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Lickly Names Nita Patel Chief Marketing Officer as Creator Marketing Moves Into Performance Era

Business

Lickly Names Nita Patel Chief Marketing Officer as Creator Marketing Moves Into Performance Era
Business

Business

Lickly Names Nita Patel Chief Marketing Officer as Creator Marketing Moves Into Performance Era

2026-07-14 18:00 Last Updated At:18:10

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 14, 2026--

Lickly, an audience-first creator intelligence platform built for data-driven brands ready to scale repeatable marketing campaigns, today announced the appointment of Nita Patel as Chief Marketing Officer.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260714722124/en/

As Lickly prepares for its broader public launch in early fall, Patel will lead brand strategy, product marketing, demand generation and go-to-market execution while using the platform to build Lickly itself. The approach will put Lickly’s intelligence model to work across its own audience strategy, creator selection, campaign planning and growth programs.

Patel brings more than two decades of enterprise technology marketing leadership, having held executive roles across AI, enterprise SaaS, intelligent automation and cybersecurity, where she has built brands, launched innovative products and led go-to-market strategies for both emerging companies and global tech leaders.

U.S. creator ad spending is projected to reach $37 billion, up 26% year over year and growing four times faster than the broader media industry, according to IAB data reported by Business Insider.

The money is moving because creators can deliver what traditional media struggles to match at the same speed — trust, relevance and distribution inside communities where people are already paying attention. But as more budget moves into the channel, the old operating model is starting to break. Most platforms still start with a list of creators. Lickly starts with the audience.

That shift is especially important as growth moves through nano and micro communities, where influence is more specific, more contextual and often closer to the buying decision. Smaller is not the strategy. Relevance is. A creator only becomes valuable when they carry credibility inside the audience a brand actually needs to reach.

Lickly was built for that shift. The platform helps mid-market brands understand which audiences are ready to move, which nano, micro and scaled creators can influence them, and which campaigns are worth repeating before more budget is spent. A list of influencers is still just a list unless there is intelligence to act on.

An engineer by training and a digital marketing leader by experience, Patel brings technical fluency, product discipline and growth instinct to Lickly. Her mandate is not only to market the platform, but to prove how an audience-first intelligence model can help a company move faster, stand out and scale in a category where many brands are still buying creator access without enough intelligence behind the decision.

“Brands do not need another static influencer list,” said Patel. “They need to understand where influence actually lives. Sometimes that is a scaled creator. Often it is a nano or micro creator with real trust inside a specific community. Lickly helps brands see that before they spend. We are going to build Lickly with Lickly and prove how audience-first intelligence turns creator marketing into a repeatable growth system.”

As Lickly prepares for its public launch, the company is applying the same audience intelligence principles across its own marketing, product strategy and customer acquisition — using the platform to validate its approach before bringing it to market at scale.

“Across our portfolio, we’re seeing major scale from brands that put audience intelligence first,” said Jeremy Barnett, co-founder of Lickly and CEO of parent company RAD Intel. “Those learnings shaped how we built Lickly's self-serve platform for mid-market teams that need to manage more creator programs without sacrificing strategic control. Creator marketing is growing because it brings trust, relevance and distribution into the same channel. The waste happens when brands confuse access with intelligence. The power is knowing which audiences are ready to move, which communities hold influence and which creators can activate them. Nita is the right leader to build Lickly with Lickly and show the market how this model scales.”

Patel’s appointment comes as Lickly prepares for its full public launch in early fall and continues building self-serve capabilities for data-driven mid-market brands. The platform is being built for teams ready to move beyond manual campaign management and toward a model where audience insight, creator selection, campaign learning and workflow automation work together.

“Self-serve SaaS only works when every campaign makes the next one smarter. That’s exactly how Lickly is designed,” added Patel. “That is the standard we are building toward. Lickly gives teams a way to make better decisions before spend happens, then use every campaign to improve the next one.”

About Lickly

Lickly, a RAD Intel company, is the audience-first influencer intelligence platform that helps brands understand audiences before selecting creators. By combining AI-powered audience intelligence, creator intelligence, predictive forecasting, brand safety and workflow automation, Lickly enables marketing teams to identify the right audiences, discover the creators who genuinely influence them and build more measurable, repeatable creator marketing programs. For more information, visit www.lickly.com.

About RAD Intel

RAD Intel is an AI marketing holding company built around a shared intelligence layer, with a portfolio that includes RAD Amplify (enterprise managed services) and Lickly (SaaS for mid-market operators). RAD Intel is backed by multiple institutional funds and was selected by the Adobe Fund for Design. For more information, visit www.radintel.ai.

Lickly appoints Nita Patel as Chief Marketing Officer.

Lickly appoints Nita Patel as Chief Marketing Officer.

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian air defenses intercepted five ballistic missiles launched by Russia in a raft of overnight attacks, Ukraine’s air force said Tuesday, though other missiles and drones got through and hit the capital Kyiv.

It was the first time in almost two weeks that Ukraine claimed to have downed Russian ballistic missiles, which are harder to stop than drones or cruise missiles.

Ukrainian air defenses likely used the U.S.-made Patriot surface-to-air guided missile system that is the most effective way of countering ballistic missiles, but ammunition for it has been in short supply amid the Iran war.

In Kyiv, the attack caused fires at two warehouses, while a school was also damaged, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said.

The Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement that the attack targeted military manufacturing facilities in the Ukrainian capital that produce long-range missiles and drones.

Moscow wants to choke off Ukrainian strikes on oil facilities deep inside Russia that have caused critical fuel shortages, frustrating the public and, Western analysts say, hindering the Russian army’s advance on the front line inside Ukraine.

Ukraine’s air force said one ballistic missile and 25 drones struck 17 locations, while falling debris was reported in 10 locations.

Ukraine urgently needs to improve its air defense shield as another winter looms. Much of the country is at the mercy of Russian missiles that, since Moscow’s February 2022 invasion of its neighbor, have hammered the power grid.

In an important step forward for Kyiv’s air defense effort, nine other countries joined Ukraine in a coalition announced Monday to build a shared ballistic missile shield for Europe.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine and its partners could, within the next 12 months, jointly develop a mass-produced, low-cost system.

Zelenskyy was still in Paris on Tuesday where he attended France’s annual Bastille Day celebrations.

President Donald Trump said at the NATO summit last week that the U.S. will give Ukraine a license to make Patriot systems itself. However, Patriots are expensive, in high demand and take a long time to produce, so it will be at least a few years before any Ukrainian-made systems are ready to deploy.

Ukraine, meanwhile, kept up its long-range onslaught on Russian targets, especially oil facilities.

In the Krasnodar region in southern Russia, the attack caused a fire at the Afipsky Oil Refinery that was later put out, local authorities said.

Unconfirmed media reports said an oil refinery in the city of Salavat in the Bashkortostan region, some 1,400 kilometers (900 miles) from the Ukrainian border, was also hit by the attack. Bashkortostan head Radiy Khabirov confirmed an attack on an industrial area in Salavat, but didn’t specify what was hit.

The Russian Defense Ministry said its air defenses overnight intercepted 288 Ukrainian drones over multiple Russian regions, as well as the illegally annexed Crimea peninsula and the Azov and the Black seas.

Follow the AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, left, and French President Emmanuel Macron address a press conference after the Coalition of the Willing summit on security guarantees for Ukraine in Paris, Monday, July 13, 2026. (Teresa Suarez/Pool Photo via AP)

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, left, and French President Emmanuel Macron address a press conference after the Coalition of the Willing summit on security guarantees for Ukraine in Paris, Monday, July 13, 2026. (Teresa Suarez/Pool Photo via AP)

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