International News
THE NEW ERA OF ARCHITECTURE
Mom-to-Mom Marketing TEST
Power sector’s Green Revolution
India is crucial for Sinch, particularly in the BFSI sector: Laurinda Pang
H2 is very exciting for mobile phone business: Nipun Marya, iQOO
India’s total AdEx expected to grow at 12.2% in 2024: PMAR
e4m IDMA 2024: UltraTech Cement bags gold metal for its ‘Ghar Ek, Mauka Ek’ campaign
CNN's Chief Digital Officer Athan Stephanopoulos quits
BBC relaunches North American website in a bid for global growth
Washington Post guild greenlights one-day walkout amid contract standoff with management
MSNBC cancels Mehdi Hasan's show in strategic shake-up ahead of Presidential election
Michael Jabri-Pickett takes charge as Editor-in-Chief of Khaleej Times
BBH ropes in Alex Grieve as Global Chief Creative Officer
Leena Nair of Unilever joins French luxury group Chanel as CEO
Global advt to grow by 19% in '21 with 15% higher ad revenue than '19: GroupM TYNY Report
UK agencies sign up to IPA’s Media Climate Charter to reduce carbon impact of media plans
Donald Trump launches new communications platform
Tourism New Zealand appoints René de Monchy as Chief Executive
DoubleVerify names Doug Campbell as Chief Strategy Officer
BBC Studios names Phil Hardman as Senior VP & General Manager for Asia
Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games to be postponed due to Coronavirus
Publicis Groupe Sri Lanka appoints Sanjay Chaudhari as CEO
Matt Collette joins Edelman Asia Pacific as Vice Chairman, Digital
Nils Andersen succeeds Marijn Dekkers to be appointed as Chairman of Unilever
Accenture Interactive wins Kimberly-Clark’s creative account for baby & childcare products
Australian news dailies protest against 'curbs on press freedom'
Uber appoints Lucinda Barlow as Senior Director of Marketing for Asia-Pacific
WPP AUNZ's Switched On to join AKQA, Australia
Helena Snowdon is Publicis Media ANZ’s new business and marketing head
CNN International Commercial appoints Phil Nelson as Chief Operating Officer
Giorgio Presca named Clarks CEO
Tupperware appoints ex-PepsiCo exec, Chris O'Leary, to its board of directors
International: Hottest media property that's not for sale? Time Inc.But skeptics question top execs' real long-term intentions
Time Inc. consistently makes impressive double-digit profit margins and is considered by many a good media business, a still-growing company with as-yet-unlocked potential synergy with the rest of the Time Warner operation. Yet everyone from the Time & Life Building to Wall Street and Nebraska keeps on wondering when the property is going to be dealt.
International: J&J Puts $3 Billion Global Media Account in PlayUniversal McCann, Initiative, OMD and MindShare Expected to Give Chase
International: Advertisers Salivate Over YouTube KillerNBC-News Corp. Deal Meets Demand for Online Video From Professionals
International: For marketers social media soars, mobile and gaming lagE-mail, search remain the interactive marketing channels to watch in 2007
International: Phoning It in: Content created by cell users will be ad 'Bonanza'Mobile helps marketers engage consumers and may catapult MySpace, YouTube to new heights
Virgin Atlantic Airways unveils new campaign for Upper Class
International: IQ Report: Why connecting matters more than page views on networking sites
While there are obvious caveats with any measure of Internet audience—the FIM number includes properties besides MySpace, and Yahoo has some social-networking sites—the numbers show where the prevailing traffic winds are blowing. They are going in the direction of properties that allow users to connect with other users and create their own content. For advertisers and media buyers, the next step should be to simply follow the eyeballs and soon a proportionate number of ad dollars will flow toward MySpace and its competitors.
International: TV, Print trigger net searches
International: YouTube faces challenge
International: Google tests action-priced ads
International: New Media: Can't sit through a :30? How about a 5-minute ad?Hitachi, others bet consumers will sit through docs.
International: A brand new TimeWhat everyone else would have done with the redesign
Time magazine delivered the first issue of its big redesign last Friday, so Advertising Age asked an unusual mix of observers -- including media buyers, the editor of In Touch Weekly and Radar's creative director -- to play Monday-morning quarterback and tell us what they would have done differently.
International: J&J jolts 'Old' media with $250 million ad spend shiftAs rivals talk, giant puts money where its mouth is -- Digital Formats
International: At stake in Viacom vs. Google lawsuit: Future of MediaDefining ownership in an age of fluid content
International: Magazines do video, with Brightcove Rodale, Hachette, Hearst team with web-TV company
International: Why a strong brand is a search marketer's best assetTravelocity: Nonbranded keywords only convert 4% of searchers
For brand marketers using search, a brand name may be their best asset. That's the finding of a recent Travelocity study, which challenged assumptions around the "portfolio approach" to paid search, a common practice in which marketers buy a wide variety of both brand terms and nonbranded terms -- like when an automaker buys its brand terms but also buys "SUV" or "convertible."
International: Marketers push for brand-specific commercial ratingsANA TV committee wants more granular data
Nielsen's commercial-ratings data hasn't been released yet -- advertisers and networks alike will have to hold their breath until May -- but marketers want to be sure their needs are going to be met as the industry makes the shift from program ratings (how many viewers watched a show) to measuring how many viewers stayed put for the ads.
International: Viacom sues Google’s YouTube for $ 1 bn for copyright infringement
International: Why simplicity is the key to mastering mobile webAs cellphone browsing takes off, marketers find slow connections, tiny screens require unique approach
International: Marketers, Web bigs rush to crack local-search codeMarket to rocket to $13 billion, but efficiently using tool difficult for many players
International: Daily newspapers and radio find unlikely ally in GoogleLocal media ad sales test boosts revenue for NYT, 'Seattle Times'
International: Marketers' Digital Plan? Destroy the SiloMajor players in industry reject specialist approach at Ad Age Digital Confab
Make your brand marketing useful to your consumers. Orient around the big idea. Measure everything. That such mainstream, macro-marketing concepts played starring roles at the inaugural Ad Age Digital Marketing Conference underscored the fact that digital can't exist in a media silo anymore-but instead needs to be central to everything marketers and their agencies do.
International: Is print dead? Not on your (second) life
International: Consumers eye mobile web
Twenty-five percent of those surveyed said they would use mobile Web access more this year. The mobile Internet still has a long way to go before it becomes a mainstream media habit or viable advertising medium, but signs point to heightened consumer interest that should result in more enthusiasm among big brands.
International: Nokia forays into mobile advertising
International: 'Broken' ad model holds big advantages for P>raditional media-buying practices boost giant's sales
International: Publishers: Web to reflect users
International: Microsoft to move bulk of ad dollars to digital ChannelsTells 4A's that media mix will change by 2010
International: Despite slow start, live mobile TV notches 2 million subscribersVerizon wireless launches its version in 20 markets
International: Stengel Exhorts 4A's: 'It's not about telling and selling'
Procter & Gamble's Jim Stengel described a major cultural shift that he believes is turning the world's largest marketer into a starter of conversations and a solver of consumers' problems rather than a one-way communicator. "It's not about telling and selling," said the global marketing officer of the company that once lived by that simple mantra. "It's about bringing a relationship mind-set to everything we do."
International: Tony Gulisano to lead Clio Awards
International: Starbucks smells the death of its brand experienceCEO confronts missing aroma of fresh-roasted coffee
International: Google lays groundwork for TV scatter sales sortieAdvertises for TV ad chief, negotiates to peddle upfront spillover
Google is desperately trying to wedge itself into the $65 billion U.S. TV-ad-sales market. Those close to some of the talks the search giant has had with TV executives said Google's first priority is to persuade broadcast networks to let it sell their 30-second spots. To that end Google has had talks with the broadcast networks, cable programmers and several cable operators, including Comcast and Cablevision.
International: SURVEY: Marketers can't grade agencies but fail them anyway most clients can't measure advertising's exact ROI yet feel 'Vague Disenchantment'
International: WPP's revenue, profit up in '06
International: How Google has helped build brand advertising online<br<Sales chief Tim Armstrong: Advertise all your products, all the time
International: AdMedia: M&A activity to rise in 2007
According to a new report released on Feb. 21 by the investment bank AdMedia Partners, which found that among the 3,200 companies participating in the survey 87 percent expect to either explore making such a deal or be approached by another prospective buyer in 2007, and nearly half expect they’ll complete a deal this year.
International: Research: Communication Breakdown: Why brands can't connect Sixteen brands receive failing customer- support grades.
International: Study: Ad 'Avoider' Demo tracked, profiled
International: Internet casts shadow over glossy tradeThe writing is on the digital wall for some print media, especially magazines, as readers migrate online.
International: Pepsi TV ads escalate Cola logo warsBut the new concept is a bit stupid
International: Google acquires in-game advertising startup for $23 m
International: Dennis puts Maxim, Stuff, others on the block
International: Generational shift in media habitsAdvertisers must embrace change in order to draw new audiences
International: Unilever, P&G battle hits YouTubeSunsilk viral brings buzz, but huge display-ad buy satisfies herbal essences
A profanity-laced video of a screaming bride who cuts chunks from her hair in a fit over her style drew 12 million YouTube views and reams of publicity, including segments on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" and "Good Morning America." At the same time, one of the biggest package-goods display ads on YouTube by a rival marketer generated a mere fraction of the views and attention -- but appears to be making its sponsor happier.
International: Apple Plan: Lead consumers into temptation -- and away from vistaMounts counterattack to Microsoft's new OS Ad Blitz
International: Forget Message Boards. Wikis are where it's atT-Mobile, eBay, others embrace tool as a way to connect with consumers
International: Despite web, Kids still glued to TV
International: Goodyear breathes new life into deflated IconFresh advertising campaign to showcase underleveraged airship
International: McDonald's hits record revenue but shakes up agenciesAKQA, Just Kid, Arnold and Moroch all winners in new plan
International: Garbage Trucks: the new hot spot for advertisersGlad's New York effort results in strong ROI, other marketers take notice
The garbage truck may have become the latest advertising vehicle of the future. Ads on New York garbage trucks have worked so well for the marketers of Glad trash bags -- boosting the brand's market share by two percentage points in the city through December -- that they're now looking to try the tactic elsewhere.
International: What are online giants doing in out-of-home?Microsoft, Google dabble in technology to better target, automate outdoor
International: Out-of-Home Video Advertising Bureau LaunchesCaptivate Network President Mike DiFranza leading charge
Now that out-of-home is expanding into an $8 billion industry that stretches far beyond billboards, it was only a matter of time before interests among the myriad players diverged. Enter the Out-Of-Home Video Advertising Bureau, which opened up shop this week to start educating agencies and advertisers about screens outside the home.
International: Do TV ads cause childhood obesity?
International: Behavioral Targeting: The new killer app for researchSnapple uses tactic to find unexpected affinity group for premium green teas
Behavioral targeting is poised for a $1.5 billion year, according to eMarketer. And it makes sense: While the medium is seeing an influx of new dollars, there's a finite amount of premium contextual inventory for marketers to buy. Behavioral targeting is a way to sell more people-targeted advertising online and better use nonpremium inventory that may not have a natural commercial context.
International: Size doesn't matter - it's who views your content
International: Time moves on to recapture lost youth
Time chases us all, but it has been gaining on Time magazine particularly relentlessly. So, last week, the venerable US news weekly changed its publication day to Friday from Monday and began a relaunch designed to ensure that the publication, both in print and on the web, regains its former place in the media constellation.
International: Google, Yahoo! Educate marketers about testing
International: VNU Media rebrands as The Nielsen Co.
The media conglomerate and research organization known as VNU Media has rebranded as The Nielsen Company. Among the changes that come with the name are the launch of a revamped corporate Web site at Nielsen.com and new corporate graphics. The new identity will be rolled out across all company divisions through 2007.
International: LG taps Y&R for global task
International: How Google could end up selling TV inventoryAs part of deal with CBS, web giant might assume control of local ad space
Google and CBS have spent the last year getting to know one another, and clearly have found that each has something the other can use. Which is why the worst-kept secret in the media world at the moment is the deal the two are negotiating and expect to finalize very soon. That's not surprising-but CBS allowing the search giant entry into the $68 billion U.S. TV advertising business would be.
International: YouTube mulls TV channel
YouTube is considering creating a linear TV channel compiled from the video clips submitted by its users. Speaking at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week, the vice-president of content, Kevin Donahue, said the company had been considering the idea of a creating TV shows and might even extend that into a full channel.
International: Impact of internet 'overstated', says Bailey
International: Pepsi set to change 'Look' multiple times
International: Deal with CBS may prove Google's move into TVWide-ranging talks include radio, local TV spots, licensing fees
International: Major media brands in surprising turnaround
About this time a year ago, executives at most large entertainment companies were coming to terms with stock performances that couldn't keep pace with the major averages. Walt Disney, News Corp., Time Warner and Viacom were each off about 10% in 2005. Investors looking for healthy returns more likely found them in new media than old.
International: Ogilvy realigns ‘activation services’ shops
International: Coke bets on Zero to save cola categoryDrink giant plans huge marketing boost as brand rockets from dud to stud
According to an internal company document, Coca-Cola Co. plans a huge tactical push behind the brand this year to retain cola drinkers in its franchise. Coke Zero, which has no calories but claims a taste profile similar to flagship Coke, "is critical to the health of the portfolio to transition males before they leave" the carbonated soft-drink category.
International: Mobile media on the Cusp
International: Study: Online shoppers more satisfied
International: Intel Puts Consumers' Photos on Times Square BillboardsEffort Part of 'Multiply' Push for Core Processors
The chip giant has taken over Times Square's bookend video billboards -- the Reuters and Nasdaq signs -- and is allowing people to upload photos of themselves that will appear sometime before the end of the campaign on Jan. 7. Each photo first appears as one image and then begins to multiply into hundreds of smaller ones in a display that lasts about a minute.
International: Moore's Code: Time Inc.'s CEO seeks to transform the publisher's brands into vertical web plays
International: Publicis to acquire Digitas for $1.3 billionDeal is industry's biggest since WPP bought Grey in 2005
Inernational: 10 Internet acquisitions from 2006
International: Ads blamed for childhood stress
Children are being groomed for a lifetime of consumerism by marketing that targets them directly and puts pressure on them to keep up with images of how they should look and what they should own, resulting in stress, depression and low self-esteem, a report by the left-leaning thinktank Compass warns.
International: Brands offered protection from bloggers
International: Report: Big Radio is fewer formats, smaller audience
International: Love your customers? Co-create with them
We are witnessing a transformation in the figurative contract between companies and people. Seeking consumers' input during the process of developing a product or idea is not, of course, a new idea. But the future's increasingly complex marketplace has already spurred an evolution of this process to interesting—and even radical—new models.
International: Post-click Marketing: How to finish a web saleIon Interactive develops system to turn online visitors into customers
You just moved into a new home and need insurance, so you go to Google and search for "homeowner's insurance." It brings up all sorts of links -- some sponsored, some not. You click on one of the sponsored links for Esurance.com, and it opens up a page to give you auto-insurance quotes. Wait, that's not what you're after.
International: ConAgra sticks with MediaCom for ad buying and planningMarketer to spend $425 million on 'High Priority' Brands
International: Media Spending in '07? Don't expect big boostNext year appears depressingly flat
Want one forecast rather than five forecasts? Media spending next year will be depressingly flat. If you don't like that Ad Age conclusion -- which is based on a thorough analysis of the history of media spending and our read on the many factors affecting media right now -- you can go with one of the many marginally more optimistic forecasts proferred last week.
International: Google Audio finally a realityWeb Giant Beta Testing Ad Platform Based on DMarc
At long last, Google radio is live. Actually, it's not called Google radio -- it's Google Audio, a better fit with its any-platform sort of approach to the medium. Using Google Audio, advertisers can target their buys by location, station type, day of the week and time of day and online verification will tell advertisers exactly when those ads ran.
International: Coca-Cola names Muhtar Kent President-COOPrompts predictions that Marketing Head Mary Minnick will leave the company
Coca-Cola Co. elevated Muhtar Kent to president-chief operating officer Dec. 7, effective immediately, fueling speculation that Mary Minnick, president-marketing, strategy and innovation, likely would leave the marketer. Mr. Kent assumes the No. 2 executive post left vacant by Steve Heyer in June 2004.
International: Marketers' websites outdraw those of major media playersP&G and Unilever attract 9 million unique visitors monthly
Believe it or not, those boring corporate websites are pulling in more eyeballs -- and more influencers -- than the flashy prime time TV shows, print magazines and general interest sites on which marketers advertise. And part of what's driving the traffic is old-fashioned web display advertising and e-mail pushes.
International: Optimedia repositions, sets new agenda
International: Yahoo! in major revamp mode; COO Rosensweig resigns, Susan Decker to lead advertising
Global Internet giant Yahoo! Inc has effected major reorganisation of its structure and top management to capture future opportunities for growth and give a tough fight to its arch rival Google. As part of the restructuring, COO Dan Rosensweig has decided to leave the company by March end, while CFO Susan Decker has been promoted to a new job overseeing advertising sales.
International: Advertising forecasters expect modest growth for 2007
The advertising forecast for 2007 coming out of investment bank UBS' 34th Annual Global Media & Communications Conference being held this week was decidedly mild. Even with major growth projected for internet spending, Robert Coen, senior VP-director of forecasting, Universal McCann, sees only 4.8% growth in ad spending in national and local advertising in 2007. Steve King, CEO-worldwide, ZenithOptimedia, predicted only 4.2% growth.
International: Marketers tune in family channels
International: Olympics website set for redesign
International: P&G, others build mobile-marketing budgets; could be signal that medium is 'Out of Trial Mode'
International: British junk-food ad ban rocks TV businessMarketers prohibited from targeting children under 16
International: New Media: Publishers test out text-to-buy featureMagazines, marketers experiment with new technology
International: I want my a la Carte TVHow on-demand models will flatten the playing field
It's no secret that consumers in droves are tuning out ads using TiVo or DVRs. This is forcing the networks to try all kinds of new distribution models. Of course, in some cases these accompany ad-supported, on-demand full streaming of shows. Though the various models differ, they share some things in common.
International: Sorrell: junk food ads will go online
International: $120 Mil. Olympic Committee Eyes 4
International: J&J to throw $3 billion global media business into review; push for fresh thinking could rock agency world
International: The Spy who loves brandsIt's a new, darker James Bond, but the franchise stays true to product placement
International: Nielsen: Product Placement boosts brand awareness by 20%
Product placement in TV content boosts brand recognition by 20%, according to the results of a study released Wednesday by Nielsen Media Research. The study found that 57.5% of viewers recognized a brand when viewing a product placement in combination with a commercial, compared to the 46.6% of viewers that recognized a brand exposed only to a commercial.
International: Sony prepares for big game battle
International: 'Time' to Sell Total Audience, Shifts away from rate baseMajor move to change the way magazine ads are sold
International: Disney Relaunching Disney.comExpects Internet revenues to reach $700 million in '07
International: Microsoft maps out virtual ad medium
International: Google targets Newspapers
International: P&G pumps up print ad spending, trims TVDigital may be hot, but giant finds Mags, Papers and Direct work harder
International: Keeping Martin Sorrell awake at night: China and Internet
International: Study: Kids connect with social-conscious marketersNearly 90% of Gen Y respondents would switch to brand supporting a cause
Marketers that think the only way into Gen Y wallets is through snowboarding, MP3s and Jessica Alba are missing out. A study released by Boston-based Cone and AMP Insights found this generation cares about causes, and is more than willing to reward or punish a company based on its commitment to a cause.
International: Will consumers watch ads for air miles?
International: STAR launches five Indian channels in Japan; Fox News and Sky News available too
STAR has entered into a deal with Tokyo-based The New Media Group to launch its channels STAR Plus, STAR One, STAR News, STAR Utsav, Vijay, Sky News and Fox News in Jpan. These channels would be available on ‘World on Demand’ (WoD), a new IPTV and community platform that serves expatriate communities in Japan.
International: Update on the 2008 Beijing Olympics marketing frenzyVisa, Coke, Lenovo get head start to cash in on sizzling economy
International: Big marketers smell money in scent technologyMars, Pepsi, others add aromas to their package goods
International: Messing with your brand's logo is no longer a no-go
International: Sorrell: Web holding back the ad market
International: Magazines: The safest bet in advertising
No topic is more top of mind for marketers than just what they are getting for their ad dollars. Does the money they spend with TV, internet and magazines actually result in brand awareness and sales? According to some magazines are the most consistent of all media in delivering both brand awareness and purchase intent.
International: ESPN's Cell-Phone Fumble Mobile ESPN had 30,000 customers, way below breakeven
International: Stop The Presses: Print still effective ad buy
The study, by Marketing Evolution, El Dorado Hills, Calif., and commissioned by the Magazine Publishers of America found magazines drove through the "purchase funnel," leading three of four "funnel stages". The studies covered automotive, pharmaceutical, entertainment, electronics and "general" categories.