In response to Claire Myerscough’s recent article, Brian Jacobs, director at BJ&A, says the way forward is to sell audiences online, but there needs to be a degree of commonality in the way in which those audiences are defined.
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Claire Myerscough, business intelligence director at News International Commercial, says newspapers are trailing behind when it comes to creating simple and flexible solutions for buying and selling…
In our latest research focus article, TGI’s James McCombe says from a marketing point of view mobile Twitterers are an attractive target in their own right…
Greg Grimmer, partner, Hurrell Moseley Dawson & Grimmer, begs, borrows and steals predictions for the year ahead – Sorrell is going to get richer; it will be the year of mobile or location-based ads or digital outdoor (maybe); MySpace will shut; and Mail Online will become bigger than bbc.co.uk/news to name just a few…
Greg Grimmer, partner, Hurrell Moseley Dawson & Grimmer: “Wasn’t the internet supposed to encourage freedom, proliferation of brands and consumer choice? The actuality is that it is dominated by a hegemony of super brands.”
Circulation figures were down across the board in November, with the daily newspaper market posting a 5.3% decline on last year’s figures.
Jim Marshall wonders whether MediaTel’s recent TV Summit makes the case for scaling up to a full TV Conference now – the sort of TV conference that used to happen in Monte Carlo and Barcelona some years ago when everything was less complicated, more profitable and more profligate…
Latest figures from Thinkbox show that TV viewing is up; commercial TV is perfoming strongly; and as a result, commercial impacts have grown by 21.3% over the last five years to a new record high.
The release of The Social Network in cinemas earlier this year has once again brought Facebook into the limelight, with countless people discussing the advantages and disadvantages of letting everyone into your life and numerous people ‘just wanting to see what all the fuss is about’.
Adam Crozier’s calm candour certainly won over delegates at MediaTel Group’s TV Summit last week.