Right now, we all speculate about the potential changes artificial intelligence might bring, as well. Predictions range from the existential (CEO jobs will go away) to the mundane (how we write emails will be more automated).
But it is not the technology we need to watch and understand, as such. It is what the technology enables. We might agree that spreadsheets, word processing, presentation software, personal computers or smartphones have had an impact on work and learning, without also arguing those information technologies fundamentally changed the nature of work or most business models.
But sometimes, new IT has reshape whole industries.
If you worked in any managerial position in U.S. ad-supported media back in 1996, you are well aware of the huge shifts that has taken place in use of ad venues. Print media, linear video and radio have taken huge hits, while online digital venues have skyrocketed.
Many--perhaps most--of the business issues facing managers of ad-supported assets flow directly from those shifts in activity and venues.
Source: Gemini
Put simply, digital now claims up to 82 percent of all U.S. ad placements and revenue. Print has declined from 42 percent to less than three percent. Linear video dropped from 38 percent to 16 percent. Radio dipped from 10 percent to half a percent.
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