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HGTV Orders Additional Episodes for Eight Series















‘House Hunters’ duo, newcomers ‘All American Handyman’ and ‘Holmes Inspection’ picked up

By Tim Baysinger — Broadcasting Cable, 4/26/2011 1:04:12 PM

HGTV has ordered additional production for eight series, the network announced Tuesday.

Mainstays House Hunters and House Hunters International have been picked up for additional episodes, as well as other real estate themed programs My First Place, For Rent, Property Virgins and Real Estate Intervention.

Two new series, All American Handyman and Holmes Inspection have also been renewed for second seasons.















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  • TrylonSMR

    At Trylon SMR, we are dedicated Public Relations professionals solely serving clients in the media, technology, telecommunications, and related industries. We understand the specialized types of audiences our clients need to reach and the best media to reach those audiences. Tryl..more


Franken Schedules Senate Hearing On Apple Geolocation Tracking















Asks Why It’s Company’s Job To Collect, Save Personal Data

John Eggerton — Multichannel News, 4/26/2011 10:23:00 AM

Add Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) to the legislators concerned about Apple’s geolocation tracking on iPhones and iPads: he has scheduled a hearing in his privacy subcommittee on the issue.

Franke has sent a letter to Apple CEO Steve Jobs, expressing concern that the information was stored in unencrypted form both on the devices and computers used to synch their info.

Among the questions he wants answered are why Apple collects and saves the data, whether it does so for laptops as well, why consumers were not “affirmatively informed” it was being collected, whether it squares with Apple’s privacy policy, and who, if anyone, has access to the info.

Franken, who is chair of a newly created Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Privacy, Technology and the Law, plans to hold the committee’s first hearing May 10 on the issue of “Protecting Mobile Privacy: Your Smart Phones, Tablets, Cell Phones and Your Privacy.”















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  • Bigband Networks

    BigBand Networks, Inc. NASDAQ: BBND provides broadband service providers with innovative network solutions designed to make it easier to move, manage and monetize video. These solutions are based on BigBand’s video-networking platforms that are built to enable efficient and relia..more


b4-i-4get: Scarecrow for Nestle Birds?

What does Nestle India want to scare? The birds off its corporate logo? Check out what Nataranjan Bohidar reads between the lines.

By Nataranjan Bohidar

Can’t say about Nestle S.A. but Nestle India may be going through its most schizophrenic phase ever. Appointing a creative consultant called “Scarecrow” simply takes the cake – made with Nestle MILKMAID, perhaps, now that the Company is into confectionary, when news as interviews last came in! What does Nestle India want to scare? The birds off its corporate logo? Sounds a bit like the forest department in a country or the environment ministry appointing “AXE” or better still “PODU”, which among our tribal communities is short for slash burn! The public sector may well be excused for not estimating the image impact, such as we pardon our tribal brethren for not connecting podu cultivation to overall environmental degradation. But brand sensitive Nestle?

Hands off and hats off, of course, if this has the nod of the bosses in Vevey. Because, if the best ad agencies of the world aligned with the Company globally cannot solve Nestle India’s creative problems, well, then welcome “Scarecrow”! It was the company’s pride once that if you took roughly 35 Nestle brands to a country and factored in about 85 years of Nestle operations in 145 nations, Nestle India would always have close to half a million brand marketing experiences to bank on at any given time.

Clearly not enough for India! Basis the recent census, that’s only 0.00036 ideas per capita. Too few, in the local company’s view, in this viral age of social networking that’s taken mass customisation simply, or not so simply, to dizzying heights altogether. No? Particularly when compared to a promised investment of a staggering Rs.19/- per capita planned for next year! Can’t make a co-relation? Well, all Nestle India has to do is raise prices by a mere 5 paise per product it sells in India and hold it for a year to be able to fund the so called  bullish investments it promises to make in the coming year in  “ factories, capacity increases and new technologies”. For this it needs ‘Scarecrow’? More likely a scare to take it out of deep ennui set around a myth – an old Indian rope trick that has transcended into a rope-a-dope trick – that the Indian consumer of Nestle is reluctant to pay 5 paise more per person per day for the exquisite products it buys from the Company, because of no other reason than that s/he is an odd kettle of fish! (Now there’s a new visual that the Company may consider once the birds have flown leaving the local Indian counterpart an empty nester!).

But seriously, is “Scarecrow” expected to brood over a full fledged marketing services department that I inherited and a full fledged advertising unit that I created and a full fledged Communication Department that I launched for the first time in the history of the Company in India? Or is it going to impart soaring lessons to a once battle ready adult mother bird that appears to have regressed into a fledgling?  If it does not scare that bird and its chicks away in the first place…squawk!

So, what’s the brief going to be? Please help our advertising to take wing without scaring the pants of our blue eyed trainees, wet behind the ears, because our communication induction programme is just not in place! See, how we cannot spell confectionery right! (Aside: is that confectionery or confectionary, man?) And that milk factory we have up North in what’s that place, Monga or Moga , please check out the correct place with our production manager, will you ? Well, what can we do to increase sale of powder milk among the farmers there who supply us liquid milk in the first place? They are a rich lot you know…How about painting every farmer’s house blue with the Nestle EVERYDAY logo? Great idea!

You know outdoor is cheap in the hinterland and we are a bit tight on budgets. But no worries, we’ll protect your 15%, okay? Or will that be 2% for your creatives on all media spends and remaining 13% to the AOR who will buy the media? But because the walls of farmers’ houses cost nothing in media terms, well, you’ll just have to give us the designs and we will get it painted ourselves…but, of course, the logos are with us!…That’s right! But you can give it a great slogan, no? Just make sure it’s in the local language…Punjabi or Gurumukhi or whatever…find out from the Nestle CERELAC guys …they are doing this all the time, in 16 Indian languages…so, if you have a great slogan for powder milk or dahi we can take the campaign all-India. Oh, no no, not dahi …that will have to be in Marathi…are there any farmers in Pune whose derelict walls we can paint? …or near the factory…there’s bound to be prosperous farmers thereabouts…oh, but that’s a co-packer …so, forget it….or, wait, we’ll get back to you on that later …ok?

Also, could you audit our ads for us, too? You know, compile all the ads on a disc…this I need urgently…Vevey’s asking for it…so can you do it quickly …no , no …don’t contact our aligned agencies for this …it can take ages …and will never come…you just buy it off the market ..yes, yes, Ad Index will do …buy off our ads and tell them not to put the Ad Index logo on it…or take it out ..how long will this take? Really urgent, this! Top priority, theek hai?

Just avoid that Cup-o-Noodles ad in it …that’s right …ha ha …imagine a couple of kids carrying hot water in flasks to eat instant noodles on a picnic in a jungle…Are they going on a trek or are they going on a noodle eating trip? I mean, where’s the convenience? Why wouldn’t they just carry hot food instead …if they can carry hot water…Then there’s that splash in the end in really dirty brown mucky water in the jungle with Cup-o-Noodles in hand … the cues are totally wrong …so forget that ad …just compile the rest..

Speaking of MAGGI…it’s just MAGGI, o.k., not Nestle MAGGI …never make that mistake.. Why? I’ll tell you why … in fact, why don’t I come over and make a presentation of our brand architecture, the worldwide standardisation of colors, logos, categories, brand names, descriptors, and the birds in a nest…little nest, you know…that’s what Nestle means…in German…or is it French?…well, you know Switzerland is a big country …I mean, it’s a small country geographically but is hugely influenced by its neighbouring countries…that’s right , neutral during the war and all that…you know the history…400 years of peace…impressive , hahn? ..achha, so we’ll send you there for a junket if you do good work …ahem…ahem…perhaps organise a w.w. seminar at Rive Reine…how would you like that?

But we also need this  name for a new MAGGI flavour we are launching …so, you have to conduct that contest …of course , response will be huge …we did that many years ago when we launched MAGGI only…..we asked for names …huge response…and then we called the brand MAGGI ..after Jules Maggi, founding father …very creative it was ! Now, you handle this contest…no no, TOMATO TANG kahan chalega …in fact , nahin chala…it cannibalises our ketchup sales …but you don’t have to come up with a brand name ..yaar…that will come …woh ayega…we have more than 35000 brands around the world and still counting …tum sirf contest ke entries handle karosamjhe…ya, ok, we’ll pay per prospect…per hit , if you like…

What ? Sevian in soya milk …kya abhi jaga hai ya soya…..woh  soya project kab ka soya hua hai…was shut down ages ago, man…bahut laphda tha , boss! But keep generating ideas …who knows what may work…No no no , this Deepika NESCAFE thing …don’t touch ..so what if she is not doing the brand ambassador thing as defined in your classic promo books, bhaiyawoh sab chhodobhool jao your MBA tembia …I tell you don’t fix what’s working …all the hip gyration during coffee preparation…its doing wonders… of course we lose sales in the summer months ..but we pick it up in the winter months, na…so business as usual… hai ki nahin

Then we have the press …you know very nosey…chirp chirp…we use them only for product launches…current-news walla funda…taaza front page …full page we could afford in the past …ab quarter chalata hai…paua…kuchh strip shripkuchh arcane publications…and we use T.V. for regular advertising ..trp trp…and we don’t care for edits…paid or not … I know, I know…totally lost opportunity…we really wanted to slip some news out about how unhygienic is the daily  milk supply in our cities and how mother’s ought to turant switch to Nestle tetra PURE MILK…well, what to do… there was this chap here earlier , in my place, so headstrong…he wouldn’t do it and he wouldn’t allow anyone else to do it either…saala bada saadhu ban ta tha…he put out a Press Policy that stopped everyone and anyone from talking ‘officially’ to the press except himself and his boss, the Market Head…real chalu.. Real duffer, if you ask me… added no value for 8 years …so we asked him to quit …and true to form we took his nest away …you know, this house… the Company had loaned him money to buy a house…so, he built it ..and just when he was ready to move in , with his family…da baangg! we had him put in his papers…so he builds the nest and we get to lay eggs in it…serves him right!

Communication was in a mess then… much better now… we allow more people in the Company to talk to the Press…didn’t you read how one junior guy told this national newspaper off  when it tried to pry into our Nutrition Programme in colleges.. “we cannot give you details of our programme because it will adversely impact the competitive position of our Company”, he was quoted…solid, boss…kya maara…then he resigned , of course…pata nahin kyon…must have got a higher package elsewhere for his amazing communication effort… about our strategic CSR…we have a reputation for that ..HBR padho, sab samajh jaoge ! It’s nothing short of a miracle what we have done in Punjab. You can organise a media visit there…yes, yes, another good idea!

So, don’t worry about this controversy that “Scarecrow” will scare away the Nestle birds in its logo…we’ll fix the guy who started this …Incidentally, how did the press get to know that “Scarecrow” has been appointed Nestle creative consultant? Oh, you squawked, did you? Well, don’t do it again …without my written permission, ok…we have a Nestle India Press Policy, you know…its our NIPPle contract…allows us to show just as much as we like… no more, no less.. all in writing, proof read by me…Next time media wallahs call, on a slow news day, just avoid, or direct them to me.

And yes, before you go, you can look after our in-house magazine, VARTALAP…yes Nestle VARTAPLAP, but with a small Nestle on top, or on the side…not too big..HQ is very sensitive about associating the world wide NESTLE bird-nest  visual id with every this or that publication…but we use it discreetly, sort of, because we so value internal communications…or should that be communication? You figure that out….the singular plural angular stuff…okay!

****************************************************

Nataranjan Bohidar is a management guru with 35 years of positioning experience. He held key integrated marketing and communications positions with reputed companies like NESTLE India, Bennett, Coleman Company and leading American collaborations in the automotive industry.

Views Expressed here are personal. HE MEANS NO OFFENCE TO INDIVIDUAL OR COMPANY, ONLY TO SYSTEMS PROCESSES OUT OF WHACK! Mail natbohi@in.com for BACK perspectives more. BACK = (B)rand, (A)dvertising, (C)ommunication, (K)angaroo. Or just follow this column exclusive to BestMediaInfo.com.

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YouTube for Business

Author: Michael Miller
Publisher: Que, 2nd edition, 2011
Pages: 368
ISBN: 978-0789747266
Aimed at: Businesses new to idea of YouTube marketing
Rating: 4
Pros: Well presented, highly readable
Cons: Rarely goes beyond information already available  Reviewed by: Lucy Black

The subtitle “Online Video Marketing for Any Business” is an attractive proposition. Does it have useful advice and insights?

This book’s cover proclaims BESTSELLER! in a oval that looks like a removable sticker. It is in fact part of the artwork – and also part of the book’s problem. It’s a popular book on a popular topic and really can’t say anything much that isn’t already well known. In fact its Introduction starts:

Unless you’ve been living in a cave for the past few years, you’ve no doubt heard of YouTube, the video-sharing site owned by Google.

Yes, YouTube is well-known, so to a certain extent it is likely to be preaching to the converted – but the part of its audience that will find it the most valuable are going to be the cave dwellers.

 

 

The title of Chapter 1 “How YouTube Can Help You Market Your Business” suggests that we are going to plunge straight into the topic and get all the answers at the start, In fact this chapter looks at the history of YouTube and YouTube demographics and tells you “Everybody’s Doing It” before listing several reasons you might want to use it: Brand Awareness; Product Advertising; Retail Promotion; Direct Sales; Product Support; Internal Training; Employee Communications; Recruiting. It then discards some of these by narrowing the focus to promotional videos and states that “the key is to offer a video that YouTube users actually want to watch”  and concludes “your video needs to entertain, educate or inform” and looks ahead to three chapters (Chapters 3 to 5) that consider of  Informative, Educational and Entertaining videos separately.

Before we get to video content, however, Chapter 2: Developing Your YouTube Marketing Strategy asks us to consider aims, customer and message, how the videos will fit within the overall marketing mix (considered in more detail in Chapter 6) and how to measure the results.

Part II of the book is concerned with producing videos for YouTube and starts in Chapter 7 with a look at audio and video technology covering video resolution and file formats. The next three chapters look at shooting videos at three levels of sophistication – webcam videos in Chapter 8, semi-pro videos in Chapter 9 and Professional videos in Chapter 10. It is the option in the middle of the scale that gets the most coverage including choosing a camcorder and accessories such as a tripod, lighting and a microphone. 

Chapter 11:Editing and Enhancing Your Videos looks first at three tiers of video-editing programs: two free ones (Windows Live Movie Maker and Apple iMovie), ten mid-level ones and three high-end ones (Adobe Premiere Pro CS, Elements, Apple Final Cut Studio and Sony Vegas Pro and then covers using a video-editing program.

Chapter 12 has tips for producing effective videos for YouTube. They fall into three categories starting with one for creating better-looking videos such as shoot for the smaller screen, use two cameras and break the rules. Then comes tips for improving video content – including go for the funny, keep it short and keep it simple. The tips for generating sales are to include your website’s address in both the video and accompanying text and to link to your website from your channel page.

Part III covers Managing your YouTube videos. Chapter 13 is on uploading them – and also covers removing a video from YouTube. Chapter 14 is on annotations and Chapter 15 is about comments – both positive and negative.

Chapter 16: Establishing Your YouTube Channel starts by explaining that “channel” is a “fancy name for what you might otherwise call a profile page” and goes on to discuss how to customise it to best present your company, brand and products. Chapter 17 then looks at the community aspects of YouTube and how you can engage in social marketing. The same considerations apply as with other social networking – you have to actively participate and its a matter of give and take. It very realistically advises that that this requires real commitment and concludes, “It can be a full time job.”

Chapter 18 has the title “Incorporating YouTube Videos on Your Own Website” and its message is to let YouTube host the videos and link to them or embed the code for them on your website and still let YouTube provide the bandwidth necessary to view them.

Part IV is called Promotion and Monetization and for many readers will the section they are most interested in. However it has another topic to cover first, and it too is an important one. Chapter 19: Tracking Performance makes you take stock of how effective your videos are in terms of attracting viewers and achieving sales. It introduces the metrics available via YouTube’s Insight tracking tool, including the Demographics tab which provides an audience breakdown by age and gender  and the Discovery tab which shows the links viewers followed to find your video. It also briefly mentions the information about engagement on the Community tab, how the HotSpot can be used to identify popular parts of a video and tells you about the Call-to-Action tab – but while this could be a useful handle for marketing it simply says: “This tab is only visible when you’ve promoted a video and add a Call-to-Action Overlay.” If you are interested in this you’ll find it fully explained in Chapter 23.

The title of Chapter 20: Marketing Your YouTube Videos raised my expectations. However, the chapter opens with a section Entertain, Inform or Educate which echoed Chapter 1, then had short sections “Target Your Content”, “Write a Compelling Title”, “Pick the Best Thumbnail Image” all of which advice seemed obvious by this stage. It did eventually get to some new advice showing how to promote your video to YouTube’s community, via the “blogosphere”, using social media and using traditional media. A short section on running a contest was an idea that probably deserved more space as did the idea of uploading to other video sharing sites which was merely a list followed by “Obviously, you should include your video on your own company website or blog” – valuable advice that seemed denigrated by the inclusion of “obviously” when in fact it’s a lot less obvious than other guidance in this book. It was however discussed in an earlier chapter.

Chapter 21: Optimizing Your Videos for Search is very short – fewer than 6 pages but pretty important in the context of the book. It discusses the importance of  choosing the right keywords and tags and providing a description that includes keywords. It also mentions the importance of inbound links, views, comments and rating. All good stuff but so brief as to make the reader feel short-changed. 

Chapter 22: Advertising Your YouTube Videos tackles a large topic. It starts by explaining Pay-per-Click advertising and YouTube’s Promoted Videos program and goes on to how to create an advertising campaign on YouTube. This is very nearly a hands-on walkthrough going from creating an account and setting a budget, through writing your ad and selecting keywords to the metrics displayed on the Promoted Videos dashboard. Once you understand the idea of a Promoted Video you are ready for the next step – that of linking that video to your own website where you can generate sales directly – and this is covered in Chapter 23 which returns to the topic of Call-to-Action overlays and tracking their performance.

The final two chapters further develop the theme of monetization. Chapter 24 looks at generating revenues by converting viewers to become purchasers of your products and Chapter 25 goes slightly off topic to look at using YouTube for BtoB (business-to-business) marketing.  They present useful information and good ideas but in a very cursory fashion.

This book does gather together useful ideas and sound advice and and presents them in a logical and readable format. If you are a novice to this form of marketing – and certainly lots of people will be – it will be helpful. But there is little if anything that will seem new or surprising for readers who are already familiar with YouTube and online marketing in general.

 

New NCTA Head Powell Featured At CPB Event















John Eggerton — Multichannel News, 4/25/2011 11:46:56 AM

Former Federal Communications Commission chairman Michael Powell may have started his new job as head of the National Cable Telecommunications Association Monday, but in what will likely be one of his first public appearances in that new post he’ll don a different hat.

His name was being circulated Monday by CPB as a featured exec at an upcoming event, but as co-chair of the Grad Nation campaign of America’s Promise Alliance.

The alliance was founded by Powell’s parents, Colin and Alma Powell, and prepares kids for college and
employment. CPB said Monday that it is teaming with the alliance and the Bill Melinda  Gates Foundation on a public TV and radio initiative to combat what it calls the “epidemic” dropout rate in the country.

It lists Powell among those who will be at the May 3 launch event.















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    Akamai has created a digital operating environment for the Web. Our global platform of thousands of specially-equipped servers helps the Internet withstand the crush of daily requests for rich, dynamic, and interactive content, transactions, and applications. When delivering on t..more