logo
PR Gun Rolls Out Premium Media to Skyrocket Press Release Visibility

PR Gun Rolls Out Premium Media to Skyrocket Press Release Visibility

Globe and Mail17-07-2025
PR Gun, a leading press release distribution platform, proudly launches Premium Media, a game-changing service that secures placements on top-tier outlets like Yahoo Finance, AP News, Business Insider, Benzinga, The Globe and Mail, and BarChart.com. These platforms reach diverse audiences—from financial experts and corporate leaders to everyday readers—making them perfect for announcements such as product launches, corporate expansions, or nonprofit campaigns. With syndication on Google News and Bing News, Premium Media maximizes online exposure, delivering stories with precision through PR Gun's robust newswire.
Available as a standalone solution or as an enhancement to PR Gun's PR Basic, PR Plus, and PR Pro packages, Premium Media offers unmatched flexibility. As a standalone option, it provides a powerful platform for major announcements like a startup's funding milestone or a corporation's rebrand. When paired with existing plans, it amplifies campaigns with high-profile placements, ensuring guaranteed placements on platforms like AP News and Yahoo Finance for enhanced credibility and impact.
Premium Media's adaptability empowers clients to align distribution with specific goals. Standalone users can target premium outlets like Business Insider for focused, high-impact campaigns, while those integrating it with PR Basic, PR Plus, or PR Pro plans can expand their reach across elite platforms. This versatility supports industries such as technology, finance, or community initiatives, enabling clients to engage local or global audiences as needed.
Clients can enhance Premium Media with independent tools like Media List, which offers access to journalist contacts and media databases. Though not affiliated with PR Gun, such platforms support targeted pitches to niche outlets, complementing Premium Media's automated distribution for a balanced PR strategy that maximizes both reach and precision.
Premium Media empowers businesses, entrepreneurs, and organizations to share transformative stories—whether partnerships, product debuts, or community efforts—with confidence and measurable results. PR Gun's commitment to efficiency, reliability, and access to leading media outlets ensures that Premium Media delivers high-impact distribution for single milestones or broader campaigns.
To explore Premium Media or launch a campaign, visit https://prgun.com/pricing/premium. For tailored support, contact support@prgun.com. PR Gun remains dedicated to providing innovative, reliable PR solutions to amplify client stories worldwide.
About PR Gun
PR Gun is a premier press release distribution platform, empowering businesses, entrepreneurs, and organizations to share their stories globally. Renowned for efficiency, reliability, and access to top-tier media outlets, PRGun.com delivers transformative PR distribution and media outreach solutions with verified media lists for real, measurable impact.
Visit https://prgun.com for more information.
Media Contact
Company Name: PR Gun
Contact Person: Rica
Email: Send Email
Country: United States
Website: https://prgun.com/
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Prediction: 1 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Will Be Worth More Than Palantir Technologies and Nvidia Combined by 2030
Prediction: 1 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Will Be Worth More Than Palantir Technologies and Nvidia Combined by 2030

Globe and Mail

time31 minutes ago

  • Globe and Mail

Prediction: 1 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Will Be Worth More Than Palantir Technologies and Nvidia Combined by 2030

Key Points Nvidia and Palantir are collectively worth $4.6 trillion today, and Meta Platforms has a reasonably good shot at surpassing that figure within five years. Meta Platforms is using artificial intelligence to strengthen its ad tech business, and the company is an early leader in the smart glasses market. Wall Street expects Meta's earnings to grow at 17% annually in the next three to five years, but analysts have regularly underestimated the company. 10 stocks we like better than Meta Platforms › Shares of Nvidia have advanced 29% year to date, leaving the chipmaker with a market value of $4.2 trillion. And shares of Palantir Technologies have surged 104% year to date, bringing its market value to $365 billion. That means the companies are collectively worth $4.6 trillion. I think Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META) can surpass that figure in five years. The company is currently worth $1.9 trillion, so its market value needs to increase 150% to $4.7 trillion by 2030 to satisfy my prediction. In that scenario, the stock would return about 20% annually. My forecast is aggressive, but investors have good reason to think Meta is equal to the challenge. Here's why. Meta Platforms is using artificial intelligence to strengthen its ad tech business Meta Platforms owns three of the four most popular social media platforms in Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp as measured by monthly active users. Those three platforms also ranked among the four most downloaded social applications for mobile devices last year, meaning the company is successfully defending its dominant position in the industry. Meta currently earns the vast majority of its revenue from advertising. Its ad tech tools help brands reach consumers with relevant ads across its social media platforms, as well as third-party websites and mobile applications. What advertisers are willing to pay depends on user engagement and campaign performance, and the company is leaning on artificial intelligence (AI) to improve both metrics. CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently told analysts, "AI is significantly improving our ability to show people content that they're going to find interesting and useful." Improved recommendations led to a 5% increase in time spent on Facebook and a 6% increase in time spent on Instagram in the second quarter. Also, more brands used Meta's AI creative tools, leading to 3% more ad conversions on Facebook and 5% more on Instagram. Here's the bottom line: Meta Platforms is the second largest ad tech company, behind only Alphabet 's Google, and it is successfully using AI to strengthen its value proposition for consumers and brands. Ad tech spending is forecast to increase at 14% annually through 2030, according to Grand View Research. That gives Meta a good shot at similar earnings growth within its advertising segment. Meta Platforms dominates the burgeoning smart glasses market Meta Platforms is currently the leading supplier of smart glasses. The company accounted for over 60% of shipments last year as the market tripled in size. And growth is projected to remain robust in the years ahead. Counterpoint Research says smart glasses shipments will grow faster than 60% annually through 2029. Other analysts are a little less optimistic. Grand View Research estimates smart glasses sales will increase at 27% annually through 2030. Nevertheless, CEO Mark Zuckerberg thinks smart glasses could slowly replace smartphones (or at least reduce their importance) in the next 15 years, especially once lenses are embedded with augmented reality displays. That could make Meta Platforms the Apple of the 2030s. To elaborate, whereas Apple was a sensational investment over the past two decades in large part because of the success of the iPhone, Meta could see similar success in the next two decades if smart glasses do indeed become the form factor of choice in personal computing and mobile communications. Why Meta Platforms could be worth $4.7 trillion by 2030 To summarize, Meta Platforms is using artificial intelligence to strengthen its advertising business, and the company is also an early leader in the smart glasses market. In turn, Wall Street analysts expect its earnings to grow at 17% annually over the next three to five years. That makes the current valuation of 27 times earnings look reasonable. However, Meta Platforms beat the consensus earnings estimate by an average of 18% in the last four quarters, meaning Wall Street has routinely underestimated the company. If that trend continues, earnings could grow at 21% annually over the next five years, in which case its market value could hit $4.7 trillion (more than Nvidia and Palantir combined today) while its valuation fell to 26 times earnings. Importantly, while I am moderately confident in the scenario I've outlined, Meta Platforms is still a smart long-term investment even if its market value does not reach $4.7 trillion in five years. Patient investors should consider buying a small position today. Should you invest $1,000 in Meta Platforms right now? Before you buy stock in Meta Platforms, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Meta Platforms wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $624,823!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,064,820!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,019% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 178% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of August 4, 2025

Here's how Trump's tariffs are starting to cost Americans
Here's how Trump's tariffs are starting to cost Americans

CBC

time32 minutes ago

  • CBC

Here's how Trump's tariffs are starting to cost Americans

Little by little, the costs of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs are starting to show for American businesses and consumers. News of the tariff impact is mounting, from the Detroit Three automakers announcing they'll face extra costs this year totalling into the billions, to the stainless steel cookware manufacturer in Tennessee hit with a $75,000 (US) tariff bill on one shipment, right down to the coffee shops considering boosting the price of a cup because of tariffs on Brazil. Until recently, companies have somewhat shielded U.S. consumers from the full effects of the tariffs, either by rushing supplies into the country ahead of Trump's deadlines, or absorbing the levies as a cost of doing business. But with tariffs on imports from roughly 100 U.S. trading partners due to rise this week from their current baseline of 10 per cent, tariff-related costs are headed nowhere but up. Alex Durante, senior economist of the Tax Foundation, a Washington-based policy and advocacy group, says the tariffs are hitting a broad range of U.S. businesses that rely on imports. "I think the administration is going to have a really hard time trying to convince the American people that some of the price increases they're seeing are because of other factors not related to the tariffs," Durante said in an interview with CBC News. "I just don't think most people are going to be fooled by that," he said. WATCH | Carney's point man on tariffs takes Canada's message to U.S. television: Canadian officials confident U.S. trade deal will be reached 1 day ago Prime Minister Mark Carney and Dominic LeBlanc, the minister responsible for Canada-U.S. trade, expressed confidence a new trade deal will be reached with the United States, even after 35 per cent tariffs were imposed late last week. Trump, cabinet deny tariffs costing Americans While on a macro level the U.S. economy is generally chugging along just fine despite Trump's tactics, there's some fresh data suggesting the tariffs are acting as a drag, including: weak jobs numbers; rising core inflation; a sharp drop in orders of durable goods, such as appliances and automobiles. Trump and his cabinet members quickly brush aside any evidence that the tariffs are costing Americans, with the president even firing the head of the federal statistics agency that produces the country's employment report. "We have a lot of money coming in, much more money than the country has ever seen, by hundreds of billions of dollars," Trump said Sunday when a reporter asked about tariffs. U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer flat-out denied that Trump's tariffs policies are a factor in the jobs slump. "I don't read tariff policy into that number," Greer told the CBS program Face the Nation on Sunday. But if you're willing to look around, you can find plenty of examples of U.S. businesses feeling the pinch. Reuters news agency is compiling examples of how major companies around the world are responding to Trump's tariffs, such as hiking prices and issuing profit warnings. Retailers, big brands raising prices The Reuters tracker currently shows 22 U.S. companies raising prices, including retail giants (WalMart, Best Buy), footwear brands (Nike, Crocs, Birkenstock) and big-name makers of household goods (Colgate-Palmolive, Procter & Gamble, Clorox). It's hard to imagine many American consumers haven't bought something from those businesses this year. Other big-name U.S. firms have in recent days reported tariff impacts. Tech giant Apple says it faced $800 million in tariff-related costs last quarter alone, and expects that to rise to $1.1 billion this quarter. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway blames tariffs in part for a 5.1 per cent quarterly decline in revenue in its consumer goods division, which includes brands like Fruit of the Loom and Tool manufacturer Stanley Black & Decker estimates its tariff costs will hit $800 million this year. Those corporate figures don't touch on another trend emerging in the U.S. economy: the downturn in visits by international travellers, dramatically so from Canada. Perhaps that's not exactly tariff-related, but Trump slamming other nations on trade by describing them as nasty, unfair and ripping off the U.S. is not exactly what you'd call a warm and welcoming tourism ad campaign either. WATCH | This economist says Canada has a better deal on Trump's tariffs than other countries: Economist Robert Embree on the impact of U.S. tariffs on the Canadian economy 2 days ago Higher prices could impact public opinion While some polling suggests more Americans disapprove of tariffs than approve, the issue does not appear to be a crucial source of public-opinion damage to Trump and the Republicans — at least not yet. That could change if the tariff costs on businesses accumulate so much that consumers can't help but see the impact. "We know from the most recent presidential election that voters really disliked seeing higher prices," said Durante. He sees trouble ahead whether businesses pass along all, some or none of the extra tariff costs to consumers. "If they're absorbing the price increases, that's less money that they could use to invest in their own businesses and jobs and further production," Durante said.

As Beer Stores shut their doors, who will take your empties?
As Beer Stores shut their doors, who will take your empties?

CBC

time32 minutes ago

  • CBC

As Beer Stores shut their doors, who will take your empties?

Social Sharing With more and more Beer Stores closing across Ontario, charities and non-profits that rely on bottle collection are hoping to cash in on your empties. The Beer Store currently processes about 1.6 billion empty alcohol containers per year. But it has closed dozens of locations across the province since the arrival of beer in convenience stores, and plans to shutter still more this September. At least five of the actual or planned closures are in Ottawa, including one in the Glebe, where Operation Come Home runs a bottle drive as part of its BottleWorks social enterprise. Executive director John Heckbert hasn't noticed any impact yet — but he's hoping more residents will call on BottleWorks to collect their empties. "We would be very happy to help people if they find that they're accumulating bottles or that they would like somebody to come pick them up," he said. "It's definitely bad news for the people that are affected by the closures," he added. "But it is a positive for our program in the sense that we can provide more employment opportunities and more activity for our youth." Operation Come Home provides housing, employment and eduction programs for homeless youth, who staff the BottleWorks program. They ride around in the truck and collect from practically anywhere in Ottawa, though suburban areas have higher minimums for collection. Residents can fill out a form on the BottleWorks website and schedule a collection date. They can get a tax receipt in return. "We are going to be adding two new trucks to the road in the coming year," Heckbert said. "We're going to expand the capacity of the program and this timing will help us make sure that the trucks are always full." Animal rescues also hopeful BottleWorks isn't the only group that will pick up empties. Fundraisers for animal rescues also collect bottles and cans to pay for food and vet bills. Darlene Charman of Empties for Paws Orleans said empties play a major role in their fundraising. She saw a major uptick in collections during the COVID-19 pandemic, when it was tougher for people to get out for returns. She wonders whether the Beer Store closures might trigger a similar trend. "It could bring a little bit more of an influx of the empties to the animal rescues, because the people won't be bothered to drive further out," she said. Melody Lachance collects empties for several animal rescues through her fundraising group, Barrhaven & Area Empties. She too is hoping for a boost. "They may just contact us and say, 'Do you want my empties, because I'm not going to drive to wherever to cash them in,'" she said. Lachance is already looking to nearby Manotick, where a store is set to close later this month. But further closures could also be a hindrance, since both Lachance and Charman rely on the Beer Store for returns. Waste reduction advocate worried Duncan Bury of Waste Watch Ottawa agreed that charities can pick up some of the slack left as Beer Stores closed, but not enough to compensate for the overall decline of a collection system he already sees as severely lacking. Where other provinces like B.C., Alberta and Saskatchewan collect about 80 per cent of their empties, Ontario brings in only about half. "That 50 per cent number will surely fall," Bury said. "The whole system, which is not very good to start with, is just going to get worse." Buty noted that most other provinces accept non-alcoholic containers and offer far more locations for residents to return their empties. Quebec has 1,200, while B.C. has 600. Currently, the Beer Store is required to keep at least 300 locations open as part of a contract with the provincial government. But that will end as of Jan. 1. Bury fears that could mean more closures and even fewer options for returns. "The options to recover those containers are frankly disappearing," said Bury. On that same date, the province will require grocery stores that sell alcohol to accept empties for collection. Bury said that could work. It's a major component of British Columbia's successful system. "If they can do it in British Columbia, there's absolutely no reason they shouldn't be able to do it in Ontario," he said. But he's concerned it won't happen. The province already requires about 70 grocery stores in areas without Beer Stores to accept empties. But a report in May found that few were actually complying. Bury said the province needs to be tough with the grocers, but it should also do more. He said Ontario should open stand-alone depots for bottle returns, like Quebec and British Columbia. Heckbert said BottleWorks could help businesses that sell alcohol by taking the empties off their hands. "I could imagine that for a grocery store, space and inventory will be an issue. It's the same thing that our bars and restaurants encounter," he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store