If global publishers feel the need to spoof their own websites to sell garbage ad inventory, it means the state of online advertising is in even worse shape than many realise, writes the editor-in-chief.
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Everything about the BBC’s decision to launch ads on podcasts in the UK seems political, writes the editor-in-chief.
Whatever happened between Michael Kassan and UTA, the great dealmaker’s acrimonious exit marks the end of an era for the industry’s so-called power brokers, writes the editor-in-chief.
This industry should be asking hard questions about how we can be the most pro-family sector in modern business, writes the editor.
The three-year cycle of pitch explosions could be broken in 2024 as advertisers appear to be more “introspective” about what they need, writes the editor.
Does anyone actually do ‘advertising’ any more, asks the editor.
2024 looks set to be a year of consolidation in publishing, but it’s a short-term fix for a long-term problem: the digital publishing market is suffering from market failure, writes the editor.
Omar Oakes doesn’t get why some parts of the media industry have systems for pre-approving what ads are fit to publish when others don’t.
Whatever we call it, TV can still bring people together and build brands in the long term, but it must shout about it more loudly, writes the editor-in-chief.
The post-Covid economy is flat and stagnant, and yet media budgets are buoyant. This industry may be “winning the argument”, but there lies a danger within, writes the editor-in-chief.