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Big brands could pivot easily if TikTok goes away. For many small businesses, it’s another story [Video]

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Taylen Biggs, right, and Nubia Williams pose at an FAO Schwarz store where toy company Cepia LLC launched its new fashion doll line called Decora Girlz on March 2, 2024 in New York. Cepia, which is based in St. Louis, Missouri, began investing in TikTok in 2019. (AP Photo/Anne D’Innocenzio)

NEW YORK (AP) — If content creators and corporate executives made TikTok videos about the platform’s possible U.S. demise, disco diva Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive” could supply the soundtrack.

Sure, businesses that built strategies around TikTok and promote products there would prefer not to seek eyeballs on another app. Smaller firms and solo entrepreneurs are bound to feel more pain in the event of a breakup. But if the popular video-sharing service remains under Chinese ownership and Congress bans it, many companies would learn to get along.

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