into the mountains for some intramural sports with yetis and rams.

“We went out and talked to our consumers, and there is this notion of wanting to go out and be with other people, and sometimes just needing a little kick to go and do that,” said JP Bittencourt, VP of marketing at Mountain Dew. “I thought that it was a meaningful message, but it’s also being done in a way that’s not too judgy or judgmental.”

Ads from the Past

Mountain Dew, 1965

Mountain Dew, 1965

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