Empower
Teens don't care about privacy, right?
Changing attitudes towards online privacy among teenagers has huge implications for brands. But the assumption that young people are indifferent about their online lives and how their personal data is used is wide of the mark.
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Is Britain in a post-traumatic state?
You only have to read the headlines to see that the British public is doing its level best to put the recession behind it. But we’re dogged with incidents and issues that remind us that we may not yet be in a position to move on.
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Don’t just do the right thing – say it as well
What is missing in the narrative about the corporate higher purpose is how to make sure the brand reflects the social mission overtly in consumer communications.
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Biometrics on course to put the 'me' into media
In the age of the ‘quantified self’, in which it is possible to integrate the manifold data produced by our Facebook posts, emails, GPS and fitness logs, purchases, preferences and so on, we’re beginning to get used to the idea that our data can b
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A postscript to Goddard on cost competitiveness
Jules Goddard puts not a word wrong in his damnation of cost competitiveness (Market Leader, March 2014). Solid research supports what many of us have long believed.
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How will new media fundamentalists react to the revolution in TV?
I read with interest remarks by Maurice Levy on how he thinks about life after the failure...
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Managing screens in a TV-centric market
New analysis of multi-screen behaviour highlights the power of mobile and tablets, but it should also remind marketers that...
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Brand relationships in the world of smart technology
As presented at the Marketing Society 2013 Annual Conference, Paul Kemp-Robertson describes four fascinating trends that flow from emerging technologies and new consumer behaviours which form the basis for exciting brand marketing innovations in t
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Strategy is more dependent on courage and humility than talent and charisma
Misconception: Leaders need to be charismatic.If you ask CEOs to nominate the business leaders they have most admired, they will invariably refer to a small group of well-known, highly entrepreneurial men at the top of large corporations: leader
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Difference between winners and losers is less aims and more methods
A powerful application of the oblique principle lies in the finding that goals are better achieved by focusing on the underlying belief system, rather than on the goal itself. As the proverb has it, the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
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