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Opinion
The keyboard warrior of Twitter
In this guest post, NBN staffer Scott Rhodie writes an unofficial, personal view on his experience with a hostile Twitter critic.Last night I had a strange incident. While on Twitter I noticed someone saying that Australia’s NBN is already outdated. I wrote a small note back explaining they were incorrect.
And their response? The lovely gentleman (whose Twitter profile says: ‘Father of 5 kids, Loving Grandfather of 10 Grandchildren,and 2 Great Granddaughters. love to give heaps to Pollies and Poofters’) said to me: “Go and lick Gillards C*** out U commie Prick”
What's in a name?
In this guest post, Moensie Rossier wonders about the power of names for brands and marketers.
Brands have been having a bit of fun with names lately, not to mention a fair bit of success. Interbrand just named a headhunting firm Cloak & Dagger. And ‘Share a Coke’ showed how much power there is in a name.
The Coke campaign effectively short-circuited the usual mechanics of communication. It undoubtedly stroked people’s egos. But, I believe, its success stems from the fact that it directly and automatically affected people’s behaviour, rather than doing so indirectly by shaping attitudes.
Best ads from Super Bowl 2012
The Super Bowl is all done and a team from North America won. But as well as some sort of sporting event, it’s the world’s biggest advertising showcase. See the best of them right here… and please tell us what you think.
How to debunk media myths
In this post, UWS’s Ullrich Ecker, John Cook and Stephen Lewandowsky argue that cognitive science can help PRs form strategies in managing media misreporting.
A growing cohort of commentators has bemoaned the descent of contemporary political “debate” into a largely fact-free zone.
How about simply focusing on what consumers want?
In this guest post, Peter Mountford argues that brands should think more about what is really going on for consumers
Who here is hoping their favourite brand of toilet paper is going to be organizing a flash mob on their way home from work today?
What the Optus web copyright victory means
In this analysis first published on The Conversation, RMIT’s Marita Shelly examines the implications of Telstra’s defeat over the online rights to the AFL broadcast deal
This week’s Federal Court ruling that Optus customers are able to view sporting matches minutes after they are streamed live without breaching copyright is a landmark decision that alters our understanding of copyright law, and has significant implications for the AFL’s broadcasting rights deal.
Does Gina Rinehart’s bite of a chunk of Fairfax make her an oligarch?
In an article that first appeared in The Conversation, Mark Rolfe wonders whether the mining magnate’s move could turn Fairfax into something resembling America’s Fox network.
Australia’s richest person Gina Rinehart has moved to increase her stake in Fairfax Media, owner of The Age, Sydney Morning Herald and a number of radio stations. Rinehart has already shown her desire to play a role in public life, campaigning against former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s aborted mining tax. She has also demonstrated a willingness to make media investments to ensure her pro-business worldview is promulgated.
What does this latest move by Rinehart mean?
Gillard's Australia Day crisis
PM Julia Gillard’s media adviser Tony Hodges has been forced to resign over the Australia Day tent embassy debacle.
It came after it emerged he had revealed opposition leader Tony Abbott’s whereabouts, leading to both politicians being rescued by police in ugly scenes.
Mumbrella editor Tim Burrowes and advertising practitioner Jane Caro debate the topic on Weekend Sunrise’s masters of Spin segment:
The biggest cock-up I made in business
In this guest post, Chris Savage urges agency staff to live the brand.I still shudder when I think about how incredibly stupid I was when I made the biggest stuff up of my career. And then, 18 years later, I did it again. Do not make this mistake with your clients. Ever.
Hey Groupon. Thanks for fucking up email
In this guest post, Daniel Monheit warns that group deal overload is devaluing email marketingEmail marketing used to be fabulous. Back in the heady days of 2010, brands would work hard to build up well qualified databases, upon which they’d bestow carefully crafted correspondence filled with information, offers and incentives. The recipients, of course would be delighted: “Oh look! An email! From one of my favourite brands! And it’s 40 cents off at Woolies this week!”.
The staggering sway of Harold Mitchell
The Power Index today names Aegis Media chairman Harold Mitchell as the most powerful person in Melbourne. Andrew Crook profiles him.
Harold Mitchell takes pride in dispensing with the niceties. When The Power Index visited his South Melbourne private office before Christmas, fresh remains were scattered all over the boardroom table.
Share a Coke with… the moronic masses
The most-read story on Mumbrella last year, with not far off 100,000 page views, was a fairly humdrum yarn about the launch of Coca-Cola’s name-on-a-bottle campaign.The headline, “Coca-Cola puts people’s names on bottles in ‘Share a Coke’ campaign”, though hated by any self-respecting sub-editor, was loved by Google. And in rushed what can be politely described as the public.
Assumptions kill creativity
In this guest post, Gual Barwell disagrees that the sales success of the Old Spice social media campaign was overstated.Yesterday’s post from Cathie McGinn suggested the Old Spice campaign failed to connect with consumers. Based on the facts and figures, I disagree.
What Old Spice and Wieden + Kennedy has done and done phenomenally well is to create a franchise.
The SMH's readers (are wrong) editor
We are now about five months into the reign of Australia’s first readers’ editor. And I don’t think it is working.
It struck me at the time of Judy Prisk’s appointment to the Sydney Morning Herald that the fact that her boss was editor-in-chief Peter Fray was not going to be ideal if she was going to be the independent voice of the reader.
The emperor's new fragrance: Old Spice’s campaign failure
In this guest post, Cathie McGinn slays a sacred cow of 21st century marketing – the highly awarded Old Spice campaign.One of the biggest myths of recent times (by which I mean a story of great heroism and triumph we’d all like to believe but deep down know to be untrue) is the Old Spice social media campaign. It’s been much lauded and awarded as an example of outstanding content, a creative and collaborative way of connecting with consumers and driving a record increase in sales.
Big three’s domination of the Walkleys says it all about media diversity
I’ve been looking at this week’s Walkley shortlist.
When you start tallying the mentions, a picture begins to emerge of which organisations are investing in journalism – and how concentrated the serious media is in Australia.
I make it 25 nominations for Fairfax, 24 for the ABC and 22 for News Ltd.
But tellingly, no other organisation comes close. If you put together Kerry Stokes’ various interests - West Australian Newspapers, Seven and Yahoo!7 – they deliver nine shortlistings. SBS gets a disappointing three nominations.
Across individual titles, The Australian gets 11 nominations, while the SMH gets nine. Or 10 if you count the smh.com.au as the same masthead. Or 12 if you count a couple of joint mentions with other papers. ABC TV also gets nine.
But perhaps most tellingly is that I can’t spot a single nomination for The Sunday Telegraph, which is Australia’s best selling newspaper. it would seem that their Pauline Hanson photos triumph earlier this year didn’t catch the judges’ attention.
And PBL media – for all ACP magazine’s recent advertising to push its serious journalistic credentials – is barely represented: just one nomination for Nine.
It’s going to be a funny old awards night.
Tim Burrowes
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Comments
16 Oct 09
11:18 am
Yeh, I dunno Tim.
Sometimes I just like to think that it’s because those are the organisations that simply attract the best talent and there’s nothing funny in it. Never that simple though.
Really don’t know though. It does seem to be exclusive, so it depends on your point of view I guess (much like everything).
16 Oct 09
1:12 pm
I think those bleating (rather jealously) about why the Walkleys don’t represent new media and independent media need to just accept the fact that the broadsheets still house the vast majority of journalists with the talent and contacts to break stories.
We can all pick holes in The Australia, but its front page will tell you something genuinely new most days. How often can you say that about Crikey.com.au?
If people like Crikey owner Eric Beacher were REALLY serious about journalism they’d spend less money sending out opinion and news aggregation each day and more money hiring gun journos to investigate stories.
The Walkleys aren’t biased – new media just isn’t as good.
16 Oct 09
3:33 pm
Don’t represent new media?
They don’t even represent old media given the awards are run by the Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance, a union that represents a fraction of the people working in the industry .
The Walkleys are as relevent to non-union members as the Code of Ethics the union presides over on behalf of all journalists.
In the words of Paul Keating they are “unrepresentative swill” and so are the Walkley Awards.
16 Oct 09
3:34 pm
Well said Jason Whittaker. And as for ACP Magazines – I’m not certain writing a product endorsement about an advertiser’s lipstick attracts the attention of the Walkley judges, does it? PS There’s a typo in your header!
16 Oct 09
4:01 pm
*** puts on best Barbara Woodhouse voice *** …. “Walkeys …. now sit Tim”.
16 Oct 09
5:09 pm
Ha! I read it three times before I could find the typo – for those who don’t get it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r7lZnxrF694
Cheers,
Tim – Mumbrella
16 Oct 09
5:25 pm
You fixed it. Now we look like fools.
16 Oct 09
5:39 pm
Jason, you said it in one. New media doesn’t qualify for true grit, investigative journalism. And Tim is spot on in saying that those who are nominated are those who continue to invest in the merits of journalism. I wouldn’t go as far or be as altruistic tosuggest that all those nominated abide by the ‘truth at all cost’ theory, but they’re largely worthy recipients of the nomination.
16 Oct 09
10:29 pm
“The Walkleys are as relevent to non-union members as the Code of Ethics the union presides over on behalf of all journalists.”
Ethics: not relevant, says new media booster. Pathetic.
19 Oct 09
2:08 pm
This says it all.
I received an email from an independent publisher earlier in the year: “The 2009 Walkley Awards are coming up and we’d love to enter your essay “Xxx” in the Magazine Feature Writing section….
“There is one catch though – we need to know if you’re a member of the Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA). Entry is free for members, but otherwise there’s an accompanying fee of $260, which unfortunately we don’t have the funds for (and we certainly don’t expect you to pay). If you’re an MEAA member, and keen to enter, let me know and I’ll organise the application on your behalf. ”
No I’m not a member. I rang the Alliance to see if it would be cheaper to join just to qualify for the awards. The cost (I’m a freelance)? Around $600 per year!
21 Oct 09
5:38 pm
Surely it says more about those judging the entries than the investment organisations are putting into journalism. And it seems if you work in sport, there is nothing to be had, even if you deliver world firsts. Disappointing indeed.
27 Oct 09
5:35 pm
Well Crikey entered and they didn’t get anything … not even for Bernard Keane who comprehensively provides the best coverage in the Canberra press gallery.