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Bill Abbott on Five Years of Great American Media — and Why Focus Wins in a Fragmented Media Market

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NEW YORK, July 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — For the last two decades, the prevailing playbook in media has centered on scale: Build larger entertainment ecosystems capable of serving as many viewers as possible. One of the loudest critiques is that brand has become meaningless among the largest media companies — because those companies have let business strategy dictate brand strategy.

Bill Abbott celebrates 5 years of Great American Media, focusing on faith, family, and country-focused entertainment.

Great American Media spent the last five years testing the opposite premise: Holding resolute focus on a strong brand and a relatively narrow audience and letting that brand shape its business strategy.

Since launching in 2021, the company’s distribution footprint has grown considerably: — expanding across linear television, streaming, FAST channels, digital products and direct-to-consumer experiences. But its core brand — and the audience it was built to serve — has remained remarkably consistent.

Whether that philosophy represents a blueprint for other media companies is another debate entirely. But five years in, it raises an interesting question: What happens when a media company treats its brand not as something that evolves to support growth, but as the foundation that determines where — and how — it grows?

To mark Great American Media’s fifth anniversary, Cynopsis spoke with President & CEO Bill Abbott about why the company made that strategic choice, how it has influenced the company’s evolution, and why he believes it will continue to shape Great American Media’s next chapter.

Cynopsis: Looking back over the past five years, what surprised you most about building Great American Media?

Bill Abbott: The biggest surprise was how quickly the industry changed around us.
We started the business right as the acceleration of the decline in linear really began. At the same time, the industry was dealing with audience measurement challenges, and the combination of those two things changed our forecast right out of the gate.

That was challenging, but it also reinforced something we believed from the beginning: Viewing habits are going to change and platforms will have to change in response. But if people know what your brand stands for, you’ve got something durable to build around.
Every decade the industry mistakes distribution for strategy. First, it was cable, then streaming, now AI. Distribution will always evolve. What doesn’t change is that audiences reward companies that know exactly who they are. Technology changes much faster than human behavior.

Cynopsis: One of the interesting things about Great American Media is that you’ve expanded the business without really changing the brand. Was that intentional from the beginning?

Abbott: Absolutely. We’re big believers in brand, and brands drive loyalty — which is more important than ever in this fragmented environment of endless choice.
Our philosophy has always been to serve what we believe is an underserved audience. Everything else really starts there.

Now, that doesn’t mean there aren’t trade-offs. The minute you target one part of the audience, your addressable market gets smaller. You must be very careful with your marketing dollars. You must be very careful with your programming. And you must protect the audience you’ve already built.

The temptation is always there to say, “Let’s go a little younger,” or “Let’s broaden the brand,” or “Let’s become something we’re not.” One of the biggest mistakes companies make is confusing reach with relevance. You can reach millions of people and matter to very few of them. In our experience, growth comes by being more distinctive. The clearer you are about who you serve, the more valuable your brand becomes.

Cynopsis: The business today is much bigger than it was five years ago. Did you always envision building this kind of multi-platform ecosystem?

Abbott: No chance I would’ve predicted this when we started. Because five years ago, the delivery mechanisms just weren’t there the way they are today. I don’t think anybody could have envisioned exactly what this business would become. But as those opportunities emerged, we saw new ways to monetize our content and new ways to serve our audience. That’s how the ecosystem evolved.

Today, we are producing more original content than ever before. We’ve got linear television, streaming, FAST channels, digital products and direct-to-consumer experiences. But brand is still what ties it all together for us. Whether someone arrives through streaming, FAST or linear, they know they’re going to get family-friendly content with a certain sensibility to it.

Consumers don’t think in terms of linear, FAST, streaming, or apps. They think in terms of brands they trust. The future belongs to companies that can adapt to every platform by making it feel like the same promise rather than a different business.

Cynopsis: How do you make sure business opportunities don’t start pulling the brand in different directions?

Abbott: That’s the most important question, right? And if you look at other platforms, they approach that very differently: Some monetize content much better through advertising. Others have subscription models. There’s not a single proven approach among those, so every platform is trying to figure out what the best business strategy looks like for them.

For us, we’ve always thought that if your brand is your North Star, and you’re always looking to serve your brand and your viewer, you’re generally going to make the right decision. It’s when you’re just searching for the dollar that you sometimes make the wrong decisions.

Cynopsis: You’ve talked a lot about loyalty. What do you think media companies misunderstand about what drives it?

Abbott: I think we can look at the decline of linear television as a good lesson in the danger of not staying true to what made your brand successful in the first place. Over time, a lot of networks lost their identity. They felt pressure to scale audiences, so they created and acquired a lot of the same genres of content (and, actually, a lot of the same exact content). Then there was so much content to manage that it became very tempting to spread it everywhere, so they expanded into every possible distribution channel.

I think it’s clear that people still want destination programming, and that starts with brand: people want to know that a brand will deliver a reliable experience worth seeking out. For us, it’s why one of our key focuses is creating destinations that viewers know they can come back to year after year.

Great American Christmas and Great American Christmas in July are good examples: Those become staples that are good for the business, but they’re also good for the viewer because they know exactly what they’re going to get.

Loyalty isn’t built by asking viewers to watch this or that. It is built by reducing decision fatigue. When your values are uncompromising, viewers are predisposed to love what you put in front of them.

Cynopsis: Speaking of tentpole programming, why do you think that kind of content still works in linear television today?

Abbott: I think there are really three survivors in the linear landscape: live sports, news, and franchises or tentpoles.

The longer those franchises run, the more they become experiences. That’s what creates stickiness and keeps people watching linear television.

One important difference is that streaming is usually about picking one title. Linear is different because you’re picking not only the movie or the show, but everything around it — the ads, what comes before, what comes on after. Linear viewers want a reliable experience so they can put it on and leave it on.

I think that’s why our brand — and specifically a franchise like Christmas in July — still has real value in linear.

Cynopsis: What does your brand-first strategy mean as an independent media company competing against much larger players?

Abbott: We have to be very efficient with our content spend because we’re never going to have 40 million subscribers. But that kind of scale has never been our goal. Our opportunity is to provide something that’s not already in the marketplace — to fill a void.

If you’re trying to become all things to all people, you’re competing against companies with enormous scale and enormous content budgets. As an independent, we’d much rather know exactly who we’re serving and execute incredibly well for that audience.

Independent companies can’t outspend conglomerates, but they can ‘out-focus’ them. Focus is one of the few competitive advantages that becomes stronger as the marketplace becomes more crowded.

Cynopsis: Looking ahead, where do you see the biggest opportunity over the next five years?

Abbott: First of all, awareness.

I said scale has never been our goal, but in terms of filling a void for our very specific audience, we’re still only scratching the surface in terms of how many of those people know what we do. We’ve only really been in streaming for about three years, and we’ve only existed for five. The reality is, when people find us, they love what we do.

The second piece is content creation. Every dollar we make goes back on the screen to create what we believe is high-quality storytelling. As awareness grows, that becomes the flywheel. Better content creates more awareness. More awareness lets us invest in more content. Once that flywheel starts spinning, it becomes a virtuous and victorious cycle.

Cynopsis: AI is dominating media conversations right now — between declarations that AI will change (or ruin) all of media, and skepticism that the technology won’t live up to the hype. Where do you think AI will make the biggest difference in media?

Abbott: There are certain things you can do with AI where you really don’t know the difference in terms of production. More power to the people who figure that out quickly and can reduce their costs.

I also think it’s going to make the back room a lot more efficient and effective, and that allows companies to put more money on the screen.

Creatively, though, you have to be careful. As smart as AI gets, it’s never going to have human sensibility. There’s still a fundamental and visceral need for people to see other people in content. Humans want to experience real, authentic human stories. And at the end of the day, if your content isn’t good — if your stories don’t deliver the experience your audience wants — you don’t have a business.

Cynopsis: Five years in, are you even more convinced that starting with the brand was the right decision?

Abbott: Yeah, I am.

Everything has been harder in some ways than I expected, but it’s also been more fun in nearly every way than I expected.

Almost nothing happens the way you put it on the roadmap. Most surprises present challenges. But if you’ve got a good team with you — people who are at the top of their game — and you’ve got the perseverance to push through, you’re in a good position.
I believe the next five years belong to companies with the clearest identities. Consumers increasingly organize their entertainment around trust, rather than abundance.

Cynopsis: Are you staying the course with your brand-first approach?

Abbott: Absolutely. If anything, the last five years have reinforced it. We started the company thinking there was an underserved audience looking for this kind of content. Five years later, I think we’ve validated that belief.

The business has evolved in ways I never would have predicted. We’ve expanded into platforms that didn’t even exist in our original thinking. But what’s interesting is that none of that required us to rethink who we are.

We could not feel better about what we’re building. We have the patience of Job and the perseverance of a happy warrior to see this through. We’re proud of what we’ve built over the first five years, but we’re even more excited about the next five.

Cynopsis: Finally, if you could go back and talk to yourself five years ago, what advice would you give?

Abbott: I’d tell myself it’s going to be harder than you think — and more rewarding than you think.

Every challenge forces you to adapt. The biggest lesson is to stay committed to what you’re building. Businesses don’t succeed by avoiding adversity. They succeed when they remain recognizable through adversity. Strategy matters most when circumstances change.

Lastly, in addition to building brands, I’ve learned a great deal about the importance of emotional connection in storytelling. Technology and algorithms continue to personalize entertainment, but they can’t replace the moments that bring people together. Whether it’s Christmas, a beloved mystery franchise, or a series rooted in faith and family, audiences are looking for stories they can share across generations. Those shared experiences build tradition, strengthen relationships, and create lasting memories.

That’s not nostalgia – it’s one of the most enduring truths about human nature, and it’s why great storytelling will always matter.

ABOUT GREAT AMERICAN MEDIA
Great American Media is the leader in faith and family entertainment, and one of the fastest-growing entertainment networks on television. Great American Media is home to a portfolio of entertainment brands that celebrate faith, family and country, including Great American Family, the flagship linear network featuring original Christmas movies, rom-coms and beloved series; Great American Pure Flix, the leading faith and family streaming service; Great American Faith & Living, the unscripted companion network; and GFam+, an app that lets viewers watch anytime, anywhere. Great America Media, established in June 2021 by Bill Abbott and a group of U.S.-based family offices, is available via cable, streaming on Pure Flix and YouTube TV, and on the GFam+ app.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Debbie Davis
media@crosswindpr.com
C: 214-802-8979

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SOURCE Great American Media

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Insurify Exceeds 250 Million Auto Insurance Quotes Served

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The milestone reflects Insurify’s industry dominance as an insurance comparison platform that helps Americans compare quotes, saving consumers up to $1,100* on their auto insurance policy.

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., July 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Insurify, the leading online insurance comparison platform, announced today that its total number of real-time auto insurance quotes served to American consumers has reached a landmark 250 million. With a quote database that’s more than three times larger than the publicly reported volume of major competitors, Insurify empowers auto insurance shoppers to compare quotes and buy policies entirely online.

Since its launch in 2016, millions of drivers have turned to Insurify to find better coverage at a lower price. In the last year alone, Insurify users saved up to $1,100* on their auto insurance policy, annually.

“Reaching this landmark speaks to the trust insurance shoppers place in Insurify,” said Snejina Zacharia, founder and co-CEO of Insurify. “This volume of quotes enables Insurify to provide insurance shoppers with the most accurate quotes possible, and provide data-driven consumer insights.”

Insurify is also the go-to source for major media outlets needing verified auto insurance quote data. Its robust database spans all 50 states, Washington, D.C., including metropolitan and rural areas, and multiple coverage levels, and driver profiles.

How Insurify differs from lead-generation ‘comparison’ sites

Insurify’s 250-million-quote database of real-time insurance quotes sets it apart from lead-generation sites, which gather information from insurance shoppers and then sell it to third parties.

Every auto insurance quote Insurify provides comes from its integrations with more than 120 partner insurance companies. Quotes reflect real-time auto insurance rates, and are personalized to each driver’s actual location, driver profile, driving record, credit history (where state law permits it), and additional rating factors insurance companies use when setting rates.

Leading in data-driven consumer insights

The scale of Insurify’s database enables precise national, state and city-level analysis that reflects an authentic consumer experience. Insurify translates these analyses into relatable, highly digestible consumer-focused insights that help drive insurance shoppers’ decision making.

This empowers consumers to:

Track insurance costs by car modelKnow when auto insurance rates dropGet insight into how DUIs, accidents, and tickets, change rates over timeUnderstand how factors like, age, gender and credit history, affect rates

“When drivers come to our platform they are not just shopping for insurance. They are trying to find more room in their budget for groceries, housing costs, and other necessities,” Zacharia said. “To meet the diverse needs of all U.S. consumers, Insurify partners with national, regional, and niche insurers. We want someone who comes to our platform to find a policy that meets their needs and fits their budget.”

About Insurify:

Insurify is America’s top-rated online insurance marketplace, offering a secure, spam-free way to compare and buy coverage. With a network of 120-plus carrier partners, Insurify empowers consumers to compare auto, home, pet, and renters insurance in minutes, online or with the help of a licensed agent. Since 2016, Insurify’s AI-powered technology has served over 250 million quotes. By using Insurify, customers can save hundreds of dollars annually, with some saving up to 50% on their premiums. In 2026, Insurify expanded its innovation with Insurify Car, providing liability-only coverage through flexible, weekly payment options underwritten by its insurance carrier partners.

* Average potential savings based on initial quotes received by 31,051 customers seeking insurance through Insurify. Actual savings may vary depending on state of residence, individual circumstances, coverage selections, and insurance provider. Savings and lowest rates do not reflect typical results.

For more information, contact:
jessica.edmondson@insurify.com
Press@Insurify.com
https://Insurify.com

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SOURCE INSURIFY, Inc.

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Alta Raises $25M to Redefine the Go-to-Market Architecture for Revenue Teams

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By transforming the GTM stack, Alta’s AI team brings a learning curve managers can only dream about

TEL AVIV, Israel, July 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Alta, the AI System of Actions for go-to-market teams, today announced $25 million in Series A funding. The round was led by IN Venture, with participation from Mindset Ventures, Skywell Capital, LeumiTech77 and existing investors Entrée Capital, Target Global, and Verissimo Ventures, along with prominent angel investors and scout funds.

Alta will use the funding to accelerate growth by expanding its team globally, growing its customer base, and enhancing the platform – adding new data, CRM, and advertising integrations, as well as introducing agents for account management and cross-selling.

Alta hit its first million in revenue within months of commercializing and is on track for 800% revenue growth this year. Its platform is already being used by Snowflake, Deel, Atlassian, and Atoms, as well as hundreds of businesses, from Fortune 500 companies to SMBs.

For decades, GTM has run on “systems of record”: CRMs and data warehouses storing information until a human acts on it and dozens of disjointed tools that don’t communicate.  As companies increasingly implement AI, the industry has bet on AI agents as point solutions for automating outbound or inbound GTM at scale. The results, however, often fall short, and can even exacerbate problems by scaling broken playbooks. Even though AI allows teams to generate more activity, pipelines remain flat, lead quality has fallen, and reply rates have dropped as buyers’ inboxes are filled with generic, monotonous, AI-generated outreach.

Industry leaders like Salesforce and HubSpot have introduced agent-enablement layers through APIs, MCP tools, and CLI interfaces, underscoring a broader race to add intelligence to systems originally designed for data storage and workflow management. But retrofitting intelligence onto legacy architectures is fundamentally different from building an intelligence-native platform from the ground up – one that understands business context, orchestrates every customer and operational touchpoint, and continuously compounds value through real-world outcomes. Recognizing this need, Alta designed and built its solutions.

Alta tackles the challenge of deploying AI agents by first building a “Company Brain” that serves as a centralized intelligence layer that maps exactly how a business’s GTM engine works. Instead of relying on a fragmented stack of disconnected software, Alta replaces them with a single, coordinated network of AI agents that learn from every action. Powered by this shared “Brain” and fueled by more than 50 data sources and hundreds of buying signals, these agents orchestrate and act on existing systems of record, collaborating and evolving as a single unit with every single interaction. The platform partners with Salesforce, HubSpot, IBM, and Google, and connects to 60+ GTM tools, including Attio and Clay, enabling Alta to run on top of the stack teams already in use rather than locking them into a closed box.

“Before the cloud, every company building software racked and maintained its own servers,” said Stav Levi-Neumark, CEO and Co-founder of Alta. “We’re doing for go-to-market what AWS did for infrastructure and the cloud: transforming a stack of cobbled-together tools that never communicated into one system that simply runs well, learns, and drives revenue pipelines and sales.”

“The market spent three years adding tools to the sales stack. The team at Alta went the other way and built the intelligence layer the whole stack was missing,” said Eitan Naor, Managing Partner at IN Venture (Member of Sumitomo Corporation’s Venture Group). “Alta isn’t competing in a category — it’s defining one. That’s why we wanted to lead this round, and why we’re excited to introduce Alta to Japan and Southeast Asia, backed by Sumitomo’s global reach.”

“Having worked closely with Stav at monday.com, I knew firsthand her rare ability to turn complex data into explosive growth,” said Avi Eyal, Managing Partner at Entrée Capital. The Alta team is not just building another AI feature; they are fundamentally redefining GTM architecture. Watching them scale from inception to this milestone proves that the market is starving for a single, intelligent system of action.”

About Alta

Alta is the AI System of Actions for go-to-market. We run your GTM, replacing the fragmented sales stack with coordinated AI agents that share one Company Brain and compound with every interaction. Founded in 2023 by Stav Levi-Neumark and Tom Hoffen, both ex-monday.com, and serial entrepreneur Mor Shabtai, Alta handles prospecting, research, multi-channel outbound, inbound qualification, AI calling, and continuous optimization. Alta hit its first million in revenue within months of commercializing and is on track for 800% revenue growth this year. Its customers include revenue teams at Snowflake, Deel, Atlassian, Atoms, Riverside, and Sabio Group. Learn more at altahq.com.

Contact:

Rebecca Ash
rebecca@gova10.com

View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/alta-raises-25m-to-redefine-the-go-to-market-architecture-for-revenue-teams-302820618.html

SOURCE Alta

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PTC to Announce Fiscal Q3’26 Results on Wednesday, July 29, 2026

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BOSTON, July 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — PTC (NASDAQ: PTC) will release its fiscal 2026 third quarter results on Wednesday, July 29th after the stock market closes. Senior management will host a live webcast and conference call to review the results on Wednesday, July 29th at 5 p.m. Eastern Time (ET). The earnings press release, accompanying earnings presentation, and financial data tables will be accessible prior to the conference call and webcast on the Investor Relations section of the company’s website at PTC Investor Relations.

What:

 PTC Fiscal Q3’26 Conference Call and Webcast

When:

 Wednesday, July 29, 2026 5:00 p.m. ET

Webcast:

 Register Here

Replay:

 To access the replay via webcast, please visit this page.

Please note that statements made on the conference call and webcast are as of the date of the conference call and webcast and PTC does not assume any obligation to update any statements made live or the archived call. Matters discussed may include forward-looking statements about PTC’s anticipated financial results and growth, as well as about the development of products and markets, which are based on current plans and assumptions. Actual results in future periods may differ materially from current expectations due to a number of risks and uncertainties, including those described from time to time in reports filed by PTC with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, including PTC’s most recent reports on Form 10-K and 10-Q.

About PTC

PTC (NASDAQ: PTC) is a global software company enabling manufacturers and product companies to digitally transform how they design, manufacture, and service the physical products the world relies on. Headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, PTC employs over 7,000 people and supports more than 30,000 customers globally. For more information, please visit www.ptc.com.

Investor Contact

Michael Maguire
mmaguire@ptc.com
investor@ptc.com 

 

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SOURCE PTC Inc.

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