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Saturday, September 6, 2008

Los Angeles Times Tribune Expands Reach Online



John T. O’ Longhlin, president
Targeted Media and SVP
Marketing, Los Angeles Times

LA Times Wants to Globalize Itself Online

By George McQuade
West Coast Bureau Chief
www.Odwyerpr.com

“Our portfolio, as we capture more of the market, puts us in a better position to market ourselves to both consumers and advertisers by augmenting our portfolio,” said John T. O’ Longhlin, president, Targeted Media and SVP, Marketing, Los Angeles Times. O’ Longhlin was the keynote speaker at a network marketing and pubic relations event at the LA Times auditorium, which included a newsroom tour every 20 minutes. The seventh annual event was sponsored by PRSA-LA, Southern California American Marketing Assn. (SoCal AMA); Direct Marketing Assn. of Southern California (DMAsc) and Women in Technology International (WITI) and held in one of the ‘great buildings of LA history.”


“How do you talk about advertisers in New York with a 120 year old newspaper?” Longhlin asked the audience of mostly marketers and public relations pros. “When we planned our website globalization projects we had to answer four questions:”

  • Which Countries should we support? In which order?
  • Which languages should we offer? Which should we do first?
  • ‘How much content should we offer? How deep should we go?
  • Should we just market ourselves on the web? Or should we sell?


“We connect with people not products and we conducted a successful experimental engagement using the LA Film Festival, Book Festival and The Envelope during the Oscars and Emmys season,” he noted.

“We really thinking about an aggregate reach by which you can dive deeper into a segment, or go across a segment in masses if that’s what you need to do, and if you are a consumer we’re going to be your definitive media choice. If you want news, politics, sports, entertainment, we got something for you, so come and send some time with us,” explained O’ Longhlin.


The next day, after the newsroom tour and event, the LA Times Media group made this announcement.

Newspaper industry Veteran Scott McKibben has been named executive vice president, chief revenue officer, for the Los Angeles Times Media Group, filling a job considered key to reviving the company's financial fortunes. The Times has been without a head of ad sales since Dave Murphy left the paper in February.

One LA Times employee, who wished not to be identified, told this writer that folks in the newsroom have been told not to push sales of the Los Angeles Times.


“I’ve heard, unofficially and speaking for me, that some higher ups have said to each other that they should ‘let circulation find its own level.’” This is according to several around here, who say they read it in memo materials that got out.”


The appointment of McKibben is the first major announcement and move by the new Times Publisher Eddy Hartenstein. McKibben, most recently was president and publisher of the Gazette in Colorado Springs, Colorado and vice president of the Central region of Freedom Communications overseeing the Gazette and four other papers. He will report directly to Hartenstein. McKibben, 55, takes over as The Times and other newspapers struggle to reverse sharp slides in ad revenue caused by a slump in the housing industry and the flight of advertisers and readers to the Internet. “We are at a juncture where we have an opportunity to transform the business,” he said in the Los Angeles Times, in reasons for taking the job.

According to The Times, advertising on newspaper websites has been growing, but so far has failed to replace the revenue lost on the print side. In August, Tribune Co., The Time’s Chicago-based parent company, reported a 15 percent drop in second quarter newspaper ad sales.


New York Times Co. said late last month that July ad sales slid 16 percent compared with July 2007. Since leading the buyout that took the company private late last year, Tribune Chief Executive Sam Zell has frequently hunted outside the newspaper industry for important hires, including Hartenstein, who took over as publisher August 18th after a career in the satellite TV industry.


McKibben said he planed to expand or explore other revenue suources, including even sonsorsihyips, cooperative ad sales with KTLA-TV, the local Tribune-owned station and revenue-sharing opportunities with other local newspapers.


During the tour of the Los Angeles Times newsroom, this writer noticed several changes. Stacks of newspapers, media kits, dictionaries and books have been replaced by more computers, high tech gadgets, high tech monitors and electronic wizardry. But really noticeable were fewer people, almost like visiting the newsroom on a weekend night with a skeleton staff onboard.



Darrell Kunitomi, Public Relations
Representative, LA Times


“The Times right now is changing, it has for several years and it will continue to change,” said Darrell Kunitomi, public relations representative, LA Times, who led the group newsroom tours. “The Media Group will get webbier, the newspaper will change sections, fold them, create new composites; retrain still photographers and reporters to become VJs and use their video reports more and more; and the newspaper will continue to change its look.”


Kunitomi also told this writer that, “The graphics are changing as we speak, including the front page of the future. Don’t be shocked – it’s a new era of new ownership, a new publisher and new editors.”


And yes, survival is a word heard in the halls.


Personally speaking, Kunitomi told us, “I don’t think we are going to disappear, as some have predicted. We are in tectonic times. And those times seem to be changing weekly, as quickly as the earth seems to be warming. We hope we aren’t polar bears, stranded on disappearing ice. I know we have some truly smart folks at the helm. A great organization such as The Times should be one of those companies that will go on long after its original founders have passed from the scene, change its spots, adapt, and survive to prosper and grow. The movies survived the breakup of the studio system. The music business has dealt with synthesizers, vinyl to cds and now file sharing,” he said.


Here’s the best part for PR pros pitching the LA Times and still can’t figure it out. “We still take hard information, images, commentary entertainment, food and sports and fun and put it to newsprint every 24 hours. It might be a traditional, retro way of informing society, but at The Times it is what we know and what we do best. We’re changing. We know we must to survive. And really, we know that,” said Kunitomi.


The Tribune Direct/LA Times event was billed as helping PR Pros learn “what the LA Times is looking for today in news coverage and how it is dealing with current changes in print media.” However, the closest we got to any editors or writers was the distant tour of the Los Angeles Times Newsroom, which was quiet, nearly empty and almost surreal compared to even two or three years ago. For the newspaper business, it might just be the sign of the Times.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Google's Chrome Rocks



Google Brings Back Simplicity -
Surfing The Internet With Chrome


By George McQuade,
West Coast Bureau Chief
www.Odwyerpr.com

As a self-taught techie, who launched the media campaign for open source Linux Operating Software in August 1998, I have seen a lot of changes in technology, but none so advanced as Google. Google's much-anticipated Web browser, Chrome, hit the Internet in beta form (testing stages) Tuesday (Sept. 2, 2008), with shiny new features, but best of all it is several times faster than Microsoft’s Internet browser (IE) and twice as fast as Mozilla’s Firefox.


The good news is your bookmarks can be easily imported with the click of a mouse.

The open-source browser first showed up on an unofficial Google blog in the form of a comic book. Google made an official announcement that appeared late Tuesday afternoon after the Internet began buzzing about the comic-book site. Chrome, the newest browser technology had so much buzz, users were waiting anxiously for the free download, but for MS Windows only.



Sundar Pichai, vice president
of product management,Google.

Photo by Stephen Shankland/
CNET Networks


Many of the options are hidden, but easily found in the menu, giving Chrome a cleaner, sleeker technology look, unlike IE or Firefox. For the PR Pros who are like me and visit so many websites daily for news articles to research on clients, it is the browser that gets you there faster than a bullet train, and remembers where you’ve been. Like the competition, you can have your membership sites like www.odwyerpr.com saved in Chrome, and you just click on the plus sign to bookmark it.


I downloaded and tested it on Labor Day, and love it, but still love Firefox for my other functions such as menu bookmarks, clearing the cache (good for getting rid of spyware and ad ware history) when I close it. Much of the technology in Firefox has been included in Chrome, so you have a very small learning curve and you can keep all three browsers. I keep MS IE6 to design websites and blogs so I can know what surfers are seeing using those applications, Chrome is the new shining star in my book, and it will be yours soon, too.

To download the Chrome beta for free, visit: www.google.com/chrome. All your book bookmarks, browsing history and passwords are imported automatically and loaded for use.

The main features of Chrome include:

  • Performance – Chrome totally wipes out Internet Explorer (IE) at rendering web pages. It’s just faster.
  • User Experience – You have one box for everything. Type in the address bar and get suggestions for both search and web pages. Chrome’s integrated address/search menu and tab drag & drop feature really says it all. You can rapidly combine all of your tabs from separate browser windows. In IE there is a lot of copying and pasting of URLs required. Just drag, drop, repeat and you’re done.
  • New Features - Chrome has thumbnails of your top sites and you can access your favorite pages instantly with lightning speed from any new tab. \
  • Shortcuts for your applications – You receive desktop shortcuts to launch your favorite web applications.
  • Compatibility – Chrome makes Microsoft’s new browser almost a dinosaur for me. Chrome does a better job of re-using shared code than Internet Explorer. If you or your company has multi-tab application scenarios, Google’s clean multi-process design explodes with bonuses compared to IE 8. Almost every other Windows application I’ve experimented with was compatible and lightning fast.
  • Home Page - The standard home page is all about you the PR pro. It includes links to the sites you visit most often and bookmarks. At beginning, you can return where you left off, not just on the last page you visited, but all of the pages you had up when you shut down. Wait, there’s more. You can even tell Chrome which websites you want it to open every time you start the program. This is outstanding for PR Pros who often monitor hundreds of pages.
  • Web Surfing Ease -The Google search field is conveniently located in the URL address bar. So, you could type www.odwyepr.com in the space to go directly to the site or type "Jack O’Dwyer PR News" for a search.

  • Pull-Down Windows -Chrome has pull-down window functions for Print and Save, making way for a cleaner browser with more content room, but if you don’t like it just right-click your mouse to do it. Like Firefox, Chrome can keep you in a incognito surfing mode, allow for privacy while surfing the Internet and any sites can be kept off the browsing history list

  • Shortcuts – you can make many shortcuts on your desktop, where Chrome opens up that home page when you start up or when you return to browsing the web.

Google assembled a large cast of characters to unveil its new browser, Chrome, on Tuesday. Here's the engineer and executive who took the stage at the company's Mountain View, Calif., headquarters.

Sundar Pichai, vice president of product management, led off the show with Google's grand aspirations for Chrome: "Our intent here is to drive the Web platform forward," he said. In other words, Google wants the Internet to be a more powerful foundation for online applications.

The bottom-line is this. Speed is the key to success here. Time is money in any business, especially PR and while you test drive the Chrome browser keep track of your time, then try the other browsers you normally use, I bet you will feel cheated without Chrome. Google Chrome is a browser that combines a minimal design with sophisticated technology to make the web faster, safer, and easier.
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