Quoting from today's PRWEEK posting on branded content:
"As branded content occupies a larger portion of marketing output, agencies and production companies are scrambling to claim the space."
Teressa Iezzi,Director of PR and Publishing Wieden + Kennedy New York, kicks off the round robin discussion.
Link to the posting.
News and information from Maggie Holben in Denver, Colorado. She posts good ideas and great reads (particularly concerning all things PR and interesting tidbits about Denver and Colorado). Plus links to client, family and friend news items. Follow her tweets at @MaggieHolben or @DenverPR or @AbsolutelyPR
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
Social Media Examiner: "How to Create a Social Media Content Calendar for a Year"
Quoting yesterday's post by Leonard Kim:
"The first step in creating a content calendar is to set everything up in a spreadsheet. You can do this with Excel or Google Sheets. On the top line of the sheet, fill in the days of the week..."
Link to the full posting.
"The first step in creating a content calendar is to set everything up in a spreadsheet. You can do this with Excel or Google Sheets. On the top line of the sheet, fill in the days of the week..."
Link to the full posting.
Monday, October 24, 2016
Poynter: "Print advertising woes are getting worse"
Quoting, in part, from Poynter's October 21 posting by Rick Edmonds:
"The first half of 2016 was financially bleak for newspaper organizations; the second may be even worse...
...The shift of a share of print budgets to various digital marketing formats continues year to year with new opportunities in video and podcasts emerging in 2016. Some stalwart print advertisers — retail stores and financial institutions — are facing digital disruption in their own industries and squeezing ad budgets...
...Pharmaceutical advertising, still heavy on TV and present in magazines, seems to have disappeared entirely from newspapers. And the political ad wave that boosts local broadcasters again has largely passed newspapers by."
Link to the full posting.
"The first half of 2016 was financially bleak for newspaper organizations; the second may be even worse...
...The shift of a share of print budgets to various digital marketing formats continues year to year with new opportunities in video and podcasts emerging in 2016. Some stalwart print advertisers — retail stores and financial institutions — are facing digital disruption in their own industries and squeezing ad budgets...
...Pharmaceutical advertising, still heavy on TV and present in magazines, seems to have disappeared entirely from newspapers. And the political ad wave that boosts local broadcasters again has largely passed newspapers by."
Link to the full posting.
Labels:
advertising,
Media Analysis,
print media
Thursday, September 29, 2016
Denverite: Denver's "Globeville and Swansea schools lose funding to gentrification. A city grant tries to make up the difference."
Quoting from yesterday's Denverite Chalkbeat by Melanie Asmar:
"Two elementary schools in working-class north Denver neighborhoods that are feeling the sting of gentrification will share a $120,000 grant to fund a staff member at each school to address some of the challenges facing the changing communities...Garden Place Academy, an elementary school in the adjacent Globeville neighborhood, will use its $60,000 to hire a new family liaison to encourage parents to become involved at the school."
Link to the full article.
Note: My family, including a pair of great-great grandparents made roots in Globeville after immigrating here from the Volga River area of Russia at the turn of the century (1900). The last family to make their home in Globeville died in 1994. I believe her immediate heirs sold the small home, built in 1896, on North Sherman Street for $20,000 or so, back then. The last sale recorded appears to be for $40,000 in November 2006. But...enter Denver's real estate/gentrification boom of late and current estimates ballooned to these estimated levels for the property: Redfin, $149,942; Re/Max, $172,000; Zillow, $187,447; and Trulia, $216,000. Hence, the public school gentrification crisis explained in this article.
"Two elementary schools in working-class north Denver neighborhoods that are feeling the sting of gentrification will share a $120,000 grant to fund a staff member at each school to address some of the challenges facing the changing communities...Garden Place Academy, an elementary school in the adjacent Globeville neighborhood, will use its $60,000 to hire a new family liaison to encourage parents to become involved at the school."
Link to the full article.
Note: My family, including a pair of great-great grandparents made roots in Globeville after immigrating here from the Volga River area of Russia at the turn of the century (1900). The last family to make their home in Globeville died in 1994. I believe her immediate heirs sold the small home, built in 1896, on North Sherman Street for $20,000 or so, back then. The last sale recorded appears to be for $40,000 in November 2006. But...enter Denver's real estate/gentrification boom of late and current estimates ballooned to these estimated levels for the property: Redfin, $149,942; Re/Max, $172,000; Zillow, $187,447; and Trulia, $216,000. Hence, the public school gentrification crisis explained in this article.
PR Week: "Doritos is tying a branded promotion to a presidential election for the first time this year"
Quoting from yesterday's posting:
"Doritos has formed a partnership with Rock the Vote to increase voter registration among eligible young voters and to show the U.S. that 'the boldest choice is to make a choice.'
This marks the first time the brand is tying a promotion to a presidential election."
Link to the full article.
"Doritos has formed a partnership with Rock the Vote to increase voter registration among eligible young voters and to show the U.S. that 'the boldest choice is to make a choice.'
This marks the first time the brand is tying a promotion to a presidential election."
Link to the full article.
Wednesday, August 10, 2016
Confluence Denver: "Pedestrian bridge connecting Globeville and Sunnyside opens"
Quoting the August 1 Confluence Denver posting by Margaret Jackson:
"The new pedestrian bridge connecting the Highlands and Sunnyside neighborhoods to Globeville neighborhood near the future 41st and Fox Station along the Regional Transportation District's G Line has opened.
On the Sunnyside end, the bridge is located at West 41st Avenue and Inca Street."
Link to the full posting.
Interesting bit of my own Denver history. My Dad was born in his family home in Globeville on Lincoln Street in 1914. In 1920... they moved to a home in Sunnyside on Alcott St. It took roughly 96 years to "build the bridge."
"The new pedestrian bridge connecting the Highlands and Sunnyside neighborhoods to Globeville neighborhood near the future 41st and Fox Station along the Regional Transportation District's G Line has opened.
On the Sunnyside end, the bridge is located at West 41st Avenue and Inca Street."
Link to the full posting.
Interesting bit of my own Denver history. My Dad was born in his family home in Globeville on Lincoln Street in 1914. In 1920... they moved to a home in Sunnyside on Alcott St. It took roughly 96 years to "build the bridge."
Labels:
Denver PR News and Information
Friday, July 8, 2016
Fox31 Denver: 'Text to 911 now available in Denver'
Quoting from the July 8th posting on the Fox31/Denver news site:
"Denver is rolling out a new program that lets people text 911 during emergencies.
Denver gets about 1 million 911 calls per year, and that number is growing. Sometimes, dispatch operators are forced to put callers on hold because of volume. So more people are turning to social media to report crimes to police."
Link to the full posting.
"Denver is rolling out a new program that lets people text 911 during emergencies.
Denver gets about 1 million 911 calls per year, and that number is growing. Sometimes, dispatch operators are forced to put callers on hold because of volume. So more people are turning to social media to report crimes to police."
Link to the full posting.
Labels:
Denver PR News and Information
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