Posts Tagged ‘blogger’

We’re all writers now. How recession damages copywriting.

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

There are many signs that something is going wrong. The scarcity of invitations to join the staff of a particular agency; the lack of requests to pencil out dates in your diary and the distant memory of those top-dollar, overnight emergency briefs.

Only fool wouldn’t come to the conclusion that the industry’s finances are sinking faster than Simon Le Bon’s yacht. Still, any seasoned freelance copywriter has seen all this before. Recession follows boom as surely as a belch follows a can of cola and things will surely come right. And they will.

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Help yourself

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

Merry Christmas? Times are as hard as a granite boulder, encased in steel, painted in superglue and treated with a rare carbon compound.

Broke is what we are.

Blame a multitude of politicians and stab an accusing finger in the direction of international bankers and I will be with you, brothers and sisters. Had the former been watching the latter, we may not be in this sorry situation. Add to this negligence a patchwork government hell-bent on hobbling the voluntary and public sectors and we’re staring down the wrong end of a long, bleak winter. But again, what’s to be done? In the creative industries, can we really lighten this crushing load in any meaningful way? I feel certain we can.

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Open air. How a radio station can enhance a community.

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

You’ll have noticed more than a little disruption in UK cities this week. And, as a blog for the creative industries, this isn’t the platform to conduct a post mortem into its causes and consequences. That said, it seems obvious there are substantial fractures in some of the communities where rioting and looting has taken place. I have no doubt it will take a whole lot more than local radio stations to fix this depressing scenario, but I am equally certain they have a role to play.

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Torrential reign. Why the music industry is still on a wild goose chase.

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

“As things stand now, digital music has failed.”

So says Forrester Research analyst Mark Mulligan. Of course he doesn’t mean digital music isn’t being consumed – just glance around any train carriage – what he’s pointing to is an abiding anxiety that the MP3 revolution is almost over and the record companies still aren’t across it. Not that you’d find many industry executives echoing this sentiment. Most will tell you that, as long as they can continue to bear down on piracy and intervene to make it almost impossible to download music illegally, their fortunes will rally.

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Is no News good news?

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

Even a grizzled old blogger like me can call it wrong. And last week I did. My previous piece stated with confidence that the phone hacking (it’s not really hacking is it?) scandal would not spell the end of the News Of The World. Within 24 hours, the title was finished. The paper was very profitable, sold 2.6 million copies and generated about £35-40m in advertising spend every year.

But misjudgement on such a monumental scale couldn’t be carried and it died of shame.
  

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Move closer. The rise of hyper-local media.

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

The media is like a balloon or something ...Planet media tends to throw up buzzwords like a heavy drinker with acute salmonella. ‘Social networking’, ‘disruption marketing’, ‘viral video’ – and now here comes another: ‘hyper local’. You’re likely to hear this phrase an awful lot, because if predictions are anything to go by, it describes the brave new frontier for broadcasting, the web and even print.

Rather like a balloon, the world’s various media outlets have inflated and expanded over the last twenty years or so. Sky ushered in global satellite TV in the 90s, the internet engulfed our lives in the early 21st century and social websites linked us all to likeminded folk across the world in recent years. As the balloon stretched, regional television became more amorphous and considerably less relevant, ITV soaked up the provincial broadcasting companies (Granada, Central, HTV etc.) and, just this year, Global Media Group has swallowed the independent local radio network whole, rebranding every station Capital (Capital? That’s only London surely?) and duplicating its output across the nation.

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The ads don’t work.

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

Advertise your businessAdvertising doesn’t work. There, I’ve said it. Sorry if it upsets you, but I think you deserve the truth. The notion that an advertisement plonks a product or service in a favourable light and inspires thousands of people to rush out and pay for it just isn’t true any more. If it ever was.

To expect a poster, TV clip, mailer or website to perform such a commercial miracle, is really to misunderstand advertising’s place in the world. To see ads as mighty, evil arm-twisters, permeating every aspect of our lives and every corner of our brains, is laughably glib and actually flatters the advertiser’s abilities.

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