Two unrelated developments this week both suggest that the long predicted disruptional change for network television may be reaching critical temperature, writes Raymond Snoddy.
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M&S, O2 and British Gas are just a few of the brands that are being advertised on paedophile, incest and bestiality websites, according to a report in The Sun on Tuesday.
While the future of programmatic TV ad trading looks both promising and inevitable, there are still huge barriers to overcome, a new TubeMogul white paper has found.
ONE by AOL will be the first open cross-screen programmatic ad platform optimising campaigns from web to TV.
The data-led consultancy will be run by worldwide CEO Jason Harrison, with 200 existing WPP staff – including consultants, analysts, data experts and engineers – based in hubs in New York, London and Bangalore.
Advertisers spent a record £7.2 billion on digital advertising in 2014, up 14% year on year, according to the latest Internet Advertising Bureau UK digital adspend report, conducted by PwC.
During Jason Seiken’s time at Telegraph Media Group there was no digital breakthrough while the print edition settled even deeper in the water. The lessons to be learned are stark, writes Raymond Snoddy.
One of the UK’s biggest advertisers, Procter & Gamble, has become the first brand to be formally recognised for complying with good practice when using online data to target ads at people.
All 4 replaces 4oD and hosts all of Channel 4’s linear channels, digital content and other online services.
#AWEurope: Douglas McCabe says media newsbrands might be fighting back against the likes of BuzzFeed and Vice, but they won’t win in the long-run.
