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Showing posts with label digital marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital marketing. Show all posts
Friday, November 21, 2014

Facebook; More Updates!

The social media site that dominates our lives is powering on through 2014 and has introduced a number of changes;

Investments at Facebook - Facebook is set to make ‘large, strategic’ technological investments in a bid to boost mobile revenue and a major force in premium advertiser monetisation.      
Quick Stats;

  • Advertising revenue has risen 64% year-on-year to £1.8bn in the three months to September, with two thirds of that coming from the mobile side.
  • On mobile, 1.12 billion people now use Facebook each month
  • 703 million people every day, nearly 40% growth from this time last year
Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said: “We’re investing in ad-tech for a simple reason. Consumers are shifting quickly to mobile and the advertising industry is not keeping up." He also went on to add, "Similarly marketers are not confident that they can measure mobile ad performance. Many of the most commonly used measurement systems over emphasise the value of the last click. This does not make sense, given that studies of Facebook campaigns show that over 90% of ad-driven in-store sales come from people who saw an ad but didn’t click on it."

This is part of a long-term strategy that includes recent acquisitions such as WhatsApp, Instagram and Oculus Rift.

Places Directory - Facebook's new Places Directory has been discretely released and will be spark fierce competition with directory sites such as Yelp. Places Directory allows you to search the globe for destinations and then narrow down your searches for bars, hotels, restaurants, gyms, landmarks and many more attractions. It's strength lies in the fact results are ranked by user ratings and show comments from your Facebook friends. Places Directory taps into Facebook's existing technology such as Graph Search, Page Locations API, and other elements.

Facebook at work - Facebook is working on extending its network beyond the social realm and into the professional world, according to the FT, citing an anonymous source. Facebook at Work will be very similar to the current Facebook model, with collaborative tools for work on shared documents and professional/social profiles not sharing any information. It is currently being piloted in London, although effectively it has been piloted for years at Facebook HQ as they are known to use Facebook internally.

Facebook Groups - Facebook is set launch another spin off app, although it isn't creating anything new, it's giving Facebook Groups its very own app. With 650 to 700 million monthly active users and 2.5 billion pieces of content every month, its second in size only to Facebook itself. Current users having been trailing through Facebook to access Groups, so this should make it much simpler for those users while also more inviting to new users. But what is Groups anyway? Its effectively a much smaller Facebook in which you can customise your news feed to smaller group such as friends, family or work colleagues. 
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Thursday, November 13, 2014

Digital Marketing Talent Shortfall!
The Online Marketing Institute has identified the most the largest talent gaps and most in-demand digital skills of 2014. The 'State of Digital Marketing Talent' study consisted of interviewing 747 advertising and Fortune 500 marketing executives to find out what skills their teams possessed and which were most desired.

The Missing Skills: It's striking that talent is perceived to be a 1/3 short of where it should be. This could have a detrimental affect on performance, identify your talent gaps within your company and address them. As an individual, look where the gaps might be in your team and gain a greater understanding of these skills (making yourself more valuable to the company).


Desirable Skills: No surprise that Content and Mobile are part of the most desirable skills, however the surprise is that employees have not met these demands and specialised their skills sets by educating themselves further. Opportunity for crossover skills such as Journalism developing into content marketing.


Hiring Issues: A lack of previous work experience could be due to the fact some of the skills are 'new', having been created by new technologies and sectors. Nearly a third of participants are unable to find capable digital talent, we've seen the statistics of the amount of people applying for the same jobs, therefore its crucial your CV stands out from the crowd. Be innovative and showcase your ability!


Further Education: You can definitely teach an old dog new tricks! 66% of marketers would find further education beneficial. Are you participating in available classes? Or are you offering members of your team the opportunity to train further?


Images courtesy of Kelly Services infographic


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Monday, November 03, 2014

The latest study from the Advertising Association has shown a 8.5% rise in advertising spend to a grand total of £4.5 billion in the three months leading to June. This is the highest spending we've seen since late 2010. It is believed a maturing attitude to digital marketing played a key role behind this growth, with Internet (17.2%), Radio (17.7%) and Display (5%) all having strong quarters.

Although the growth for the rest of this year is expected to slow to 5%, if we look to 2015 demand for Display will push Internet spending to £8.1 billion (compared to the projected £7.5 billion for 2014). Search marketing is also predicted for strong growth figures next year, growing from £3.9bn to £4.3bn between 2014 and 2015.

Tim Lefroy chief executive of the Advertising Association, says the performance of digital media so far in 2014 points to “digital and creative leadership in e-commerce”. The insight is supported by companies such as Mondelez and Diageo tightening the link between online advertisements and search marketing to move further into ecommerce, which is considered a well of untapped potential for food and drink marketers. Around 60% of UK GDP is household consumption – one of the highest – according to the Advertising Association and “e and m commerce are an increasingly large part of that picture”.

Ad spend was up across the media mix, they were all down in the first quarter of the year, but posted rises in the following quarter. The latest Bellwether report, which said over 25% of companies planned to increase the marketing spend.
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Monday, October 13, 2014

Google Panda 4.1: What's new?

Another Google update enviability means Winners and Losers, this new update has been dubbed Panda 4.1 (although many of Google's other algorithms were updated) and news broke via Google employee Pierre Far's Google+ page. Medium and small websites are said to have benefitted most from 4.1, in the past Google has been accused of favouring the bigger players, but they expect to see the highest ranking sites to come in a variety of sizes now.

The Panda algorithm penalises content that it believes offers little or no value to users.  What is new about the latest Panda update is that Google has developed new and more sophisticated signals to more accurately detect low-quality and thin content from ranking highly,
although it's worth noting that 4.1 has only effected 3-5% of search queries. 

Losers

Gaming, lyric and some medical portals suffered organic search visibility losses, this seems to be because these sites tend to have thin, repeated, or aggregated content, and Google deems this type of content as low quality. Lyric websites often have identical content to their competitors, medical content sites have a habit of repeating content, while gaming sites have a lack of content compared to other platforms. Affiliate sites have also been deemed losers by many tech experts due to their thin content.

Winners

News websites, download portals and content sites benefitted due to the fact they are regularly updated with new, (presumably) high-quality and unique information. Another thing to note is that sites that were hit by the Panda 4.0 update have been working hard to delete duplicate and thin content over the past few months and as a result have recovered very well, examples include rd.com, Hotelguides.com and Yourtango.com.

Concerned about how this update may affect your website? Although it may seem that Google is trying to catch websites out, they're actually very clear with how they critique content. They suggest referring to the following questions when curating your own content;

  1. Would you trust the information presented in this article?
  2. Is this article written by an expert or enthusiast who knows the topic well?
  3. Does this article have spelling, stylistic, or factual errors?
  4. Does the page provide substantial value when compared to other pages in search results?
  5. Was the article edited well, or does it appear sloppy or hastily produced?
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Wednesday, July 02, 2014

YouTube the Community vs. YouTube the Business


When YouTube was hailed as "The New Hollywood" it seemed as though the golden age of online video had arrived. Ordinary people were becoming stars, video was being democratized, from retro to cult to niche if ever there was a place where content was king it was the kingdom of YouTube.

The Bizarre Landscape of YouTube

Michael Jackson & Janet Jackson 'Scream' - The most expensive music video of all time at $7,000,000
33 million views


'Charlie Bit My Finger' Two otherwise unknown English kids (I'm guessing it didn't have huge production costs)
732 million views
... and here's the app off the back of it https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.viralspiral.charlie 


While discussion of the "Greatest TV Drama Ever" can range from Breaking Bad to The Wire or from The Wire to Breaking Bad, YouTube offers literally millions of videos and each user likely has their own favourites.

Personal favourite: 'All Your Base Are Belong To Us' has it all from dreadful Japanese to English translation, an obnoxious soundtrack to smart, funny photo-editing. All in all it goes pretty far to summing up community driven, meme-led portion of the internet .
900,000 views

Of course the ludicrous freedom and variety was supported by a sophisticated and successful revenue model, with ad placement making YouTube its earnings. A figure of likely $5.6 billion in 2013, which is not too shabby. YouTube hit upon an irresistible offer for content creators, the chance to take home 55% of the profits from advertising around their videos, while YouTube takes a 45% cut. That's 55% of something (and potentially a lot) or 100% of nothing. It's an easy choice, one that made likes of PewDiePie millions of ad dollars for playing games and just generally putting himself on display.

Now YouTube seeks to offer premium models to diversify the experience and take some profit from the growing revenues of streaming services for both video and music. With many major labels comfortably tied into deals with YouTube already through publishing companies like music-only Vevo, smaller independent labels are fighting tooth and nail with YouTube claiming the terms they're being offered are unfair. YouTube's wielding its power by threatening to remove the videos from these labels already on the services. While one could argue YouTube is bullying the 'little guy' it's also fair to point out being able to have your wares in the shopfront that is YouTube has been a massive advantage for the labels.

The effects of YouTube go far beyond making some people very rich though, as exemplified by one lawsuit filed by Ghyslain Raza who claimed the sharing of his video had 'ruined his life'. Not a name you recognise? You may know him as Star Wars kid. Appropriately he's now a law school graduate - specialising in cyber bullying.

This is how you get the name 'Star Wars Kid'...
29 million views


From an often bizarre mishmash of poorly executed oddities YouTube has grown to be possibly the most dominant force in video on the planet, which is remarkable seeing as it was only started in 2005. Simply if you want a video online, overwhelmingly you go to YouTube (unless you're artsy enough to use Vimeo). Now it'll even support HD 60fps, offering Blu-Ray level quality from a little box on your browser. More than that though YouTube can wield the monolithic power of a media giant, decreeing what will and will not be happening (or seen) in online video - perhaps even video in general. Much like Google, YouTube has gone from being a relatively passive curator to an active director of content, making rules and distinctions and sub-levels as it goes.

Here's a 60 FPS video for Battlefield: Hardline, which further affirms YouTube's close relationship with gamer culture.


An odd sandpit where the likes of Billy in his bedroom with some pirated animation software and the cheapest midi keyboard he could find on Ebay can outdo Michael Bay and a billion dollars of exploding this and that. YouTube has the challenge to find a balance between its impeccably slick, media-dominating money-making aspirations and the interests and preferences of possibly most engaged large community on the web.

But with Google at the helm, who've shown an adeptness at growing huge and all-powerful while still remaining relatively well liked, YouTube stands a decent chance of juggling all those balls at once - if taking the odd swipe at some of the pillars of traditional media along the way. As long as it does there'll be a fair few more hits the like of "Leave Britney Alone" and "Nyan Cat" yet.

Nyan Cat
Racking up an amazing 110,000,000 views Nyan Cat has almost matched last year's Super Bowl for number of viewers - the most watched event in TV history

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Monday, June 23, 2014

The Discussion: The Rise of Anti-Social Media?

The Rise of Anti-Social Media: Are the major social networks getting less and less social? 

That's the question we asked to some top experts from digital agencies. Here's what they had to say.

Let's start with the thoughts of Dan Sodergen (@ukmarketinghelp) a Digital Marketing consultant and regular events speaker.


"Many marketing people have gotten used to an easy life. Social was about posting and now they cry “foul” because the platforms on which they post change the rules.

As for the idea that new platforms are “anti brand / anti social” this is nonsense. Such platforms protect their early adopters before they cross the chasm and change strategy. Some will do so better than others. In my mind "old boy" Twitter with well-timed advertising is the best so far for non-intrusive value add for content distribution. But ‘new’ formats like Pinterest’s new tools for businesses, Snapchat’s new events for brands, and powerhouse content centers like BuzzFeed all have or are sponsored and might be amazing.

But what is amazing is that BuzzFeed with around 3,000 articles produced 20.7 million likes, 13.7 million comments, and 47.5 million interactions in March alone. How? They gave people want they wanted which is mainly things about themselves and things that entertain them and their friends.

As someone wiser than I said many moons ago* "If you're going to crash the party, bring some champagne with you."

If brands are producing something which doesn’t get shared – they need to look themselves for interrupting people’s lives with branded cheap wine rather than the glass it comes in."


Sarah Bradley (@sarahmbradley), Head of Social, at Receptional (@receptional) and an Editor at State of Digital, takes a stand against our (admittedly provocative) title and makes a great point - if brands find it hard to reach their audience then their strategy is at fault.

"I don’t think any changes we have seen within social networks are ‘anti-social media’! The nature of social media is that it’s reactive, fluid and ever-changing. Networks are desperately trying to keep up with the way we use their networks, so changes such as the Twitter mute option and new networks like Snapchat are simply a natural progression of social networking today. A successful network provides its users with the space they need to make it their own. Take Facebook for example: launched in 2004 as a University-based network, Facebook quickly became popular with people who used university emails to create an account so Facebook expanded. Back then it was primarily text based - status updates, comments etc. Until massive picture share that started to mould the way we communicate online today so Facebook adapted again.

New ways of communicating have evolved in the past 10 years and social networks have to try and respond to, and anticipate, as many of these ‘evolutions’ as they can to remain popular; they are businesses after all.

If brands who use social networks are finding it harder to reach their audience, it’s their strategy that is at fault, not the network. Today’s consumers expect more from their brands.

Paid content will remain successful as the way it is placed before consumers is evolving too; social network paid ads are sophisticated, fun to run and cheap as chips so are still a viable option for many. However they cannot be successful without a great, adaptive strategy behind them with content that captures attention and isn’t ‘sales focussed’. The brands who do well with social media remember their customer’s interests come first and that interactions happen when they are happy or interested; sales should rise naturally as a result of customer happiness."



Sian Ediss (@fox_creative_), Head of Social, Online Ventures Group (@ov_group offered an amusing personal take on the sanitisation of social networks and rued the loss of Keanu Reeves memes:

"Facebook is going through a midlife crisis, what was once a fun and engaging platform is now a minefield of ‘Dos and Don’ts’.  Brands have been discouraged to ‘like-bait’ as poor Facebook is feeling played. Users have also been told by Mr FB that memes are no longer quality content, I for one, will never tire of seeing the Keanu Reeves dumbfounded face. Ever.

Quality content is what social platforms are looking for, this is important, but the freedom of social media is what makes it an exciting and creative place to hang out. With rules and regulations, muting and ‘tellings off’, I can’t help but feel a bit stifled in the "anti-​social media​"​ world of late."

Just for Sian, here's our favourite 'Conspiracy Keanu'




BadMan Media (@badmanmedia) brings an interesting arsenal of figures and proves that the shift from image to video hasn't quite taken full swing yet.

"Social media activity is an important aspect of brand marketing. Determining the impact of content, activity and time spent on the network is critical to deciding how to move forward, how to adjust and how to actively engage users.
Facebook knows that spammy content has cluttered news feeds
"Like-baiting" refers to posts that explicitly ask readers to like, comment, or share the post in order to get more distribution. According to Facebook, these types of posts are 15% less relevant than other stories with a comparable number of likes, comments, and shares.
Ideally a lot of brands now are heading over to Twitter more to engage and share content with their followers but now with the Mute button being introduced it's even harder and more important for companies to watch and take care in what content they post and share.

Anyone can say they are a social media ''expert'' but now it's becoming more of a skill and takes more than just posting a tweet or sharing a photo on Facebook
Companies have to adapt to these changes rapidly before they fall behind and become just another fish in a very, very large pond.

When Instagram revealed its 15-second video feature, it received a lot of buzz in the media. Overall, video seems to be making an impact, but photos still receive 37 interactions for every 1,000 followers, compared to 24-per-1,000 for videos. Fortune 500 companies have been slow to adopt the feature, as well, with only 74 videos shared in the past 30 days. In that same time period, the companies shared 1,792 photos. This helps support the claim that Instagram is still a photo sharing site at its core. And many people are now using Instagram to follow brands because of this.
Overall, these advertisers are watching Twitter and other social networks to see what topics are getting the most attention, and putting together short blog posts, tweets and videos that match those themes - in hopes that the online audience will become more aware of the brand and see it as relevant to their interests and needs. Then, if one topic isn't getting attention any more, the companies can drop it without much fuss, and switch gears quickly to follow the next hot discussion.

#KeepItBadman"


Rob Goodswen (@robgoodswen), Social Media Executive, Access Advertising (@accessdigital), zoned in on the shift towards paid advertisement.

"The recent push toward paid advertisement by the major players in social, particularly Facebook, has made it increasingly difficult to reach your audience organically. This is a clear power play by Mr. Zuckerberg, a man who has a world of information at his command and whether you agree or not it’s a fairly smart one. With over a billion users, Facebook is the flagship of social media. People spend inordinate amounts of their day scrolling through their feeds and for that simple reason brands will pay for their posts to be seen. If you don’t like it, switch platforms.

Content, content, content. It feels as though this is now the industry buzzword. If you have good content are you guaranteed to have it seen by anyone? NO. Why would just ‘good content’ boost your organic reach? If there was a man in charge of how many eyes see a particular post I believe that he would be inundated with that many requests for more reach that he simply wouldn’t give two shits if the content was good. He wouldn’t have time to read it. Content is key when people click the link which takes them to it. The craft of the message which intrigues people to want to read your content is the first important step.

The Twitter ‘mute’ function is an essential tool for users who don’t wish to see tweets by people that they don’t want to unfollow but don’t want to hear from any more. Sure some users might want to ‘mute’ a brand, but all that means is that the brand has failed to continue to appeal to the user. Social marketeers shouldn’t be put off by this, rather they should concentrate on producing less annoying/offensive or illegible tweets.

Is social media becoming less social? I’m not sure. What I am sure about is that increasing amounts of people are taking on social media based roles without much knowledge of the craft. We wouldn’t trust a first year graphic designer with a full re-brand project for Apple would we? If companies invested more in their social department, adopting a strong and easy to follow social media policy, social media would be a much better place. Stop getting the teaboy/girl to do your social. Idiots."

So many great points above, on a wider level I think this shift represents a change in both how we use social networks and the internet and our expectations from those things. For arguably the first time in the modern era a generation is growing that can separate itself from intrusive, unwanted advertising - which means the platforms for advertising must change their behaviour accordingly. Concerns about privacy and over-sharing have led to much more closely-knit groups sharing more personal content and the rise of ephemeral media, such as Snapchat, has offered an ingenious antidote to data that exists permanently with ever-diminishing context. 

Our relationship with social networks might have reached a point where the novelty of ease of communication, with brands, acquaintances and friends has worn off. Now people are looking to hone and improve their experience, as well as having an increased sense of their own place within relationships, their security and their vulnerability.

Thanks to all our excellent contributors. 

The Discussion is never over, look out for a new topic in the coming weeks!

What do you think - is social media turning away from its sharing values in search of cold hard cash, or just responding to user behaviour?

Get in touch @chrysalisrec and @_matthewdavies, if you'd like to add your guest opinion to the next discussion, e-mail matthew.davies@chrysalisrecruitment.com


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Friday, May 23, 2014

The Social World Cup: Marketing's Golden Goal.
As we head into Brazil 2014, only a tantalising 19 days away, marketers are already twitching excitedly about the prospect of a huge and highly engaged audience ripe for the picking.


Each of the nations competing has at least one player with a verified account on Twitter, even Iran where Twitter is banned is represented by Hossam Masini. Savvy Social Media Managers may be dreaming of the footballing equivalent of another “Oreo moment” and looking back at past World Cups it’s not hard to imagine where the talking points might come from:

Over his head

Nowhere near his head

Improper use of his head

With more people tuning in to watch the World Cup than the Olympics, Tour De France and the Superbowl (sorry America) combined this World Cup is neatly coinciding with the rise of the 'second screen'. More and more people are watching with a mobile in hand and soaking up the information and reaction on social media as well as making searches based on the events of the game.

Above is how the searches were made during the 2010 world cup final. Largely desktop with the most queries immediately after the final whistle.

Below is how the searches were made during a major Champions League game in 2014. Predominantly mobile, with the most searches made around key moments in the match.

All of this points to an active audience ready to react in real-time to anything truly engaging. Perhaps surprisingly young survey respondents are casting increasingly disapproving glances at ambush tactics in favour of "classier" official sponsorship. Young consumers are increasingly aware of the showboating antics of the some brands and guffaws are turning to weary sighs. On the other hand, through traditional sponsorship, major brands are dominating YouTube with World Cup focussed content racking up millions of views, with the not inconsiderable muscles of Nike and Adidas flexing most successfully. Even the official England team announcement was made on Twitter, a platform that didn't even exist when the likes of Lampard and Gerrard were making their debuts, long since they'd spent a good few years getting in each others' way.

A very Twitter-centric England squad announcement


Samsung is building on the success of its Ellen selfie by giving the entire England team Samsung phones to use, and if league winning teams are anything to go by we won't be seeing an end to the selfie just yet. 

Manchester City players, Lescott, Kompany and Hart celebrate Permier League win with a selfie.

Now though celebrity endorsements are an artform all to themselves, as Hart proves advertising anything he can get his capable hands on, user generated content has matured into a pillar of marketing strategy and 9/10s of the world loves a bit of the beautiful game. With 87% of UK Twitter users expecting to watch the World Cup and the hashtag #worldcup already having been used 10 million times it's almost hard to anticipate the scale of World Cup fever the network is going to be crushed under. For fans and marketers alike the excitement is at vuvuzela-pitch but hopefully marketers will have more interesting and intelligent things to say than "OMG" or ":(" following the inevitable penalty shoot out exit.

Whatever happens lets hope we have some worthy world champions, that Wayne Rooney improves on a tally to match me and you - of zero World Cup goals, and that 'soccer' produces something to finally dethrone that imperious Oreo.
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Monday, January 27, 2014

2014 has started with a bang, and a number of competitive pitches have led to some huge agency wins!
We've highlighted the major deals this January:

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Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Xaxis completes merger with 24/7 Media
The combined entity will be called Xaxis and will be run by the Brian Lesser, the existing global chief executive of Xaxis and David Moore, the founder of 24/7 Media will be the chairman of Xaxis.

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Thursday, January 16, 2014

Confidence seems to of been restored amongst marketers as 2014 is set to see budgets reach their highest levels since the 2008 financial crash. Bellwethers most recent report highlights that 26 per cent of companies are planning to increase their marketing budgets year on year in 2014, this was complimented by a strong Q4 in 2013 which saw 11 per cent of companies registering an increase in budget spend.

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Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Senior Account Manager Harriet Sanders has a wealth of experience and knowledge in the digital recruitment industry. As the key link between several Chrysalis clients and potential candidates, her insight into recruiting is very valuable.
This brief interview (she’s a busy lady) should highlight some of her prowess as a recruiter:

So – what type of candidate would you say is most difficult to recruit for?
HS: I find that developers are notoriously hard to recruit for. It may be due to their nature, which is what makes them good developers – geeky, a bit insular and they prefer to deal with code than people, which can make them hard to find.
Then what type of candidate is the easiest?
HS: Contrast developers to marketing people, who talk and interact as part of their daily roles. Their personality typically makes finding and talking to them easier.

Once you have that skilled new candidate, how tough is it to sell your client and the role to them? Presumably it depends on the role itself, but working without job specifications…
HS: Good candidates tend to have their pick of offers and opposed to the other way around. There are always more companies for the candidates to choose from than vice versa, and there tends to be one candidate that perfect for each company but few companies who are perfect for that candidate.
In this seemingly recession-proof industry of recruitment, And with competition for exclusivity fierce, is recruiting tougher than ever?
HS: It’s always been tough, but that’s why we earn lots of commission and if it was easy to recruit then companies would do it themselves.
And finally – what is it about your job that you love? Apart from this, of course.
HS: The role is great when you find a lovely candidate, and you’ve dealt with them for weeks and then you get them a role which they love. That makes all the troubles worthwhile.

If you're looking to change roles, contact us at Chrysalis to speak to one of our specialist recruiters.
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Monday, April 08, 2013

According to data exclusively revealed in The Drum, digital marketing solutions tools from Kenshoo have shown that the UK has overtaken the US on paid-search CPCs in the fourth quarter of 2012.
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Friday, October 12, 2012

The Internet Advertising Bureau's latest report into advertising expenditure has revealed a 12.6% rise in digital ad-spend totalling £2.6bn for the first six months of 2012, up £294m from £2.3bn in the previous year.
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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Paddy Power Euro 2012 Stunts Prove Costly
Outspoken Irish bookmaker Paddy Power have found themselves facing the discipline of European football's governing body after their latest stunt drew Michel Platini's wrath.

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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

They might be on the verge of signing Japanese star Shinji Kagawa, but Manchester United have working on another deal with another big global name.

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