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  2. With AI, you can generate dozens (if not hundreds) of articles in hours and publish at scale. But publishing is the easy part. What happens after they go live is what matters. Together with the research team at SE Ranking, we ran a 16-month experiment to track how well AI-generated content performed on brand-new domains with zero authority. As you will see, the results are hard to call a success. Here’s the full story behind our experiment. Methodology The goal was simple: test how far AI content — with no human editing, rewriting, or enhancement — could go in search. How quickly would it get indexed? Could it rank for relevant queries? Most importantly, could it drive traffic? We started by purchasing 20 new domains with no backlinks, domain authority, brand recognition, or search history. Each domain focused on a different niche, covering topics such as: Arts & Entertainment Business & Services Community & Society Computers & Technology Ecommerce & Shopping Finance & Accounting Food & Drink Games & Accessories Health & Medicine Industry & Engineering Hobbies & Interests Home & Garden Jobs & Career Law & Government Lifestyle & Well-being Pets & Animals Science & Education Sports & Fitness Travel & Tourism Vehicles & Boats For each niche, we gathered 100 informational “how-to” keywords—long-tail terms with lower competition. Each site received 100 AI-generated articles, totaling 2,000 pieces across the experiment. After publishing, we added the sites to Google Search Console and submitted sitemaps. From that point on, we left the sites untouched to observe performance over time. Timeline & key results Month 1: indexing and early visibility About 71% of new AI-generated pages were indexed within the first 36 days. They generated over 122,000 impressions and 244 clicks. Even at this early stage, 80% of sites ranked for at least 100 keywords each. Months 2–3: growth continues Cumulative impressions grew to over 526,000, with 782 clicks. Content continued to perform well without backlinks, promotion, internal linking, or additional SEO tactics. Months 3–6: ranking collapse By about three months, only 3% of pages remained in the top 100. Early relevance helped pages get indexed and briefly appear in search, but without authority, uniqueness, or E-E-A-T signals, rankings dropped sharply. Google still indexed the pages, but users rarely saw them. Month 16: long-term stagnation After over a year, visibility remained low across most sites. Impressions and clicks were minimal, and no site showed meaningful recovery. After the August 2025 Google spam update, pages ranking in the top 100 rose to 20% — up from 3% at six months. Month 1: indexing and early visibility Just over a month after publication (36 days), the first results came in — and they were stronger than expected for brand-new sites. Of 2,000 articles, 70.95% were indexed (1,419 pages). For zero-authority domains, that’s notable, as getting new sites fully indexed is often a challenge. This shows Google is still willing to crawl and index AI-generated content in most cases. Some sites performed particularly well. Eleven of the 20 domains had all 100 pages indexed. Most were in broad, evergreen niches like Food & Drink, Home & Garden, Jobs & Career, and Lifestyle & Well-being. More competitive or specialized areas, like Ecommerce & Shopping, saw slower indexation, likely due to stricter evaluation. Along with indexation came early visibility. During this first month, the sites collectively generated: 122,102 impressions 244 clicks Several niches stood out generating more than 10,000 impressions in the first month alone. Hobbies & Interests: 17,425 impressions Business & Services: 17,311 impressions Travel & Tourism: 13,598 impressions Lifestyle & Well-being: 13,072 impressions Law & Government: 11,794 impressions Games & Accessories: 11,083 impressions Vehicles & Boats: 10,677 impressions In terms of keyword coverage, many sites performed surprisingly well within the first month. Eight sites ranked for more than 1,000 keywords, while another eight ranked for 100 to 1,000. Even at this early stage, 80% of sites with fully AI-generated content appeared in search for hundreds or thousands of queries. Notably, over 28% of ranking URLs were already in the top 100. Within the first month, many pages reached positions where searchers could see them. Overall, these results show AI-generated content can gain traction quickly—even without backlinks, editorial input, or additional SEO work. In the short term, content alone was enough to get indexed and appear in search. Months 2–3: growth continues This early visibility wasn’t short-lived. Over the following weeks, impressions and clicks kept growing as Google Search discovered and tested pages. By about two and a half months after publication, cumulative results across all sites had grown: Impressions: 122,102 to 526,624 Clicks: 244 to 782 Keyword coverage also expanded: 12 sites ranked for 1,000+ keywords (up from 8 in the first month). The remaining 8 sites ranked for 100–1,000 keywords. This pattern is typical for new sites. When Google finds fresh content that matches real queries, it tests that content across results. Pages appear for related queries as Google evaluates their helpfulness. That’s what happened here. Even without backlinks, internal linking, or SEO improvements, the content gained exposure because it targeted low-competition queries and followed basic SEO structure. At this stage, it could look like a strong case for large-scale AI content. The sites were new, the content fully AI-generated, and impressions kept rising. But the growth didn’t last. Month 3-6: the ranking collapse Around Feb. 3, 2025, roughly three months after publication, the experiment hit a turning point. Only 3% of pages remained in the top 100, down from 28% in the first month. In practical terms, the content remained indexed but rarely appeared where users could see it. Early relevance can help pages get indexed and appear in search results for a time. Without stronger signals — authority, E-E-A-T, unique insights — those rankings are hard to sustain. By the six-month mark, Google Search Console showed the following cumulative totals across all sites: Impressions: 526,624 to 706,328 Clicks: 782 to 1,062 At first glance, these numbers suggest continued growth. But that’s not what happened. Most activity occurred early. In the first 2.5 months, the sites generated roughly 70% to 75% of total impressions and clicks. Over the next 3.5 months, growth slowed sharply, adding only 25% to 30%. Month 16: the long-term picture The experiment ran for over a year to see if rankings would recover. For the most part, they didn’t. After the drop around the three-month mark, visibility remained extremely low for the rest of the experiment. There were a few brief fluctuations. The most notable came in late August 2025. Starting in August, 50% of sites (10 out of 20) saw a two-week spike in impressions. This closely aligned with the rollout of the Google August 2025 spam update, which began Aug. 26. However, the boost didn’t lead to a sustained recovery. Among the sites that saw a short-term lift: Six quickly lost visibility and returned to prior lows Four maintained slightly improved performance, similar to early post-publication levels Following the update, pages ranking in the top 100 rose to 20% — up from 3% at six months. This remained below the 28% seen in the first month, but the August 2025 spam update appeared to have improved some rankings. In total, 66.9% of pages were still indexed, up slightly from 61.45% at six months. The following sites had some of the lowest numbers of indexed pages: Finance domain (9 of 100) Health domain (14 of 100) This is likely due to their YMYL nature, where Google applies stricter quality and trust standards. By month 16, cumulative results across all sites were: Impressions: 706,328 to 1,092,079 Clicks: 1,062 to 1,381 Most impressions still came from the early growth phase, before rankings dropped. Why SEO visibility didn’t last The most obvious explanation is that the content didn’t meet Google’s quality standards — and understandably so. The 2,000 articles lacked many signals Google uses to assess quality and trust: Authority. No backlinks or external validation. Without these, new domains struggle to compete with established sites. Expertise and credibility. No authors, credentials, or real-world expertise — especially critical in finance, health, and law. Content differentiation. Much of the content resembled what already exists. Without unique insights, pages struggle to stand out. Site structure. No internal linking, topical organization, or clear hierarchy to help Google understand page relationships. Google can identify AI-generated patterns. Without authority, uniqueness, or supporting signals, early visibility declines. Bonus insight: how new AI content supports existing pages In early March 2026, we ran a follow-up experiment, adding new AI-generated content to eight tracked sites. As of March 13, not all new content has been indexed. However, sites with new content already show a noticeable increase in search impressions. Interestingly, this lift comes primarily from older posts, not the newly published ones. For example: Business-focused website (from 458 impressions in February 2026 to 7,750 impressions in March 2026) – 17x increase. Law-focused website (from 19 impressions in February 2026 to 356 impressions in March 2026) – 19x increase. Science-focused website (from 34 impressions in February 2026 to 633 impressions in March 2026) – 19x increase. This experiment shows that publishing new content—even fully AI-generated—can lift traffic to older pages that had been stagnant for months. Fresh content may signal to Google that the site is active and up to date, giving the site a temporary boost. However, these are early results and don’t guarantee lasting gains in rankings or traffic. Key takeaway: AI can speed up content creation, but not replace SEO The results of this 16-month experiment don’t mean AI content is useless. They show AI alone isn’t enough to drive lasting impact. Early traffic and impressions may look promising, but without a clear SEO strategy and human guidance, those gains will likely fade within a few months. View the full article
  3. 14 questions to ask. By Domenick J. Esposito 8 Steps to Great Go PRO for members-only access to more Dom Esposito. View the full article
  4. Amid the ongoing partial U.S. government shutdown, social media is dominated by images of airports in chaos. Security lines are stretching into airport parking garages. Wait times are hours long. More and more travelers are outright missing their flights due to the delays. On paper, the solution is clear: restore funding to the TSA to get agents paid again and back into airports. But President Donald The President had a different idea that’s gone into effect as of Monday: send ICE agents into airports instead. The partial shutdown began when the Department of Homeland Security’s funding lapsed on February 14, with Democrats refusing to fund the department without reform to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, aka ICE, in the wake of the fatal shootings by ICE agents of Alex Pretti and Renee Good. With both ICE and the TSA falling under the DHS, funding for the latter was halted, causing a shortage of TSA workers and inciting the major delays now impacting travelers nationwide. Democrats have since advanced several motions to fund the TSA without letting ICE go unreformed, but Republicans have blocked them every time. The President revealed his proposed solution via a Truth Social post on Sunday, March 22. “On Monday, ICE will be going to airports to help our wonderful TSA Agents who have stayed on the job despite the fact that the Radical Left Democrats, who are only focused on protecting hard line criminals who have entered our Country illegally, are endangering the USA by holding back the money that was long ago agreed to with signed and sealed contracts, and all,” he wrote. Now, as ICE agents begin working at 13 major airports across America, social media is sounding off, from politicians to everyday citizens concerned about ICE’s role in airport security. Growing tensions in Congress Democratic lawmakers are expressing frustration that their efforts to fund the TSA have been blocked by Senate Republicans, who have been urged by The President not to budge until Democrats agree to advance the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act. The controversial act would require proof of citizenship to vote and largely eliminate voting by mail. Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), who has spearheaded attempts to get funding back to the TSA, gave his fellow congresspeople a suggestion: “Instead of sending ICE agents to harass travelers at airports, why don’t Republicans get their act together and agree to pay TSA workers like we’ve asked them to SEVEN TIMES now?” he posted on X. Instead of sending ICE agents to harass travelers at airports, why don’t Republicans get their act together and agree to pay TSA workers like we’ve asked them to SEVEN TIMES now? — Chuck Schumer (@SenSchumer) March 22, 2026 Rep. Delia Ramirez (D-IL) echoed Schumer’s sentiment, claiming that The President’s deployment of ICE exemplifies why the shutdown began in the first place. “Deploying ICE agents— whose lawlessness and racial profiling have put us all at risk— to the airports is another disaster waiting to happen,” Ramirez wrote. “Republicans need to fund TSA and other essential functions. We must abolish The President’s terror force, ICE, and dismantle DHS.” Republicans in the Senate have rejected funding TSA 9 times.⁰⁰Deploying ICE agents— whose lawlessness and racial profiling have put us all at risk— to the airports is another disaster waiting to happen.⁰⁰Republicans need to fund TSA and other essential functions. We must… https://t.co/6HuX3MtZMA — Congresswoman Delia C. Ramirez (@repdeliaramirez) March 22, 2026 California Governor Gavin Newsom also chimed in, saying the situation shows exactly why ICE needs to be reformed. “By sending ICE into airports, The President is proving the problem in real time: ICE has become the president’s lawless, under-trained, personal police force, deployed to serve his agenda — not the law,” Newsom wrote. By sending ICE into airports, The President is proving the problem in real time: ICE has become the president’s lawless, under-trained, personal police force, deployed to serve his agenda — not the law. https://t.co/GApAjroeuN — Governor Newsom Press Office (@GovPressOffice) March 22, 2026 Online uproar continues While politicians are providing more measured responses, other folks on social media aren’t mincing their words. Many questioned exactly what function ICE would even serve in place of TSA agents, who go through weeks-long training programs prior to working in airports. One user pointed out the irony of adding ICE to an already fraught situation: “Long lines, chaos, and stress at the airport. Time to send in renowned de-escalation experts, ICE,” they wrote. What would ICE agents even do at airports??? — Covie (@covie_93) March 22, 2026 Long lines, chaos, and stress at the airport. Time to send in renowned de-escalation experts, ICE. — Chapin (@Chapinc) March 22, 2026 White House border czar Tom Homan, who The President appointed to lead the operation, spoke to the specific role ICE agents would play in airports on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday. Homan explained that while a specific plan for ICE to assist the TSA was still in the works, he didn’t expect ICE agents to take over more technical duties like manning X-ray machines. Instead, they’ll be handling basic security to free up TSA agents to complete those specialized tasks. “There are roles we can play to release TSA officers from the non-significant roles, such as guarding an exit so they can get back to the scanning machines and move people quicker,” Homan said. “We’re just simply helping our fellow officers at TSA.” But Homan’s assurances that ICE will stay in its lane aren’t comforting travelers, given the agency’s history with violence. “A bunch of overly aggressive ICE agents at major airports with already frustrated travelers — what could go wrong?” one user wondered. “Nothing makes me feel safer at an airport than seeing masked people with guns,” quipped another. I predict that within four hours of ICE actually being deployed into US airports there will be video online of them violently overreacting to some situation. — crunchyrugger (@crunchyrugger) March 22, 2026 A bunch of overly aggressive ICE agents at major airports with already frustrated travelers — what could go wrong? https://t.co/bs6snf7rGq — Jemele Hill (@jemelehill) March 22, 2026 The idea of ICE agents at the airport sends a chill down my spine. — Captain Obvious™️ (@TheFungi669) March 22, 2026 Nothing makes me feel safer at an airport than seeing masked people with guns. — John Collins (@Logically_JC) March 23, 2026 Another user claimed that ICE agents’ presence could also tank the airline industry. “The average travelers will be far more reluctant to fly if they’ll be met with an armed militia instead of trained security personnel,” they wrote. The airline industry had better step in quick because the average travelers will be far more reluctant to fly if they’ll be met with an armed militia instead of trained security personnel — Randy Skyy Henley Jr (@RandyHenleyJr) March 23, 2026 And of course, there’s the elephant in the room: If airports are in disarray because TSA officers aren’t being paid, why is the government paying ICE agents to replace them rather than finding a way to restore TSA officers’ wages? As one user framed it in a viral post, “How is there money for ICE to run TSA, but not money for TSA to run TSA?” So TSA agents can't get paid for doing their jobs, but ICE will get paid for doing the jobs of TSA workers with no experience. What an insult to all the dedicated TSA workers! This is a disaster waiting to happen! — Rushi (@rushicrypto) March 22, 2026 Paying ICE to come to the Atlanta airport, which includes housing them, instead of just paying the TSA employees is actually another reason why this is a very unserious place. — Certified Hoodie Thief 🏁 Ms 1/11 🎂 (@KryssyLaReina) March 23, 2026 How is there money for ICE to run TSA, but not money for TSA to run TSA? — destiney bleu (@destineybleu) March 22, 2026 With ICE agents only assuming their new role at airports as of Monday morning, the operation’s full impact remains to be seen. Whether it leads to shorter wait times as promised, or merely an even tenser (and potentially dangerous) environment for travelers, The President’s solution may create far more problems than it purports to solve. View the full article
  5. The The President administration hasn't formally charged Swalwell, Adam Schiff or Lisa Cook, while a federal court tossed a prosecution against Letitia James. View the full article
  6. Military strongman Asim Munir uses Tehran ties and warm relationship with US president to boost mediation effort View the full article
  7. A quiet but important change is coming to the Google Ads API that will affect how advertisers and developers create Lookalike user lists — particularly those running Demand Gen campaigns. What’s changing. Google will begin enforcing a uniqueness check on Lookalike user lists, preventing the creation of duplicate lists that share the same seed lists, expansion level, and country targeting. Attempts to create a duplicate after April 30 will return an API error. Why we care. Teams using automated scripts or third-party tools to programmatically generate audience lists, an unhandled error could quietly break campaign workflows if integrations aren’t updated in time. What you need to do. Audit existing Lookalike lists and reuse ones that already match your intended configuration rather than creating new ones Update your API error handling to catch the new DUPLICATE_LOOKALIKE error code in v24 and above, or RESOURCE_ALREADY_EXISTS in earlier versions The bottom line. This is a housekeeping change designed to keep Google’s systems stable — but the April 30 deadline is firm. Developers and agencies managing campaigns programmatically should treat this as a technical to-do before the end of April. Dig deeper. Upcoming changes to Lookalike user lists in the Google Ads API, starting April 30, 2026 View the full article
  8. When starting a business, it’s critical to comprehend the fundamental steps involved in the formation process. First, you’ll need to choose the right business structure, like a sole proprietorship, LLC, or corporation, as this impacts your liability and taxes. After that, registering your business name and obtaining an Employer Identification Number (EIN) are essential steps. Furthermore, a well-crafted business plan can guide your strategy. Grasping the necessary permits and licenses is likewise important for compliance. What comes next in this process? Key Takeaways Choose the appropriate business structure (sole proprietorship, corporation, LLC) based on liability and tax considerations. Register your business by selecting a unique name and filing necessary documents with the Secretary of State. Draft a comprehensive business plan that outlines your goals, market analysis, and financial projections. Set up financial systems by creating a separate bank account and using accounting software for tracking income and expenses. Secure necessary permits and licenses to ensure legal operation and compliance with local regulations. Choosing the Right Business Structure When you’re considering starting a business, choosing the right structure is crucial, as it impacts your taxes, personal liability, and management flexibility. You’ve got several options, like sole proprietorships, which are simple but expose you to personal liability. Corporations provide limited liability protection but require more formalities. Limited Liability Companies (LLCs) offer a balanced approach, combining the benefits of corporations and partnerships, with limited liability and pass-through taxation. If you’re unsure how to create an LLC in NJ, you can seek business formation services to guide you through NJ LLC formation. Forming an LLC in NJ involves specific steps, so comprehending these structures helps you make informed decisions, aligning with your business goals and risk tolerance. Registering Your Business After you’ve chosen the right business structure, the next step is registering your business to confirm it’s legally recognized. You’ll need to follow specific steps to ascertain compliance with state regulations. Select a unique business name and check its availability in the state database. File necessary documents, like Articles of Organization for LLCs or Articles of Incorporation for corporations, with the Secretary of State. Obtain an Employer Identification Number (EIN) by filing IRS Form SS-4 online for tax purposes. Acquire any required state and local licenses or permits to operate legally. If you’re looking to nj register business or register llc in nj, make certain to understand the nj business formation process and how to set up an llc in nj properly. Drafting a Business Plan Drafting a business plan is vital for establishing a clear roadmap for your venture, as it not merely outlines your business goals but also details the strategies you’ll employ to achieve them. Start with an executive summary that highlights your vision, mission, and objectives to attract potential investors. Conduct a thorough market analysis to understand your industry, target demographics, and competition, which will help you shape effective marketing strategies. Include financial projections to demonstrate your business’s viability, detailing expected revenues and expenses. Outline your products and services, addressing customer needs and differentiating features. Finally, define your marketing and sales strategies, explaining how you’ll attract and retain customers. Remember, this plan is important for NJ LLC filing and NJ Corporate registration when learning how to start an llc in nj. Setting Up Financial Systems Once your business plan is in place, the next step involves setting up robust financial systems that will support your operations and growth. To guarantee your business runs efficiently, consider these critical actions: Establish a separate business bank account for accurate bookkeeping and liability protection. Invest in accounting software like QuickBooks or Xero to track income, expenses, and tax obligations effectively. Create a detailed budget that allocates resources and manages cash flow, guaranteeing you meet financial commitments. Maintain accurate financial records, including receipts and invoices, to comply with tax regulations and prepare for audits. As you navigate how to get an LLC in NJ and create LLC New Jersey, remember to file your Certificate of Formation NJ to formalize your business structure. Securing Permits and Licenses Securing the necessary permits and licenses is essential for your business to operate legally and avoid potential fines. The requirements can vary widely based on your industry and location, so it’s important to understand the regulations you must comply with. Common permits include business licenses, health permits, and industry-related licenses like liquor or professional licenses. Here’s a quick reference table to help you: Type of Permit/License Examples Compliance Requirements Business Licenses General business license Application, fees, renewals Health Permits Restaurant health permits Inspections, health standards Industry-Related Licenses Liquor, contractor licenses Specific certifications Signage Permits Outdoor signage permits Local zoning compliance Regularly check for updates to avoid operational issues. Frequently Asked Questions What Are the 7 Steps to Starting a Business? To start a business, you’ll follow seven essential steps. First, conduct market research to understand your industry and customers. Next, draft a detailed business plan outlining your goals and strategies. Then, select a business structure, like an LLC or corporation, to protect your assets. After that, register your business with state authorities. Don’t forget to obtain an Employer Identification Number (EIN) for tax purposes and set up a business bank account. What Are the Steps to Forming a Business? To form a business, first, choose a suitable structure like an LLC or corporation based on your needs. Next, select a unique name and check for domain availability. File the necessary documents with your state, such as Articles of Organization. Obtain an EIN from the IRS for tax purposes, and secure any required licenses or permits. Finally, set up a business bank account to manage your finances effectively. What Are the 5 Stages of Starting a Business? Starting a business involves five key stages. First, you generate ideas and conduct market research to identify a viable product or service. Next, you create a business plan outlining your goals and strategies. Then, you form your business by choosing a legal structure and obtaining necessary licenses. After that, you focus on funding, securing capital, and calculating costs. Finally, you launch your business and implement marketing strategies to reach your target audience. What Is a 7 Step Business Plan? A 7 Step Business Plan consists of key components that guide your business strategy. First, you’ll create an executive summary outlining your concept and mission. Next, conduct a market analysis to understand your target audience and competitors. Define your organizational structure, detailing roles and responsibilities. Then, outline your marketing and sales strategies. Finally, include financial projections to estimate revenue and expenses, helping you plan for profitability over the coming years. Conclusion In summary, successfully forming a business requires careful consideration of several key steps. Start by choosing the right business structure that fits your needs, then register your business and draft a solid business plan. Establishing effective financial systems is fundamental for tracking income and expenses, whereas securing the necessary permits and licenses guarantees compliance with local regulations. By following these vital steps, you’ll lay a strong foundation for your business and increase your chances of long-term success. Image via Google Gemini This article, "What Are Essential Steps for Business Formation?" was first published on Small Business Trends View the full article
  9. OpenAI is pushing ahead with advertising on ChatGPT, but early adopters say the platform is far from ready for serious performance marketing. The big picture. According to a report by The Information, ChatGPT’s ad offering shares almost no data with advertisers, lacks automated buying tools, and offers very limited targeting — leaving brands with little ability to measure whether their spend is actually doing anything. What advertisers are dealing with. Digital marketer Glenn Gabe helped list out what the current issues are: No automated way to buy ad space — deals are being made over phone calls, emails, and spreadsheets No meaningful performance data to evaluate campaign outcomes Two agency executives told The Information they haven’t been able to prove the ads drove any measurable business results for clients Why we care. If you’re considering ChatGPT as an advertising channel, the lack of performance data means you’re essentially spending blind — with no reliable way to prove ROI to clients or stakeholders. As OpenAI prepares to scale ads to all U.S. free users, the audience is about to get significantly larger, but the measurement tools haven’t caught up. Advertisers who jump in now should do so with very managed expectations and treat it as an experimental budget, not a performance channel. What’s coming anyway. OpenAI has told advertisers it plans to show ads to all U.S. users on free and low-cost versions of ChatGPT in the coming weeks — a significant expansion from the current pilot. Advertisers have also been advised they can improve performance by supplying more variations of text and visual creative. The irony. OpenAI builds some of the world’s most sophisticated AI — yet its ad reporting tools remain firmly in the spreadsheet era. The bottom line. ChatGPT ads are about to reach a much larger audience, but the infrastructure to prove their value isn’t there yet. Advertisers entering now are largely flying blind — and paying for the privilege. Credit. Gabe shared highlights from The Information’s article on X. Dig deeper. OpenAI’s First Advertisers Can’t Prove ChatGPT Ads Work (subscription needed) View the full article
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  11. AI technology is evolving rapidly, and for small business owners, this brings both opportunities and challenges. Salesforce has recently announced a collaboration with NVIDIA that promises to enhance how businesses can harness AI agents—tools that can significantly streamline workflows and drive efficiency. The new offering combines Salesforce’s Agentforce platform with NVIDIA’s Nemotron models, enabling small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to integrate AI agents seamlessly into their operations. These technologies not only aim to provide answers but also to ensure that these AI agents work securely and effectively within existing business frameworks. The core of this initiative is Agentforce, a platform designed for crafting and managing enterprise-level AI agents. According to Salesforce, Agentforce leverages “trusted data through Data 360,” applying business logic to coordinate actions across various applications, thereby maintaining governance and compliance without compromising performance. A standout feature of this collaboration is the introduction of NVIDIA’s Nemotron 3 Nano model within Agentforce. This model is optimized for enterprise environments, especially beneficial for companies dealing with large volumes of data or complex workflows. It can process long histories and considerable documents without skipping a beat, which is crucial for small businesses that need to deliver personalized services based on comprehensive customer histories. The model’s efficiency can lead to significant cost savings in computing resources, allowing businesses to allocate funds more effectively. This AI tool’s practical applications span various industries. For example, a financial services firm could deploy a compliance agent that monitors transactions and identifies risk signals in real time. This capability enables SME owners in heavily regulated sectors to focus on strategic decisions rather than administrative burdens, freeing them to engage more effectively with their customers. Similarly, healthcare organizations can utilize these agents to synthesize extensive case histories, ensuring access controls are maintained, thus improving patient care. However, adopting such advanced technologies is not without its hurdles. Many SMEs may find the orchestration of AI solutions daunting, as the integration of multiple platforms and data systems can be complex. Salesforce and NVIDIA address this challenge by offering reference architectures that clearly delineate each system’s role—from Slack as a collaboration tool to Data 360 as a context provider. These blueprints aim to eliminate ambiguity for small business owners, assuring them that they can adopt these technologies confidently. Despite the promising features, small business owners may still face challenges such as the initial learning curve, implementation costs, and the need for ongoing support. As with any new technology, investing time in understanding these advanced tools will be crucial for maximizing their utility. Additionally, while the platform ensures security, business owners must also evaluate how these systems align with their operational philosophies and culture. Salesforce’s partnership with NVIDIA underscores the shift toward a more integrated approach to AI in the workplace, enabling businesses to easily deploy AI agents within trusted frameworks. This initiative aims to make enterprise-level capabilities accessible to businesses of all sizes, potentially leveling the playing field for SMEs competing in a rapidly evolving digital landscape. As the landscape of AI continues to evolve, small business owners will benefit from staying informed about the latest tools and technologies that can enhance their operations. For further details on Agentforce, visit Salesforce’s website, or to learn more about Slackbot, click here. Additionally, for insights on the NVIDIA Nemotron models, follow this link. For more information, check out the original announcement from Salesforce here. Image via Google Gemini This article, "Salesforce and NVIDIA Launch Integrated AI Agents for Enterprise Efficiency" was first published on Small Business Trends View the full article
  12. In a recent keynote at the Industrial Marketing Summit, Rand Fishkin argued that we’re marketing in a “zero-click world.” His observation captures an important surface-level trend: fewer users are clicking through to websites. The deeper shift, however, is structural. What has changed is the way information is evaluated, repeated, and trusted across the web — and that’s where many are drawing the wrong conclusion. As clicks decline, it can look like websites matter less. In reality, their role in shaping what gets seen and trusted may be increasing. Why ‘zero-click’ discussions often lead to the wrong conclusion From a traffic perspective, the trend is unmistakable. Clicks are declining in many contexts. Search engines now answer many questions directly on the results page. Social platforms function as discovery engines where people research ideas, products, and services without leaving the platform. AI assistants synthesize answers from across the web before a user ever sees a list of links. Part of the reason the zero-click discussion resonates so strongly is that it disrupts the way we’ve historically measured visibility. For more than two decades, traffic and click-through rates have served as the primary signals for forecasting performance and evaluating the impact of search. When answers appear directly in search results, AI summaries, or platform conversations, those interactions often occur outside the analytics frameworks we’re accustomed to using. The conclusion many draw from this trend — that websites matter less — is an incomplete assessment. The role of websites is changing, but their importance in the information ecosystem hasn’t disappeared. In some ways, it may be increasing. The reason has to do with how modern information systems determine what to trust. Large language models and AI-driven search interfaces don’t evaluate truth the way humans do. They rely on probabilistic signals drawn from the information available across the web. When the same message appears consistently across multiple independent sources, the statistical likelihood that the information is correct increases. Visibility in this environment is determined by where information appears. Dig deeper: Why surface-level SEO tactics won’t build lasting AI search visibility Your customers search everywhere. Make sure your brand shows up. The SEO toolkit you know, plus the AI visibility data you need. Start Free Trial Get started with Fishkin is right about the trend The fragmentation of discovery is real. Information consumption now happens across many environments: search results, social feeds, community forums, video platforms, and AI interfaces. Users frequently encounter answers without needing to click a link. A search result might contain an AI summary. A product recommendation might appear in a Reddit thread. A professional insight might circulate on LinkedIn. From a traditional web analytics perspective, these interactions can appear as lost traffic. However, focusing exclusively on clicks misses the more important question: where does the information itself originate? The environments where people consume information are expanding, but the underlying knowledge those systems rely on still has to come from somewhere. Zero-click doesn’t mean zero influence The critical distinction you need to understand is the difference between traffic and information influence. Traffic measures whether a user visited your website. Influence measures whether the information you produced shaped the answer someone received. AI systems don’t generate answers out of thin air. They construct them from patterns learned across the open web. When an LLM answers a question about a legal issue, a technical concept, or a marketing strategy, it draws on the analysis, explanations, and original thinking that publishers have already placed online. Even in a zero-click environment, those sources continue to exist. They continue to shape the answers. The difference is that influence increasingly occurs earlier in the information pipeline, before the user even reaches a website. Fewer clicks don’t mean fewer sources. In practice, it often increases the value of authoritative sources because AI systems depend on them to construct coherent responses. Without expert explanations, detailed analysis, and original insight, there’s nothing for the system to synthesize. Dig deeper: Is SEO a brand channel or a performance channel? Now it’s both Get the newsletter search marketers rely on. See terms. The role of ‘rented land’ In discussions that follow the “zero-click world” framing, the recommendation is that brands should focus more heavily on platforms they don’t control — social networks, communities, and other forms of “rented land.” Brands can think of their visibility footprint as two categories of territory: Owned land, where they control the infrastructure and content. Rented land, where their message appears on platforms they do not control. Owned land includes assets such as a company website, product documentation, knowledge bases, and other first-party content environments. These are places where a brand controls the structure, the message, and the permanence of the information. Rented land includes platforms such as LinkedIn, Substack, industry publications, forums, podcasts, and social media environments where the brand participates but does not control the underlying platform. In an AI-mediated discovery environment, both types of territory matter. Owned land provides the canonical source of information. Rented land distributes that information across the broader ecosystem where AI systems encounter it. These platforms are powerful environments for discovery, amplification, and conversation. They are often where audiences encounter brands for the first time and where ideas circulate widely. However, they rarely serve as the place where authority itself is established. Authority tends to emerge from deeper forms of publishing: Long-form explanations. Original analysis. Research. Consistent demonstrations of expertise over time. These forms of content typically live on first-party websites, where ideas can be developed fully and preserved as reference points. Rented platforms still influence how AI systems interpret information, but their role differs from that of first-party publishing. When a brand, concept, or explanation appears consistently across multiple environments — first-party sites, industry publications, social platforms, and other third-party mentions — the association between that entity and the idea becomes stronger. Repeated exposure stabilizes the relationship between the brand and the concepts connected to it. As a result, the likelihood that the brand will be included in an AI-generated answer increases. Platforms amplify the signal. First-party publishing is where the signal originates. Dig deeper: How paid, earned, shared, and owned media shape generative search visibility Why AI often favors primary sources Another misconception in the zero-click discussion is the assumption that AI systems primarily rely on aggregated or repackaged information. In practice, the opposite often occurs. When AI systems generate answers, they frequently rely on sources that provide clear explanations, detailed reasoning, and subject-matter expertise. These characteristics are more common in original publishing than in aggregated content. Legal blogs, technical documentation, research publications, and expert commentary often perform well in AI citations because they provide usable knowledge. The material contains context, reasoning, and structured explanations that models can extract and synthesize. Aggregated summaries frequently lack that depth. Without detailed explanation or original analysis, the content provides limited value for AI systems attempting to construct coherent answers. The result is a quiet shift in visibility. Domains that consistently publish authoritative explanations may become more influential in AI-generated answers, even if traditional click-based metrics decline. See the complete picture of your search visibility. Track, optimize, and win in Google and AI search from one platform. Start Free Trial Get started with The real shift you should understand Websites still matter, but their role is changing. They’re no longer just traffic generators. In an AI-mediated information ecosystem, websites function as knowledge sources, training signals, and citation anchors — where expertise is documented, and ideas originate. Platforms distribute those ideas, conversations amplify them, and AI systems synthesize them into answers. The source of the underlying knowledge, however, still matters. The marketing implication is straightforward. Success can’t be measured solely by clicks. The objective is to ensure that credible expertise exists in durable forms that can be discovered, referenced, and synthesized wherever information surfaces — whether in search results, AI-generated responses, or discussions on other platforms. Content that is clear, authoritative, and genuinely useful will continue to shape the answers people receive. In a zero-click world, influence simply happens earlier in the information pipeline. Dig deeper: Content marketing in an AI era: From SEO volume to brand fame View the full article
  13. A reader writes: I do communications and marketing and would love your advice on something that happened my first time managing a team. I had a marketing assistant, “Kitty,” who was very earnest and a brand new grad from the fancy university in town. She was good at visuals (so the promotional graphics and fliers touting our products on social media) but less so on writing up the descriptions needed for a company like ours. Typical interactions would go like this: Kitty’s draft: CompanyName just released a new line of teapots inspired by London. The teapot are red. Me, when, reviewing drafts: This is a good start, but let’s try to make these teapots sound like the best thing ever! How would you do that? What do you think of when you think of London?” She never got it, so in the draft I would use Track Changes and change it to, “Transport yourself to London each morning, with our latest teapot collection. Using the same shade of red as London’s historic phone booths, Painty Fancypainter…” (You get the idea.) Then I would say, “Look over the edits I made and let me know if you have questions, but that’s how I’d like to jazz things up.” Anyway, it goes on like this for a bit and she never has questions and I’m struggling to figure out how to explain it/teach it better. Then I go on vacation for a week. Before I went away, I pre-edited as much as I could, but instructed her to go to our skip-level boss, Lydia, our very harried head of our division without a marketing background who runs six other teams. During our first meeting after I come back, Kitty looks agitated before bursting out, “Lydia only made one change to the floral teapot post I had to do while you were away. Unless there is a COMPLETELY DIFFERENT STANDARD for when you are here, I don’t know why you edit me so much.” She goes on to say that I’m super critical and her therapist told her that I am an insecure person who “wants to be her friend” and that I’m threatened by Kitty’s brilliance because she’s young. (I was 39 at the time.) And then she repeated the part about how if our harried boss Lydia approved the one (1!) post while I was away, there was a COMPLETELY DIFFERENT STANDARD for when I was here versus when I was on vacation, and that the vacation standard was clearly correct. It quickly became clear that the “ask her about the completely different standard” line came from the therapist. Kitty also used the “it makes me feel bad when I get edits” line, and while that framing might be helpful in conversations with a parent, romantic partner, or friend, I really just want to get my social media posts out and was frustrated that she was prioritizing her feelings over honing her skills. While this part was none of my business, I was also upset at Kitty’s therapist for giving her such terrible advice and never once considering that maybe a new grad still had skills she needed to develop? (I’m older and still have skills I need to develop!) I didn’t say any of this, but I’m still wondering how I could have handled this episode better in the moment. There are a lot of therapists out there giving weird work advice. Who knows if Kitty’s therapist was actually one of them, because Kitty could be a very unreliable narrator, but it’s definitely a thing that some therapists don’t get how work works … or they are correctly focused on their patient’s feelings in a way that wouldn’t translate appropriately to a work setting. That said, if Kitty was legitimately confused about why she got very different feedback from Lydia than she had been getting from you, it’s reasonable for her to ask about it. The way she did it was terribly executed, but the crux of the question itself could be a legitimate one. Ideally you would have calmly and matter-of-factly responded with something like, “Lydia runs six other teams and doesn’t have the time for the line editing I’m responsible for when I’m here. Part of my job is refining copy and coaching you do that, whereas Lydia is just doing a brief review for glaring issues. My review and her review are different by design.” In response to Kitty saying that getting edited made her feel bad: “I’m sorry to hear you’re having a rough time with it. When you write professionally, getting edited is a very normal part of the job. It’s also how we all get better and better at what we do. My experience has always been that the more you can actively welcome feedback on your work, the better your work will get over time and the more successful you’ll be in your career. I’m giving you feedback because I care about developing your skills, and also because I’m ultimately responsible for the work we put out.” You might add, “There’s no version of your role where the person in it wouldn’t be getting edited; it’s an inherent part of the job, like with most writing-heavy jobs.” But that’s before getting to the part about her saying that you’re super critical, insecure, and threatened by her brilliance and youth. I mean, maybe you were super critical, I can’t know for sure, but based on the totality of facts in your letter I’m inclined to think Kitty was the issue, not you. Particularly with the “threatened by her brilliance and youth” piece, it sounds you were dealing with someone having a pretty ridiculous and over-the-top outburst, and the best response would be something like, “I can talk to you about why our team is structured the way it is and why I operate the way I do, and I will hear you out if there are parts of that that aren’t working for you — which doesn’t mean they will change, but I will certainly listen with an open mind — but at this point you’re making personal attacks in a way that isn’t okay to do to any colleague. So I’d like to resume this conversation tomorrow and ask that you be prepared then to talk from a calmer place and without personal attacks.” All that said, though … at that point I think you also needed to look at whether Kitty was the right person for the job. In addition to what sound like significant issues with her writing and ability to incorporate feedback into her work, it sounds like there were some serious maturity issues there too, and those tend to show up at work in all sorts of ways. The post my employee blew up at me and claimed her therapist said I was threatened by her appeared first on Ask a Manager. View the full article
  14. A statue of Christopher Columbus has been placed on the grounds of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building adjacent to the White House, the latest effort by President Donald The President’s administration to recognize the controversial explorer. The statue is a replica of one that was tossed into Baltimore’s harbor in 2020 during The President’s first term at a time of nationwide protests against institutional racism. The President endorses a traditional view of Columbus as a leader of the 1492 mission seen as the unofficial beginning of European colonization in the Americas and the development of the modern economic and political order. But in recent years, Columbus also has been recognized as a primary example of Western Europe’s conquest of the New World, its resources and its native people. “In this White House, Christopher Columbus is a hero, and President The President will ensure he’s honored as such for generations to come,” the White House posted on X. “We are delighted the statue has found a place where it can peacefully shine and be protected,” said John Pica, a Maryland lobbyist and president of the Italian American Organizations United, which owns the statue and agreed to loan it to the federal government for placement at or near the White House. The statue, made mostly of marble, was created by Will Hemsley, a sculptor based in Centreville on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. The original statue was toppled by protesters on July 4, 2020, and thrown into Baltimore’s Inner Harbor after anger boiled over following the death of George Floyd at the hands of police. It was one of many statues of Columbus that were vandalized around the same time, with protesters saying the Italian explorer was responsible for the genocide and exploitation of native peoples in the Americas. In recent years, some people, institutions and government entities have displaced Columbus Day with recognition of Indigenous Peoples Day. President Joe Biden in 2021 became the first U.S. president to mark Indigenous Peoples Day with a proclamation. The President dismisses the shift on Columbus as “left-wing arsonists” bending history and twisting Americans’ collective memory. “I’m bringing Columbus Day back from the ashes.,” he declared last April. Echoing his 2024 campaign rhetoric, he complained that “Democrats did everything possible to destroy Christopher Columbus, his reputation, and all of the Italians that love him so much.” —Brian Witte, Associated Press View the full article
  15. Explore 10 digital asset management templates from Notion, Airtable, Smartsheet and more, for quicker, smarter file tracking and organization. The post 10 Digital Asset Management Templates for Smarter File Tracking in 2026 appeared first on project-management.com. View the full article
  16. European parliament set to vote this week on whether to ratify Turnberry agreement signed last yearView the full article
  17. Education secretary Bridget Phillipson says eligibility rules are being examinedView the full article
  18. Stop chasing rankings and start building visibility that matters with three practical strategies for SEO in 2026. The post 3 Strategies That Can Survive AI Search In 2026: What I Shared At SEJ Live appeared first on Search Engine Journal. View the full article
  19. Most SEO discussions today center on AI — from AI Overviews to ChatGPT and other LLMs — and the concern that they’re taking traffic from business websites, forcing a shift toward GEO or AEO. For the most part, that concern is valid. AI is reducing traffic for many sites, especially those that rely on top-of-funnel, informational content. But the data suggests AI may not be the biggest shift. User behavior has been fragmenting across platforms for years, and I see this play out in agency work every day. Here’s what the data shows about how search behavior is changing across platforms, and why a “search everywhere” strategy matters more than focusing on LLMs alone. Third-party platforms are encroaching on traditional search People search TikTok for restaurants, YouTube for tutorials, Reddit for authentic reviews, and Amazon to buy products. In many cases, these platforms are replacing traditional search engines like Google and Bing as the starting point. This shift isn’t just about behavior — it shows up in traffic, too. Amazon and YouTube still drive far more desktop traffic than ChatGPT, a trend Rand Fishkin recently highlighted. Recently, I helped run a comprehensive share of voice analysis for a client. The goal was threefold: See which competitors are winning in traditional search across multiple service lines. Find keyword and content gaps. Create a content roadmap based on priority to fill these gaps. The analysis revealed a lot of helpful data, but one of the most interesting takeaways was that our core competitors weren’t actually our biggest competitors in traditional search. YouTube and Reddit were. These platforms rank well in traditional search, take up valuable SERP real estate, and move users away from Google and Bing to funnel them back to their own platforms. The analysis highlighted a key point: if you don’t focus any effort on these places, you’re not only missing out on visibility in traditional search, but you’re also missing valuable attention when users navigate off Google and start watching videos or reading threads. And this website isn’t the only one seeing this type of trend. Do this type of analysis yourself, and see who your actual competitors are within traditional search. The answers may surprise you. Dig deeper: Why social search visibility is the next evolution of discoverability Your customers search everywhere. Make sure your brand shows up. The SEO toolkit you know, plus the AI visibility data you need. Start Free Trial Get started with Third-party platforms can have higher search volumes As seen above, platforms like YouTube and Reddit are increasingly occupying traditional SERP real estate. But what about searches within the platforms themselves? Depending on the query, there may be far more search volume on these platforms than on Google or Bing. For example, YouTube dominates in tutorials and “how-to” content. A term like “how to fix a leaky sink faucet” has 15x the search volume on YouTube than it does on traditional search globally. Source: Semrush Source: vidIQ Search volumes are estimates. But if you want to get in front of the right people where they’re searching, any content strategy around a term like this, or a similar topic, must include creating a YouTube video. Better yet, to be search-everywhere-friendly, create a blog post and embed that video in it. Dig deeper: YouTube is no longer optional for SEO in the age of AI Overviews Get the newsletter search marketers rely on. See terms. Third-party platforms are cited more in LLMs Aside from traditional search and in-platform search, we also know that “search everywhere” influences AI-generated results. To provide answers, LLMs need content to synthesize. More often than not, that content isn’t coming from business websites, but from third-party sources and social platforms. AI visibility tools can quickly show businesses the power of search everywhere in relation to citations. Take a look at these examples: Brand A Brand B These are two completely different brands, yet the trends are the same: a very small percentage of citations come from your own website or even direct competitors. In both examples, almost 90% of citations come from third-party news and online publications, or social and forum platforms like Reddit or Quora. The takeaway here is that focusing on your own website, in the context of LLM citations, can only go so far. If you want to improve brand sentiment or ensure that information is accurately reflected by AI, it needs to happen in places outside of your direct control. Dig deeper: SEO’s new battleground: Winning the consensus layer Start investing in search everywhere today The competitive landscape is shifting, and many marketers have tunnel vision when it comes to AI. Discovery now happens across a wide range of platforms. YouTube, Reddit, Quora, and others dominate significant portions of traditional search results and may have far more search activity within their own platforms. When AI systems generate answers, they often pull information from these platforms rather than brand websites. To win in modern search, you need to understand where your audience is actually searching. That doesn’t stop at Google. It means showing up everywhere that shapes decisions. View the full article
  20. As return-to-office mandates tighten, many workers are reckoning what life in a cubicle looks like. If it’s up to the Swiss furniture and design firm Vitra, your next cubicle might not look much like a cubicle at all. Vitra partnered with German industrial designer Konstantin Grcic to create Scout, a family of minimalist office furniture built to adapt to the flexible ways people work today. Launched on March 19, Scout is comprised of five pieces that range in sizes, offering stationary and mobile workspaces with customizable options for workplaces and schools. Konstantin Grcic The tables feature trapezoidal desks that have metal tubular frames. Attachments that hang from the tubes can turn the desks into a cubicle-like set-up or connect multiple desks to create a shared workspace. “The aim is not to replace what already exists,” Grcic told Vitra Magazine. “Rather, the system is an extension or complementary offering that responds to different levels and styles of work.” The collection offers various desk options. Scout Work allows for manually adjustable heights and tilts that don’t require electricity. A frame encases the desk and can be used for privacy screens or to hang accessories. Scout Work Mobile offers the same features but on wheels, allowing for mobility around spaces. Another product on wheels is Scout Sprint, a small table made in both a seating or standing height, with nesting bases and foldable tabletops. The collection also offers products for meeting configurations. Take Scout Summit, a trapezoidal table which can be nested together for easy storage, and Scout Meet, a long rectangular table offered in two heights which seats up to eight people. “As with tableware or cutlery, where a fork and knife belong to the same family yet serve different purposes,” Grcic said. “Each piece is defined by its own form and proportion, depending on its intended use.” The collection is the latest in Grcic and Vitra’s examination of what workspaces can look like. In 2016, they collaborated on Scout’s predecessor, Hack, which turned utilitarian wooden boards into adjustable workspaces. Scout is more mobile and more industrial than Grcic’s previous design for Vitra, but both are a playful alternative to what can otherwise be a pretty staid office furniture landscape. “All the pieces are straightforward and highly adaptable,” he said. “People will inevitably invent their own way of using them.” View the full article
  21. The U.S. economy was supposed to start the year with a bang, fueled by an unusually large jump in tax refunds from President Donald The President’s tax cut legislation. Yet spiking gas prices are on track to eat up those refunds, leaving most Americans with little extra to spend. “Next spring is projected to be the largest tax refund season of all time,” The President said in a prime-time speech in December that was intended to address voters’ concerns about the economy and stubbornly high prices. But that was before the Iran war, which began Feb. 28. Oil and gas prices have soared since then, with the nationwide average price of gas reaching $3.94 Sunday, up more than a dollar from just a month earlier. Gas prices are likely to remain elevated for some time, even if the war ends soon, because shipping and production have been disrupted and will take time to recover. Economists now expect slower growth this spring and for the year as a whole, as dollars that are spent on gas are less likely to be used for restaurant meals, new clothes, or entertainment. Lower and middle-income households are likely to be hit particularly hard, because they receive lower refunds, while spending a greater proportion of their earnings on gas. “The energy shock is to going to hit those who have the least cushion,” said Alex Jacquez, chief of policy at the left-leaning Groundwork Collaborative and a former economist in the Biden White House. “And it doesn’t look like those tax refunds are going to be here to save them.” Neale Mahoney, director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, calculates that gas prices could peak in May at $4.36 a gallon, based on oil price forecasts by Goldman Sachs, followed by slow declines for the rest of the year. The notion that gas prices decline much more slowly than they rise is so ingrained among economists that they refer to it as the “rocket and feathers” phenomenon. In that scenario, the average household would pay $740 more in gas this year, nearly equal to the $748 increase in refunds that the Tax Foundation has estimated the average household will receive. Through March 6, refunds have risen by much less than that, according to IRS data: They have averaged $3,676, up $352 from $3,324 in 2025. Still, average refunds could rise as more complex returns are filed. Other estimates show similar impacts. Economists at Oxford Economics, a consulting firm, estimate that if gas prices average $3.70 a gallon all year, it will cost consumers about $70 billion — more than the $60 billion in increased tax refunds. The gas price spike comes with many consumers already in a precarious position, particularly compared to 2022, when gas prices also soared because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. At that time, many households still had fattened bank accounts from pandemic-era stimulus payments and companies were hiring rapidly and sharply lifting pay to attract workers. Now, hiring is nearly at a standstill and Americans’ saving rate has steadily fallen in the past few years as many households borrow more to sustain their spending. “When you start looking across the perspective from a consumer side, you’re seeing people who have maxed out their credit cards, are using ‘buy now, pay later’ to purchase their groceries,” said Julie Margetta Morgan, president of The Century Foundation, a think tank. “They’re making it work for now, but that can fall apart quite quickly.” The impact will likely worsen the “K-shaped” narrative around the U.S. economy, analysts said, in which higher income households have fared better than lower-income households. The bottom 10% of earners spend nearly 4% of their incomes on gasoline, Pantheon Macroeconomics estimates, while the top 10% spend just 1.5%. For now, most analysts still expect the U.S. economy to expand this year, even if more slowly, given the gas price shock. Higher gas prices will likely worsen inflation in the short run, but over time weaker spending will also slow growth. American consumers and businesses have repeatedly shaken off shocks since the pandemic — soaring inflation, rising interest rates, tariffs — and continued to spend, defying concerns that the economy would tip into recession. Many economists note that the proportion of their incomes that Americans spend on gas and other energy has fallen significantly compared with a decade ago. Data from the Bank of America Institute, released Friday, showed that spending on gas on the bank’s credit and debit cards shot 14.4% higher in the week ended March 14 compared with a year ago. Before the war, such spending was running 5% below the previous year, a benefit to consumers. Spending on discretionary items — restaurant meals, electronics, and travel — is still growing, the institute said, evidence of consumer resilience. But there is little sign it is accelerating, as many economists had hoped. “The longer these gasoline prices persist, the more that will gradually sap consumer discretionary spending,” said David Tinsley, senior economist at the institute. Other analysts expect growth will slow because of the war. Bernard Yaros and Michael Pearce, economists at Oxford Economics, forecast that the U.S. economy will grow just 1.9% this year, down from an earlier estimate of 2.5%. “We had anticipated a lift in spending from a bumper tax refund season,” they wrote, “but the rise in gasoline prices, if sustained, would more than offset that boost.” —Christopher Rugaber, AP Economics Writer View the full article
  22. Ukrainian-American billionaire bought majority stake in controversial porn streaming platform in 2018View the full article
  23. Stocks reverse losses and oil tumbles after US President says there have been ‘constructive’ talks with TehranView the full article
  24. Choosing the right name for your business is essential, and using a business name generator can simplify the process. Tools like Shopify, Namelix, and Looka offer customized suggestions based on your industry, as well as AI-driven features improve creativity. Furthermore, unique domain name checkers guarantee your chosen name has an online presence. Comprehending how these generators work can greatly impact your branding strategy, leading to effective decisions. Let’s explore these top options and their unique features. Key Takeaways Shopify Business Name Generator provides unique, industry-specific suggestions with unlimited searches and domain availability checks for entrepreneurs. Namelix AI uses advanced algorithms for personalized name ideas, allowing users to filter by length and keywords for tailored results. Looka Business Name Generator creates distinctive names while offering logo design ideas and instant checks for domain availability and social media handles. Magic Write integrates with Canva to generate customized names, featuring logo previews and collaboration tools for team input on branding. Unique Domain Name Checkers ensure quick domain availability checks and suggest alternatives while analyzing SEO potential for enhanced online visibility. Shopify Business Name Generator Have you ever struggled to come up with a catchy name for your business? The Shopify Business Name Generator can help you overcome that challenge. By simply entering a keyword related to your business idea, this user-friendly tool generates unique brand names instantly. It’s particularly useful if you’re in construction, as it includes a construction name generator feature for industry-specific ideas. This random name generator offers hundreds of creative suggestions, allowing you to compare and brainstorm effectively. Plus, it checks domain availability to guarantee you can establish an online presence with your chosen name. Best of all, it’s completely free, so you can conduct unlimited searches, making it accessible for entrepreneurs at any stage of their expedition. Namelix AI Name Generator Finding the perfect name for your business can often feel overwhelming, but the Namelix AI Name Generator simplifies this process considerably. This innovative business name generator uses advanced AI name generation to produce unique name suggestions customized to your specific ideas and keywords. You can filter results based on name length, preferred keywords, and domain extensions, ensuring the names generated are relevant to your needs. Namelix encourages a creative naming process, offering catchy and memorable options that are ideal for startups and new ventures. Plus, the user-friendly interface allows you to explore diverse naming possibilities quickly. By saving your preferred names, you help the algorithm learn, improving future suggestions and making your naming experience even smoother. Looka Business Name Generator When you’re launching a new business, choosing an effective name can be a critical step that influences your brand’s identity. Looka’s Business Name Generator excels in creating unique names customized to your specific industry. Its user-friendly interface streamlines the process, allowing you to filter results by name length and related terms. Key features include: Categorized naming options: invented, multi-word, and traditional Instant checks for domain availability and social media handles Logo design ideas accompanying name suggestions Improved branding experience for entrepreneurs With Looka, you’ll find a business name generator that assists you in brainstorming and guarantees your chosen name aligns with your business goals and vision. Magic Write for Creative Naming Magic Write for Creative Naming offers an innovative solution for businesses seeking to develop a distinctive brand identity. This AI-powered tool, integrated within Canva, generates customized business name ideas based on your prompts. You can easily customize suggestions to suit your unique selling points and target market. Simply create or open a design in Canva and use the /Magic shortcut or Canva Assistant. With 50 free queries available, it’s a cost-effective option for startups and established businesses alike. Moreover, Magic Write includes logo preview capabilities, allowing you to visualize your brand alongside name suggestions. It also promotes collaboration among team members, making it an effective ai team name generator and an interesting name generator for creating an elaborate name or even a name generator Instagram. Unique Domain Name Checkers To establish a strong online presence, using unique domain name checkers is essential for entrepreneurs and businesses alike. These tools let you input desired business names and instantly check for domain availability across various extensions. If your first choice is taken, they often suggest alternatives that align with your brand vision. Here are some benefits of using unique domain name checkers: Check domain availability quickly and easily. Get alternative name suggestions that fit your brand. Analyze SEO potential for better online visibility. Verify social media handle availability for consistent branding. Frequently Asked Questions How to Generate a Catchy Business Name? To generate a catchy business name, start by brainstorming keywords relevant to your brand. Use tools like AI-powered generators to create unique combinations. Incorporate techniques such as alliteration or puns to improve memorability. Check the availability of domains and social media handles to guarantee consistency. Prioritize clarity and uniqueness, aiming for a name that reflects your identity. Finally, review and refine your options based on feedback, making sure the chosen name resonates with your audience. How Do I Name My Creative Business? To name your creative business, start by identifying your unique selling point and target market. Brainstorm names that reflect these elements, ensuring they’re memorable and easy to pronounce. You can use AI tools to generate options customized to your industry. Check domain and social media availability for your chosen name. Finally, consider using alliteration or puns to improve creativity, making your business name stand out in a competitive environment. How Do I Come up With a Catchy Craft Business Name? To come up with a catchy craft business name, start by brainstorming keywords that reflect your style, materials, or techniques. Use tools like Canva’s Magic Write or Namelix for name generation. Incorporate alliteration or rhymes for memorability. Check domain and social media availability to guarantee consistency. Finally, engage your audience through surveys to gather feedback on potential names, making certain they resonate and capture the essence of your craft effectively. How Do I Come up With a Creative LLC Name? To create a creative LLC name, start by defining your core values, offerings, and target audience. This foundation helps guarantee your name reflects your brand’s identity. Use online tools to generate ideas, but prioritize names that are memorable and easily pronounceable. Check domain and social media availability to maintain a consistent online presence. Finally, conduct trademark searches to avoid legal issues and guarantee your chosen name is unique and protectable. Conclusion In summary, utilizing business name generators like Shopify, Namelix, Looka, Magic Write, and unique domain name checkers can greatly simplify your naming process. These tools not only provide creative suggestions customized to your industry but also guarantee domain availability, enhancing your online presence. By leveraging these resources, you can save time and focus on developing your brand, allowing you to explore diverse options that resonate with your vision as you support your entrepreneurial expedition. Image via Google Gemini This article, "5 Best Business Name Generators to Ignite Creativity" was first published on Small Business Trends View the full article
  25. Choosing the right name for your business is essential, and using a business name generator can simplify the process. Tools like Shopify, Namelix, and Looka offer customized suggestions based on your industry, as well as AI-driven features improve creativity. Furthermore, unique domain name checkers guarantee your chosen name has an online presence. Comprehending how these generators work can greatly impact your branding strategy, leading to effective decisions. Let’s explore these top options and their unique features. Key Takeaways Shopify Business Name Generator provides unique, industry-specific suggestions with unlimited searches and domain availability checks for entrepreneurs. Namelix AI uses advanced algorithms for personalized name ideas, allowing users to filter by length and keywords for tailored results. Looka Business Name Generator creates distinctive names while offering logo design ideas and instant checks for domain availability and social media handles. Magic Write integrates with Canva to generate customized names, featuring logo previews and collaboration tools for team input on branding. Unique Domain Name Checkers ensure quick domain availability checks and suggest alternatives while analyzing SEO potential for enhanced online visibility. Shopify Business Name Generator Have you ever struggled to come up with a catchy name for your business? The Shopify Business Name Generator can help you overcome that challenge. By simply entering a keyword related to your business idea, this user-friendly tool generates unique brand names instantly. It’s particularly useful if you’re in construction, as it includes a construction name generator feature for industry-specific ideas. This random name generator offers hundreds of creative suggestions, allowing you to compare and brainstorm effectively. Plus, it checks domain availability to guarantee you can establish an online presence with your chosen name. Best of all, it’s completely free, so you can conduct unlimited searches, making it accessible for entrepreneurs at any stage of their expedition. Namelix AI Name Generator Finding the perfect name for your business can often feel overwhelming, but the Namelix AI Name Generator simplifies this process considerably. This innovative business name generator uses advanced AI name generation to produce unique name suggestions customized to your specific ideas and keywords. You can filter results based on name length, preferred keywords, and domain extensions, ensuring the names generated are relevant to your needs. Namelix encourages a creative naming process, offering catchy and memorable options that are ideal for startups and new ventures. Plus, the user-friendly interface allows you to explore diverse naming possibilities quickly. By saving your preferred names, you help the algorithm learn, improving future suggestions and making your naming experience even smoother. Looka Business Name Generator When you’re launching a new business, choosing an effective name can be a critical step that influences your brand’s identity. Looka’s Business Name Generator excels in creating unique names customized to your specific industry. Its user-friendly interface streamlines the process, allowing you to filter results by name length and related terms. Key features include: Categorized naming options: invented, multi-word, and traditional Instant checks for domain availability and social media handles Logo design ideas accompanying name suggestions Improved branding experience for entrepreneurs With Looka, you’ll find a business name generator that assists you in brainstorming and guarantees your chosen name aligns with your business goals and vision. Magic Write for Creative Naming Magic Write for Creative Naming offers an innovative solution for businesses seeking to develop a distinctive brand identity. This AI-powered tool, integrated within Canva, generates customized business name ideas based on your prompts. You can easily customize suggestions to suit your unique selling points and target market. Simply create or open a design in Canva and use the /Magic shortcut or Canva Assistant. With 50 free queries available, it’s a cost-effective option for startups and established businesses alike. Moreover, Magic Write includes logo preview capabilities, allowing you to visualize your brand alongside name suggestions. It also promotes collaboration among team members, making it an effective ai team name generator and an interesting name generator for creating an elaborate name or even a name generator Instagram. Unique Domain Name Checkers To establish a strong online presence, using unique domain name checkers is essential for entrepreneurs and businesses alike. These tools let you input desired business names and instantly check for domain availability across various extensions. If your first choice is taken, they often suggest alternatives that align with your brand vision. Here are some benefits of using unique domain name checkers: Check domain availability quickly and easily. Get alternative name suggestions that fit your brand. Analyze SEO potential for better online visibility. Verify social media handle availability for consistent branding. Frequently Asked Questions How to Generate a Catchy Business Name? To generate a catchy business name, start by brainstorming keywords relevant to your brand. Use tools like AI-powered generators to create unique combinations. Incorporate techniques such as alliteration or puns to improve memorability. Check the availability of domains and social media handles to guarantee consistency. Prioritize clarity and uniqueness, aiming for a name that reflects your identity. Finally, review and refine your options based on feedback, making sure the chosen name resonates with your audience. How Do I Name My Creative Business? To name your creative business, start by identifying your unique selling point and target market. Brainstorm names that reflect these elements, ensuring they’re memorable and easy to pronounce. You can use AI tools to generate options customized to your industry. Check domain and social media availability for your chosen name. Finally, consider using alliteration or puns to improve creativity, making your business name stand out in a competitive environment. How Do I Come up With a Catchy Craft Business Name? To come up with a catchy craft business name, start by brainstorming keywords that reflect your style, materials, or techniques. Use tools like Canva’s Magic Write or Namelix for name generation. Incorporate alliteration or rhymes for memorability. Check domain and social media availability to guarantee consistency. Finally, engage your audience through surveys to gather feedback on potential names, making certain they resonate and capture the essence of your craft effectively. How Do I Come up With a Creative LLC Name? To create a creative LLC name, start by defining your core values, offerings, and target audience. This foundation helps guarantee your name reflects your brand’s identity. Use online tools to generate ideas, but prioritize names that are memorable and easily pronounceable. Check domain and social media availability to maintain a consistent online presence. Finally, conduct trademark searches to avoid legal issues and guarantee your chosen name is unique and protectable. Conclusion In summary, utilizing business name generators like Shopify, Namelix, Looka, Magic Write, and unique domain name checkers can greatly simplify your naming process. These tools not only provide creative suggestions customized to your industry but also guarantee domain availability, enhancing your online presence. By leveraging these resources, you can save time and focus on developing your brand, allowing you to explore diverse options that resonate with your vision as you support your entrepreneurial expedition. Image via Google Gemini This article, "5 Best Business Name Generators to Ignite Creativity" was first published on Small Business Trends View the full article
  26. As usual, this week's collection of youth culture flotsam is all over the map. We got the surprising appearance of ancient Greek philosopher Socrates in AI-generated brainrot videos; a meme about winning at gambling that's becoming a meme about hypocrisy; an emoji that probably means something different than you think; and truly creative videos that, whew, don't use AI. Viral video of the week: Socrates and skeletonThe breakout star of viral videos this week is foundational Athenian philosopher Socrates, with his co-star, a living skeleton. In these AI -generated videos, the skeleton represents the viewer, and the idea is to illustrated hypothetical scenarios like "What if you and Socrates opened a Chick-fil-A in ancient Greece?" or "what if you ended up dating Socrates in Ancient Rome?" The trend started with this Instagram video: They then spread to TikTok, where anyone can generate one by posting a dumb prompt to an AI video generation app. Maybe it's good that kids are incorporating Socrates into their internal hierarchy of meme characters, but Socrates is portrayed as the most annoying person imaginable, who goes around pestering strangers with pseudo-philosophical questions. This isn't that far from actual descriptions of the philosopher, who was so confrontational and condescending that his fellow Athenians voted to make him drink poison. But it wasn't because his questions were annoying; it was because they revealed unpleasant contradictions at the center of people's beings. The Socratic Method is about arriving at truth through fearless self-assessment, not about being a jerk. Also, Socrates was from Greece, not Rome. Socratic Irony is using feigned ignorance to reveal the truth, while Internet Irony is using AI to imagine modern people are superior to ancient philosophers when they don't even know the difference between Greece and Rome. The story behind the "I just hit the jackpot" memeIt might be impossible to really know why Socrates has become popular now, so let's take a look at an easier-to-explain trend. "I just hit the jackpot" is a meme format where a clip of rapper GameboyJones singing the chorus to his song "HIT THE JACKPOT! (Hakari Dance)" is overlaid with text about a situation in which someone has hit a metaphorical jackpot. Like when there's a substitute teacher: or when a test you haven't studied for is delayed: GameboyJones originally posted the song to accompany an edit of the anime series Jujutsu Kaisen. The song and meme are tied to the character Kinji Hakari, whose superpower is themed around gambling and "hitting the jackpot." The anime connection means many of the memes made from the clip go deep into corners of the anime world that only the hardest of hardcore understand. Your guess is as good as mine with clips like this: Also, many of these memes refer to "love over lust mfers," so let's get into that, shall we? What does "love over lust mfers" mean?The mfers part means "motherfuckers," but "love over lust" is a little harder to explain. On the surface, it's self-explanatory and refers to people who say they're into love over lust. Videos like these have been cropping up on TikTok lately: The self-conscious, performative sincerity in these videos is so thick, a backlash is inevitable. It's come in the form of videos where the joke is that anyone who says they're into love over lust is secretly a huge freak, a joke that happens to pair perfectly with the "I just hit the jackpot" meme: What does 🪫, the low battery emoji, mean? Among young people, 🪫, the low battery emoji, is not saying "I need to find a charger, right away." It means something like "I am experiencing emotional depletion, heartbreak, or a general feeling of 'I can't anymore.'" It's a more general version of 🥀, the wilted rose emoji, but unlike the rose, it doesn't only refer to heartbreak. (If you can't get enough definitions of Gen Z and Gen A slang, check out Lifehacker's glossary.) These cartoon chase videos are inspired Here's something young people are doing that's original, creative, clever, and doesn't use AI. Cartoon chase videos employ old-fashioned sound effects, video editing, and cleverness to recreate iconic cartoon moments, like so: I'm sure Socrates would have some serious questions about reenacting old Looney Tunes cartoons, like "When a coyote runs off a cliff, does it fall because of gravity or because it looks down and holds up a sign that reads, 'Yipes'?" and "When Bugs Bunny dresses as a sexy female rabbit to trick his enemy, is it Bugs or Elmer who is deceived?" But that annoying prick's been dead since 399 bc, so screw him. Six-Seven! View the full article
  27. Hi there, When the pandemic broke out, one of the key ways to keep people safe was working from home. Now, as energy crises emerge, WFH is once again being called upon. It’s not just a perk—it’s a powerful work model shaping our world. This caught my attention this week, along with some exciting developments in AI and an article that sparks dreamy thoughts of living in rural Italy, Spain, or Switzerland. I’d love to hear—what stood out to you in today’s reads? -Maja Our Favorite Articles 💯When Energy Crises Push Us Back Home (The Verge)As fuel shortages loom, experts suggest remote work as a solution, showing how WFH can extend far beyond convenience into global necessity. 👉 ​Learn more​. Opening Doors for Neurodiverse Talent With AI (Patch)A new AI-powered platform aims to connect neurodiverse adults with work, tackling long-standing barriers in hiring and inclusion. 👉 ​Keep reading​. Claude’s Learning Mode: AI That Actually Learns With You (X · Nav Toor)Turn Claude into a knowledgeable professor with “learning mode” 👉 ​See here​. 8 Countries That Will Pay You to Move There (Forbes)From Europe to Asia, countries are offering financial incentives to attract new residents. 👉 ​Read on​. This Week's Sponsor 🙌Find your dream remote job without the hassle. 135,000+ roles, advanced search filters, and the ability to save searches and track applications. Try Remotive today​! Remotive Jobs 💼Let's get you hired! This great company is hiring now: 💻 Engineering 👉 ​Senior Independent AI Engineer / Architect at A.Team​ (Americas, Europe, Israel) 👉 ​Senior Independent Software Developer at A.Team​ (Americas, Europe, Israel) 👉 ​iOS Developer at nooro ​(USA Only) Free Guides & Tools​Premium Job Board​We curate 140,000+ fully remote jobs so you don't have to. ➡️ ​Find your remote job​ ​Job Search Tips​Looking for a remote job? Here are our tips to help you work remotely. ➡️ ​Check it out​ Join the Remotive newsletter Subscribe to get our latest content by email. Success! Now check your email to confirm your subscription. There was an error submitting your subscription. Please try again. Email address Subscribe Powered by ConvertKit View the full article




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