Raymond Snoddy says despite the grandeur and scale of the evidence – and the abuses revealed in cruel detail – Leveson has little choice but to wend his way towards a better form of independent self-regulation…
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Greg Grimmer: Imagine a testosterone-heavy flat in Hackney within a single speed racing bike’s ride of silicon roundabout and any number of unshaven techies living off nothing but toast and beans as they seek to create the next billion dollar web/mobile/digital revolution. Surely they should be working for the good of advertising?
Raymond Snoddy says anything that increases confidence and the propensity to spend in the depths of a recession has to be a good thing, even if the intellectual pillars on which it stands are decidedly shaky…
Raymond Snoddy says the kindest thing that could happen to Jeremy Hunt now is a reshuffle…
Raymond Snoddy says says the really interesting question from Leveson this week is whether Michael Gove was preening himself and making it up as he went along, or whether he was reflecting – in a rather shrill way – the private views of David Cameron and the Coalition Cabinet…
David Hellier, deputy editor at City AM, says it is too soon to know where this will all end up but the Facebook experience has re-opened the debate about dot com bubbles and has cast a shadow on New York’s unchallenged right to host technology flotations…
James Whitmore on the Olympic flame’s journey through Devon, a lack of bespoke marketing and David Beckham (the well known Cornish Olympian)…
Raymond Snoddy says it would be good to see competition regulators in the UK concentrate on real abuses of market dominance that actually harm consumers’ interests rather than disadvantaging consumers in pursuit of theoretical models of competition….
Michael Bayler, strategist and author, Bayler & Associates, slices through the confusion around the nature of engagement to reveal a new model for brand building in the post-Facebook era…
What do you use your mobile phone for? Angry Birds, obviously, but excepting that, you probably use it for email, the odd phone call, a text message or two, and the occasional bit of web browsing.
