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Overview The explosive growth in social media marketing over the past few years has rended scores of carefully crafted corporate websites irrelevant as marketing tools. But don't take our word for it. Just Google it. Analysts, journalists, bloggers and marketing thought-leaders have been singing thi tune for awhile. Jeremiah Owyang started leading the chorus back in 2007 when he was at Forrester Research (he's now at Altimeter Group.). The corporate website is an unbelievable collection of hyperbole, artificial branding, and pro-corporate content, " he said. "As a result, trusted decisions are being made on other locations on the Internet... networks, rating sites, chat rooms, and even blogs."....

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To determine if featuring a call to action in the form of a button on a banner will increase response rates.Despite its reputation for being a creative and innovative field, advertising has always had its share of conventional thinking. Advertising classes teach aspiring creatives the difference between the right way to create an ad and, if not exactly the wrong way, then the not-so-right way to create an ad. There are right places to put the logo, and wrong places. Good uses of type, and bad....

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Một sáng đẹp trời chúng ta được sếp triệu tập đến một cuộc họp và đưa ra một mệnh lệnh đơn giản nhưng sét đánh: “Em làm sao anh không cần biết, nhưng công ty cần nâng lợi nhuận tháng tới lên… gấp đôi”

Showing posts with label Consumer Trends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Consumer Trends. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 August 2011

Half of Parents Say Kids Watch More TV in Summer - Marketing Charts

Half of Parents Say Kids Watch More TV in Summer

Many parents of those 17 or younger and living at home say their children consume various types of media more, including watching television and playing video games, during the summer months, according to a Harris Poll/Adweek survey released today. Almost half of parents say their children consume more television (49%) and video games (46%) in the summer, with a quarter saying their children consume much more of these types of media and entertainment during the summer (23% and 24%).

One in six or less say their children consume less of these types of media in the summer (16% and 13%) while three in ten say the amount consumed is neither more nor less in the summer than at other times of the year (29% and 27%).
Increased television viewing was most prevalent in the South and West regions of the US, where 58% and 52% of parents, respectively, said their children were watching more television. 55% and 53% said video game use was up.

In looking at Internet use and watching movies, the survey found similar results — 44%-45% of parents say that their children do more of these activities in the summer, compared to 13% and 14% who say they do less.

In general, with school out of session, children have more hours to consume media, but their habits may also be influenced by a few changes in the household. Almost six in ten parents say they loosen the rules during the summer, allowing their kids more freedom (57%) to consume various types of media.

One quarter of parents say they do not loosen media consumption rules in the summer (26%) and fewer say that they do not have any rules for their children’s media consumption at all (17%).

While dads and moms are equally likely to loosen (56% vs. 57%) or not loosen (27% vs. 25%) the rules for their children’s media consumption in the summer, there are noticeable differences by region.

The findings are based on responses of 2,950 U.S. adults surveyed online between August 5 and 9, 2011, by Harris Interactive.

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