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How influencers are changing advertising, with Digitas CEO Amy Lanzi

Photo illustration by The Verge / Photo: Digitas

The future of marketing — and, in a way, everything else — is getting a shakeup. On today’s Decoder, I’m talking to Digitas CEO Amy Lanzi — and you’ll notice this episode is a little different. We recorded this conversation live onstage in New York City at an event graciously hosted by Adweek.
I’ve actually been dying to talk to Amy for some time. Digitas is one of the most important agencies in the entire advertising business, with huge clients and massive influence over big platforms like Instagram and YouTube. After all, they’re the ones buying the ads that keep all of those companies afloat.

Amy is really sharp on what value a company like Digitas brings to its clients and the role her company plays in the online ecosystem. But it seems very clear that all of that is changing rapidly as more and more ad dollars go directly to creators and influencers on those platforms instead of ad agencies and the platforms themselves.
As you’d expect, Amy has a lot of thoughts about this. Digitas is part of a huge holding company called Publicis Groupe, which just spent $500 million to acquire an influencer marketing agency called Influential. Amy was on the committee that made that deal, and you’ll hear her explain how and why huge advertising companies are starting to automate and operationalize influencer and creator content.

The idea is to use AI to examine all of the content on the platform, find the right influencers reaching the right audiences, and use software to contract with them on sponsored content at scale. That’s a big idea that’s sweeping the advertising industry, and I wanted to know how Amy saw it all playing out in the months and years to come.
We also spent some time talking about a smaller question that no one seems to know the answer to: What is the difference between a creator and an influencer? Let me know if you know the answer.
Some further reading you’ll hear us talk about:

Publicis Groupe acquires influencer-marketing giant Influential | Marketing Dive

Epsilon has first Digital CDP to provide native omni-channel activation | Epsilon

Stagwell is on the hunt for adtech as the ad company continues its acquisition spree | Business Insider

Emma Chamberlain is the people’s influencer | Allure

Inside the world of Sephora Squad | Marketing Scoop

Fanatics officially launches Fanatics Live, a next-gen live commerce platform | Fanatics

There’s no AI without the cloud, says AWS CEO Adam Selipsky | The Verge

A Google breakup is on the table, say DOJ lawyers | The Verge

For Gen Z, TikTok is the new search engine | The New York Times

Photo illustration by The Verge / Photo: Digitas

The future of marketing — and, in a way, everything else — is getting a shakeup.

On today’s Decoder, I’m talking to Digitas CEO Amy Lanzi — and you’ll notice this episode is a little different. We recorded this conversation live onstage in New York City at an event graciously hosted by Adweek.

I’ve actually been dying to talk to Amy for some time. Digitas is one of the most important agencies in the entire advertising business, with huge clients and massive influence over big platforms like Instagram and YouTube. After all, they’re the ones buying the ads that keep all of those companies afloat.

Amy is really sharp on what value a company like Digitas brings to its clients and the role her company plays in the online ecosystem. But it seems very clear that all of that is changing rapidly as more and more ad dollars go directly to creators and influencers on those platforms instead of ad agencies and the platforms themselves.

As you’d expect, Amy has a lot of thoughts about this. Digitas is part of a huge holding company called Publicis Groupe, which just spent $500 million to acquire an influencer marketing agency called Influential. Amy was on the committee that made that deal, and you’ll hear her explain how and why huge advertising companies are starting to automate and operationalize influencer and creator content.

The idea is to use AI to examine all of the content on the platform, find the right influencers reaching the right audiences, and use software to contract with them on sponsored content at scale. That’s a big idea that’s sweeping the advertising industry, and I wanted to know how Amy saw it all playing out in the months and years to come.

We also spent some time talking about a smaller question that no one seems to know the answer to: What is the difference between a creator and an influencer? Let me know if you know the answer.

Some further reading you’ll hear us talk about:

Publicis Groupe acquires influencer-marketing giant Influential | Marketing Dive

Epsilon has first Digital CDP to provide native omni-channel activation | Epsilon

Stagwell is on the hunt for adtech as the ad company continues its acquisition spree | Business Insider

Emma Chamberlain is the people’s influencer | Allure

Inside the world of Sephora Squad | Marketing Scoop

Fanatics officially launches Fanatics Live, a next-gen live commerce platform | Fanatics

There’s no AI without the cloud, says AWS CEO Adam Selipsky | The Verge

A Google breakup is on the table, say DOJ lawyers | The Verge

For Gen Z, TikTok is the new search engine | The New York Times

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