-
Companies such as McDonald’s and Nestle are using mobile and social networks to target junk food ads at youngsters – avoiding a marketing pledge on such advertising.
-
Dave Lee suggested a blogging circle of young/new journalists. Journalism.co.uk is looking to host. Suggestions please.
-
The Gazette is the latest Trinity Mirror title to relaunch with a network of local news sites incorporating local bloggers.
-
Hitwise figures suggest the search engine accounted for 69.17 per cent of searches in the US in June.
Tag Archives: Trinity Mirror
links for 2008-07-11
-
The paper has reorganised its operations along the same lines as sister Trinity Mirror titles the Birmingham Mail and Birmingham Post. Part of the relaunch includes a roster of local bloggers and a new YouTube channel.
-
Newspapers should get out of the printing/technology business. Google (or anyone else who wants to step up) should develop a ‘platform for news’ for the press.
Independent: Trinity and Johnston Press to merge?
“Trinity Mirror and Johnston Press failed to draw any steam out of suggestions that they should merge yesterday as the London market, unsettled by fears for the economy, sank into the red,” so say a piece in the Independent that canvased opinion of leading mergers and aquisitions bank ABN Amro about the nightmare that is advertising reveune in regional newspaper publishing.
The bank stirred the pot by telling the Indy that given the problems faced by the media sector companies would increasingly look for industry consolidation.
“These are desperate times, and they call for desperate measures: we believe a Trinity/Johnston combination makes sense,” ABN said.
Times: Trinity Mirror shares suffer record 28 per cent fall
Trinity Mirror shares suffered a record one-day fall yesterday after the newspaper publisher admitted that advertising at the Daily Mirror and its sister titles had collapsed by between 12 per cent and 14 per cent in May and June.
Shares in newspaper group Trinity Mirror plunged 28 per cent yesterday after it said profits would be 10 per cent lower than expected.
links for 2008-07-01
-
Trinity Mirror shares today crashed 25% after the group said profits would be 10% lower than expected.
-
Lord Heseltine, the chairman of Haymarket Media Group, has warned of tightening trading conditions over the next 18 months, as the magazine publisher today announced a 5% increase in pre-tax profits to £31.7m for last year.
-
Condé Nast will launch a UK version of Wired magazine and its accompanying website next year and has hired the Jewish Chronicle’s editor, David Rowan, to edit it.
-
Trinity Mirror shares suffered a record one-day fall yesterday after the newspaper publisher admitted that advertising at the Daily Mirror and its sister titles had collapsed by between 12 per cent and 14 per cent in May and June.
-
“OK – I’m a rubbish reviewer, but here we go.”
-
ITV executive chairman Michael Grade has criticised the Office of Fair Trading’s decision to refer proposed video on demand service Kangaroo to the Competition Commission, saying there was a “serious problem” with the regulatory framework.
-
“In the sometimes fraught relationship between old and new media, the BBC is the latest organisation to come under the spotlight.”
links for 2008-06-30
-
The Associated Press didn’t know what it stepped in when it sent a lawyer’s letter to the blog Drudge Retort (a Drudge Report parody) demanding that it take down headlines and excerpts from wire-service stories as short as 33 words long. This set off a bl
-
The supervisory board of Wegener, the Dutch newspaper group 87 per cent-owned by Mecom, resigned on Friday in a row with David Montgomery, the company’s executive chairman over the appointment of a new chief executive.
-
Monthly page impressions for the website of Britain’s biggest selling regional newspaper have topped the four million mark – a rise of more than 60 pc.
-
NRK, the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation, follows in the footsteps of BBC and today decided to become an OpenID provider
-
We are really excited to announce that we have just integrated with Twitter. What that means is that when you make a prediction on Hubdub you can then immediately drop it into your Twitter stream. Additionally, you can opt to save your Twitter log in deta
-
It was a picture that would make many blush: Cristiano Ronaldo, in swimming shorts, nestling between the legs of his bikini-clad girlfriend on a beach in Sardinia, a fig leaf for her dignity. The Daily Mail ran it on page 23, in among other less racy shot
-
“[W]ith the introductions of Rooms, FriendFeed is no longer a lifestream aggregator anymore – it is the perfect platform for sharing and discussing content with groups focused on a specific topic.”
-
“There appears to be no compromise. The BBC feels it is acting logically by fulfilling its public service remit. Regional owners are also acting logically by defending their turf. In truth, both reflect the fact that none of us know what the future holds.
-
Trinity Mirror Group has warned that its full year profits will be 10% lower than expected, blaming deteriorating conditions in the advertising market.
How news flows though the partially integrated newsroom of Liverpool Post and Echo papers
The Hub and Spoke laying out may be in vogue for the majority of those adapting to an integrated newsroom but you’d be hard pressed to call Trinity Mirror’s Liverpool nerve centre anything other than an archipelago.
Alison Gow, deputy editor of Liverpool Daily Post, gave Journalism.co.uk a quick tour and explained how a partially rather than fully integrated newsroom for Liverpool’s Daily Post and Echo newspapers and a portfolio of weeklies served them best.
Similar to other large cities in the UK, Liverpool’s morning paper, the Liverpool Daily Post (typically 15,000 copies circulated per day) and the evening Echo (109,000) serve vastly different markets. To account for this the newsroom has integrated but also demarked areas where each paper’s interest is best served by not mixing processes.
The newsdesks of the Post & Echo had previously been fully integrated but the unsuccessful experiment lasted only 18 months and end in 2001, as it didn’t fully serve the needs each paper had and met with opposition from staff who were resistant to working on the other title.
“I suspect the industry is a lot more broad-minded now as we work across print, internet, TV and radio,” Gow told Journalism.co.uk.
COPY
The dailies and weekly newspapers have adapted and refined a partially integrated newsroom where the two main papers share news copy, but keep diary and features separate.
“A government minister in town would tend to be interviewed by a Post reporter,” Gow told Journalism.co.uk. “That copy would be sent by the Post newsdesk to the Echo newsdesk to be rewritten and subbed down. Echo page leads are around 350, Post 600 plus.
“The Post & Echo share a court reporter but the very distinct target audiences of both papers means what makes a splash in the Echo, gangster trials for example, may struggle to make a page lead in the Post.
“Inquests would be covered by one reporter whose copy would be shared between both papers.
“An exception would be Liverpool council meetings – mostly covered by the council reporters from both papers as it’s a contact-building exercise as much as anything.”
The Echo can also publish stories from the weeklies the day the papers are published, Gow added, as the assistant news editor has access to their content queues.
“It’s a co-operative system and involves the newsdesks, picturedesk and multimedia desks talking to each other. That’s why the command desk is so important,” added Gow.
STAFF
At the centre of the archipelago – the big island – is the command desk where Post and Echo news editors and their deputies sit along with a picture editor who works across both publications and the Echo design editor.
Reporters are title specific, as are the features and sports teams, and both papers have separate features and sports editors and deputy editors, Arts editors and motoring editors.
A multimedia head, working across both titles, also sits on the command desk. As on the web, Gow says, the two publications have ‘more fluid identities’.
Each department desks now has embedded digital journalist. Under the old system ‘they just used to sit in the corner away from everyone else’ said Gow. Now they espouse the need for web content and ensure the website remains an area of focus for each department on each title now that they break 99 per cent of their stories online.
Video is a separate entity altogether – one video journalist is responsible for managing libraries, cutting pieces and training newsroom staff and reporters in video-journalism.
She has trained eight other staff so far, giving them a week’s hands-on training so that they can manage handicams and cut footage. They aim for a new web video each day.
SUBBING
A pool of eight subs work across the Echo, the England and Welsh Daily Posts, Huddersfield Examiner, the Chester Chronicle, the Merseyside and North Wales weekly papers on a rota basis.
There are also title-specific staff who work primarily for each paper – ‘champions’ of each brand, adds Gow.
This approach has shifted subs from thinking they work for a single publication, she said, to a ‘hive-mind’ where they work across several titles.
Press Gazette: Latest Trinity Mirror relaunch includes hyperlocal community features
Trinity Mirror has relaunch the website of West London’s Hounslow Chronicle.
The new site includes hyperlocal community features – pioneered by Trinity’s Teesside Gazette – for areas of Hounslow, Feltham, Isleworth and Brentford.
Trinity Mirror digital recruitment head Andy Baker leaves for Friends Reunited
ITV has appointed Andy Baker as managing director of its Friends Reunited Group.
Baker joins the company from Trinity Mirror, where he was director of digital recruitment.
Baker’s appointment marks a board-wide shake-up of the group, with Michael Murphy, Tim Ward and Rob Mogford, the co-owners of Friends Reunited, all changing roles by the end of 2008.
Current CEO Murphy will join the Friends Reunited board as a non-executive director, while Ward will move from marketing director to a similar position for ITV Consumer.
Changes to Mogford’s role will not take place until after 2008, an ITV press release said.
Guardian: Mirror Group websites join ABCe
Mirror Group Newspapers will this week begin reporting traffic to its websites by making public the results of monthly ABCe.
Traffic for the People, Sunday and Daily Mirror will, for the first time, be judged against that of the other leading newspaper brands when the figures are released on Thursday- all accept for the Independent, which still refuses to make its traffic figures public.
According to the Guardian, Trinity Mirror has admitted to having some reservations about the ABCe methodology but is still playing ball.
It expects to record a high percentage of its traffic from a domestic audience – unlike the leading UK newspaper websites of The Guardian and The Mail, which draw the majority of their traffic from overseas.