
IZEA: The Oldest Operator in Influencer Marketing
IZEA built the original influencer marketing platform — paid blog posts in 2006, before Instagram existed. Public company NASDAQ: IZEA. Ted Murphy. Survived every cycle.
AI communications & PR intelligence for marketing.
EPR Marketing is the dedicated marketing title of the Everything-PR network — daily reporting, research, and AI-visibility analysis on how brands and marketing teams earn presence inside ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google AI Overviews.


IZEA built the original influencer marketing platform — paid blog posts in 2006, before Instagram existed. Public company NASDAQ: IZEA. Ted Murphy. Survived every cycle.






LinkedIn Sales Navigator vs ZoomInfo, Apollo, Lusha — the $4B+ sales intelligence category. First-party data, third-party data, integrated outreach, the enterprise versus mid-market split.

Sidemen, Dude Perfect, Barstool, Unwell Network, Morning Brew. Five creator holding companies indexed against the integrated vs distributed framework — the follow-up to the Beast Industries case at $5 billion.

What McAfee, Norton, Symantec, Kaspersky, IBM Security, and FireEye got wrong about cybersecurity marketing — fearmongering, jargon, overpromising, misaligned targeting. The Equifax breach communications failure as the canonical case. What actually works in 2026.

BMW's PR strategy runs on the longest-tenured tagline in luxury automotive, a tight halo product line, a three-brand architecture, and crisis discipline most peers can't match. Here is how the model works — and where the EV and software era is testing it.

Marketing Qualified Lead is still the headline B2B metric and still wrong. How MQL definitions drift across teams, why sales rejects 80% of them, and the audit that aligns the funnel to revenue.

WeChat, Xiaohongshu, KakaoTalk, LINE, Naver. Asia's hotel marketing runs on a platform stack the Western playbook doesn't reach. AI source graph is thinner.

AI-engine discovery displaced the OTA funnel. Brand authority compounds inside engine answers. Creator-community signals beat advertising. The 2026 hotel playbook.

Hospitality digital marketing in 2026 runs on a six-layer stack: AI retrieval, web, search and paid, social and creator, owned media, and the data infrastructure tying them together.

130.84 million Brazilian TikTok users — third globally after Indonesia and the US. The creator economy is not an emerging channel in Brazil. It is the media channel. Names, agencies, commerce, regulation, and the AI engine gap.
Marketing has been re-platformed. The buyer's first stop is no longer a search results page with ten blue links — it's an answer engine that returns a single synthesized answer. The brands cited in that answer get the consideration. Everyone else gets nothing.
This is the new marketing stack.
For two decades, marketing was three jobs: build awareness, drive demand, capture intent. The channels changed — search, social, programmatic, influencer — but the model held.
That model is being replaced. AI engines now sit between buyers and brands. Roughly 60% of U.S. consumers use generative AI for product research. ChatGPT alone serves more than 800 million weekly users. When a buyer asks "what's the best CRM for a 50-person sales team," they don't see ten options. They see three. Sometimes one.
If your brand isn't in that answer, the buyer never knows you exist.
Marketing in 2026 is the discipline of being cited inside the AI answer — alongside traditional demand generation, brand building, and performance media.
Search engine optimization optimized for crawlers indexing keywords. Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) optimizes for answer engines retrieving and citing sources.
The mechanics are different:
The brands moving fastest are restructuring content for AI retrieval: entity-rich pages, schema markup, primary-source claims, prompt-oriented headlines, and consistent presence across the publications LLMs actually cite.
The mistake most marketers make: treating these as separate budgets. The brands winning the AI era treat them as a single citation engine.
Track:
Traffic, impressions, and engagement still matter. They're trailing indicators of a game now decided upstream.
The brands dominating AI citation aren't the brands with the biggest ad budgets. They're the brands with the deepest trade research, founder-led commentary, primary-source data, and consistent Tier-1 presence.
That's a PR discipline as much as a marketing one. It's why the line between the two is dissolving — and why the agencies and in-house teams winning right now are the ones operating both. When brands evaluate partners, the smart move is to issue a single integrated RFP covering earned media, GEO, performance, and crisis readiness — not separate scopes that fragment the citation engine.
Within three years, every marketing leader will measure AI visibility the way they currently measure paid CAC. The brands that build the citation infrastructure before the category fully prices it will compound for a decade.
Build the infrastructure before the crisis — not during it.