Happy Friday.
We never thought we’d write the words “a baby received Botox” and have it be the most wholesome thing we’ve read all week.
But here we are. A Texas family just shared the story of their newborn, whose life was saved by an in-utero Botox procedure.
Now, that’s the kind of news that can make your day. And the weekend.
Meta is handing you an AI content team, a 24/7 customer agent, and a paid Instagram tier

When it’s just you and Bob managing the company content, it can feel like quite the undertaking.
Now your team can get bigger: Meet Meta’s new Creator Assistant.
Live in the Facebook creator dashboard, it answers questions about your performance, spots trends, and tailors advice to your audience, without you having to copy anything over.
The catch is it could nudge creators toward the same trending topics until everything looks alike. Use it for inspiration, then build past it.
And another assistant over here: Meta’s AI business agents now answer customer questions around the clock and grab contact details on their own.
They’re rolling out to Instagram after a million-plus businesses put them to work on WhatsApp and Messenger.
A paid tier is coming, plus a platform with Shopify and Zendesk hooks for bigger teams.
Why we care: Automated conversations across three apps at once is a big deal for leads and retention. Pilot it now, while it’s free.
Speaking of budget: Instagram Plus is live worldwide at $3.99/month and hands power users more control over how their content gets seen.
We’re talking 48-hour stories, per-audience targeting, rewatch stats, pinnable profile items, and animated super hearts… because why not.
Does the lower-end price remove the excuse not to test this? You tell us.
Google tests social-search profiles and Bing introduced bigger favicons for paid ads
Google just handed you your own corner of Search to decorate.
Turns out AI Overviews weren’t the end of the story: Google is testing social-style Search profiles that let you spotlight your articles, videos, and posts in one place.
Kind of like Google Business Profiles, but for creators and media brands.
These profiles feed straight into Google Discover, so your followers are more likely to spot your content on their home screens.
Call it a handy workaround as AIOs squeeze organic click-throughs. This is a direct line to audience-building that doesn’t lean purely on keyword rankings or algorithmic goodwill.
You need to have a couple of steep qualifications, however:
- 100,000 followers on YouTube, Instagram, or X
- 300,000 followers on TikTok
So for now it’s a fairly exclusive club, and US-only at launch.
Changes at Bing are more subtle: Microsoft is testing a noticeably bigger favicon for the top sponsored ad slot, while organic results and lower ads keep the usual size.
Bigger, bolder results tend to win more clicks, that’s not new. A chunkier favicon gives the top paid slot a louder voice in a crowded SERP.
Small tweak, but it hints at where paid search is heading.
Find global influencers in 48 hrs – who actually follow the brief!
UGC delivers 4x higher CTRs and 50% lower CPC than traditional ads.
But – trying to source and manage creators yourself is time-consuming.
Insense enables you to find brand-aligned creators within 48hrs through:
- Their vetted marketplace of 68K+ creators and micro-influencers from 35+ countries.
- Their influencer discovery tool provides access to 7M+ global creators to scale your influencer campaigns.
Major e-com brands use Insense to find their perfect creators to reach global audiences and run diverse collaborations from UGC to product seeding, influencer posting, Meta Partnership Ads, and TikTok Spark Ads.
- Quip saw an 85% influencer activation rate with product seeding
- Revolut partnered with 140+ creators for 350+ UGC assets
- Matys Health saw 12x increased reach through TikTok Spark Ads
What do Google’s GEO guidelines tell us?

Apparently, GEO doesn’t stand for Generated Ends Organic… Who knew?
Dr. Peter J. Meyers dug into Google’s freshly penned Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) guidelines, so you don’t have to read between Google’s carefully worded lines.
Here’s what’s breaking through the fog:
1) SEO still matters, whatever you call it: SEO best practices still apply. Its AI features sit on top of the same core ranking and quality systems you already know.
Our take: Call it GEO, AEO, or alphabet soup. Gemini-powered search still leans on the index via retrieval-augmented generation, so your existing work keeps paying off.
2) Query fan-outs are the new keywords: The tidy one-to-one bond between keywords and results is gone.
Gemini now fans a single query into several related searches, then stitches the answers into one composite page.
Result #7 today could be result #1 for a fan-out query tomorrow. One SERP now hides half a dozen searches, so think in journeys.
3) Don’t sweat the structured data: Structured data isn’t required for AI search, and no magic schema.org markup exists. Crawlers and LLMs simply gobble whatever messy content they can find.
Markup still earns rich results and feeds the Knowledge Graph, so keep it. Just stop obsessively polishing schema expecting some secret AI bonus.
4) Build great content, 2026 edition: E-E-A-T and “build great content” are still the vague advice.
Two pointers stand out: Create non-commodity content, and serve the underlying need rather than every keyword variation.
What we think: When LLMs summarize common knowledge instantly, human perspective is your edge. Don’t put everything into micro-content. Write for the broad topic.
5) The age of agentic SEO is coming (or not): The guidelines tease “agentic experiences.”
Agentic SEO means optimizing for agents that book tickets or build dashboards for you.
The Crew’s take: Like flashy SERP features, agents may upend a few niches and ignore everyone else. We can’t prep for vague. Watch what Google ships, then adapt.
None of this means panic. Search grounding means your core SEO already feeds Gemini results.
How 30k+ social media managers and marketers catch the trends before they’re trending
Have you ever noticed how the social media teams at Netflix, Apple, and Disney seem to stay ahead of social media trends?
It’s not because they have a crystal ball of what’s going to trend or not.
It’s because they’re all hooked on the Geekout newsletter. It reveals the latest social media news, expert insights, and hit videos and memes.
So if you want to join 30k+ other marketers and be “in the know” before things go viral…
Will you notice World Cup sponsors compared to previous years?
With every square inch of the pitch digitized and brands fighting for eyeballs, are sponsors becoming unforgettable icons. Or just blending into a colorful blur?
The data reveals a clear emotional divide:
- More excited for 2026: 60% likely to notice sponsors
- About the same level of excitement: 52% (the overall average)
- Less excited for 2026: Only 43% likely to notice sponsors
That’s a 17-percentage-point gap between your most excited fans and your least engaged viewers.
Excitement is not just a nice-to-have, but a direct multiplier on whether your sponsorship dollars actually land.
A growing segment of viewers notes they’re tuning out traditional pitch-side boards due to ad fatigue and second-screen scrolling.
The Interactive Edge: Audiences show higher noticeability for sponsors who run cross-platform campaigns: specifically blending TV spots with real-time social media engagement.
Actionable Tip: If you’re sponsoring a major event, allocate budget to real-time, reactive social media marketing. Don’t sit on the banner, join the conversation as it’s happening.
AI EDUCATION: ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Midjourney… So many names, but what’s actually useful for you in your work? There’s a newsletter called The Deep View that exists to sift through all the noise and get you up to speed on what’s actionable with AI products, and it’s free. Join 765,000+ subscribers with one click and let AI empower you.*
WHATSAPP: Prepping for FIFA World Cup 2026, the app added soccer-themed calling effects, stickers, and a better match-ball emoji. You also get a football channel directory, Status posts for those channels, and more. Tying tools to big cultural moments keeps users opening your app.
TIKTOK: More football talk. Going all-in on FIFA World Cup 2026, the platform launched a separate Pro Events app for daily fan challenges. Finish tasks, earn stars, and trade them for merch or charity donations. Interesting, but spinning off another app sounds like a gamble.
LINKEDIN: Want to know if your posts reach loyal followers or strangers? A fresh analytics metric splits impressions into in-network versus out-of-network reach, sitting under the discovery section. Track both so you know when content builds loyalty and when it grows your crowd.
*This is a sponsored post.
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