Gen Z stories
Clear warranties and return policies may be needed to turn US interest in refurbished gadgets into sales, the survey found.
New digital onboarding has helped the credit union add USD $138 million in deposits and save more than 4,194 staff hours.
A survey of 2,500 knowledge workers found AI anxiety is driving 33% to consider switching industries, with younger staff most worried.
Older adults are far more likely to doubt digital messages, as a survey finds 41% of UK and US consumers question if they are genuine.
Most enterprise AI use is slipping beyond oversight, with 86% of organisations lacking visibility into data moving to and from tools.
AI anxiety is pushing a third of knowledge workers to consider quitting their industry, raising turnover risks for employers.
Young consumers are far more likely than marketers to punish value clashes, exposing a trust blind spot as influencer spending grows across Europe.
Younger adults are now more likely to lose money to fraud as scams spread across texts, calls, social ads and messaging apps.
Thousands of football fans will be reached through a creator-led push as YouTube streams its first FIFA exhibition match worldwide.
Families in Singapore can now give children controlled access to overseas spending, with limits, monitoring and no foreign transaction fees.
Retailers face stock shortages as 84% of fans say they will travel for unavailable items, with average losses pegged at GBP £116,836.
Younger adults are more exposed to fake ticket offers, with 19% of Gen Z saying they would buy World Cup seats from unofficial websites.
Unapproved AI use is widening a security and compliance gap, with 75% of UK business travellers saying they would use shadow tools for work trips.
Budget-conscious car buyers are being targeted by a six-week push as Carsales leans on AI Voice Search during sport and EOFY ads.
Consumer patience is thinning, with Australian customers most likely to walk away when poor communications or clumsy data capture erode trust.
Retailers risk missing out on Gen Z's rising spend unless they fix legacy systems and align stock, finance and service to changing habits.
One in three daily AI users say explicit images of people they know are acceptable, as confidence in online evidence and scams worsens.
Older Canadians are driving most of Fig's flagged loan scam cases as the lender moves to stop fraudsters before funds are paid out.
Cost pressures are pushing more Australians to hold onto broken devices until end-of-financial-year discounts arrive, Optus research shows.
Social feeds and AI now drive discovery for most young Australians, leaving Google first choice for just 26% of Gen Z shoppers.