Top European media and marketing blogs

Nick Burcher of ZED Media has taken a closer look at the AdAge Power 150 ranking of the world’s top media and marketing blogs and listed the top 113 European blogs. Congratulations to Åsk ‘Dabitch’ Wäppling for grabbing the second place with her advertising blog Adland. Blogs about advertising are the most popular and it was also interesting to note that the top five spots were claimed by non-UK blogs.

My blog is in a flattering 15th place. Full list here.

Top 15 European media and marketing blogs for 19th July 2008 (Power 150 global ranking):

1 (21) Adverblog – ITALY
2 (22) Adland – SWEDEN
3 (23) I believe in adv – ITALY
4 (33) Niche Marketing – POLAND
5 (35) Adverbox – ITALY
6 (45) Russell Davies – ENGLAND
7 (49) David Airey – SCOTLAND
8 (50) Osocio – HOLLAND
9 (51) Marketing & Strategy Innovation Blog – BELGIUM
10 (53) Blogstorm – ENGLAND
11 (60) Neville Hobson – ENGLAND
12 (62) Joost De Valk’s SEO Blog – HOLLAND
13 (82) Adliterate – ENGLAND
14 (91) Only Dead Fish – ENGLAND
15 (104) Media Culpa – SWEDEN

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Blogger pulls critical post

Update 27 June: Maybe we can put conspiracy theories aside? The post is now back up again, as critical as before.

Update 2: Urban explains why he pulled the post and why he decided to put it back up again. (Request came from a member of the board of Polar, but he put it back up in the name of free speech. This guy is my new hero!]

Yesterday I blogged about how the stock of C2SAT dropped 16% after a negative blog post on the Fiskebåten Polar blog. Now it seems that the blog post has been deleted. It will be very interesting to see where this leads. At the moment we don’t know if the company is pressuring the blogger or if he just feels that he stepped over the line. Should this be due to demands from C2SAT it may very well be a bad idea because the thing doesn’t go away (I have the entire post saved in my RSS reader for example), but again, we don’t know that right now. However, since the company is listed, the discussion will continue on forums and other blogs.

An interesting aspect to the story is that the blogger Urban Bryngeld already in March 2008 wrote that he was threatened with legal sanctions by Furuno, a marine electronics manufacturer, due to comments he made on his blog regarding Furuno products and employees.

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Stock plummets 16% after negative blog post

c2sat You’ve heard the arguments against blogs. They have no influence. No-one reads them. And should a blog have influence it is only the few really big ones. Yeah, tell that to the people that own stock in C2SAT, which manufactures antennas for satellite communication. Their stock plummeted 16% today after a Swedish blogger posted a critical blog post last night.

Urban Bryngeld writes a blog, “Fiskebåten Polar”, about the fishing boat Polar GG 505 which is equipped with an antenna from C2SAT. Last night he posted a lengthy post about a series of problems with the antenna and the lack of support from the company. This morning when the stock market opened, the C2SAT stock traded at 1.42 SEK. At about 2.30 PM it was down 30% to 1.00 SEK, but then managed to climb up to 1.19 SEK at the end of the day, at total drop by 16%.

The Fiskebåten Polar blog has no (0) subscribers in Bloglines. C2SAT got whipped by the long tail.

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The mash-up communicator

Communications professional, meet your new colleague, the mash-up communicator. This is the marketing student that has just graduated college or university, and who is equipped with a set of very different skills:

“Shrink, storyteller, financial wiz, global diplomat, used car salesman, communicator, community builder and code monkey are just some of the personas for a newly minted marketer to have handy (along with that MBA).”

Becky Ebenkamp writes in Brandweek: “In sum, this is not your father’s marketing career.”

I remember when I joined the Norwegian PR agency Geelmuyden.Kiese almost a decade ago (ouch!) that they made a big deal out of hiring people with vastly different backgrounds; journalists, marketers, economists, even poets. And they had a point. If you bring a group of people with diverse skills together they will probably be more creative and do a better job than if they are clones of each other. Sure there are professional services organizations, like management consulting firms, that operate with strict business models in which people are trained to work in a certain manner and where similar backgrounds and knowledge bases are an advantage. But for a creative profession like PR consulting there are clear benefits with variation.

The difference now is that these qualities need to exist within the same person and not just within a group.

“People who have cross-fertilization—both by function and by geography—are highly in demand,” said Jane M. Stevenson, global managing partner of executive search firm Heidrick & Struggles, Chicago. “The marketing executive who has been in a finance or sales role as part of their development, and, who maybe worked in Europe or Asia as well as North America. Those are the people who get paid the premium once they get to the top.”

If we look at the current media revolution there are still many PR professionals that have taken no or little interest in the new social media tools. I can imagine that communicators that choose not to embrace web 2.0 technology in a few years time will be seen as PR dinosaurs – creatures on the brink of extinction, not fit to survive under new conditions. Add to that a new generation of marketers that are multi-skilled, multi-experienced and who can multi-task like you wouldn’t believe. Now that will be an interesting sight. Last year one of the big Swedish tech compaines offered 1,000 employees over 35 (!) severance pay because they needed to get more young staff into the company. Wouldn’t that be something, PR agencies showing 35 year olds the door because their skills are outdated?

When the Swedish recruitment company Hammer & Hanborg surveyed 3,062 people in the communications business about their profession, a conclusion was that in 5-10 years time “the increased breadth of communication possibilies will force communicators to become more specialized in order to utilize all channels to their fullest potential”.

I think you probably could look at the classic “T-profile”, meaning that you need breadth in competence but also a field in which you are specialized. Can it be that within the next few years both the horizontal and vertical bars of the “T” need to expand in order to succeed in the communication industry? Your thoughts?

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Blogs influence purchase behaviour

The PR agency Mahir PR has presented the results of a blog survey with 740 blog readers from 31 participating Swedish blogs. It is hard to objectively value the results since we don’t know what types of blogs that participated. But among the findings they say that as many as 58% have bought a product after reading about it in a blog. Presentation here in Swedish.

As a comparison check out my BlogSweden 3 survey here (pdf) from January 2008. The two previous versions can be found in the right sidebar of this blog.

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Free photos for bloggers from Image Source

This is neat. Image Source, the world’s leading independent producer of royalty-free stock photography, today launched PicApp, a platform that lets bloggers and online publishers get access to free photos for unlimited use. With a PicApp license, users are able to freely and legally use Image Source photos as often as they like. Images are streamed from the PicApp servers and are published with small ads that provide revenue to the content owners.

PicApp is still in beta.

Weblog Opens Up The World Of Maiko Or Young Geisha
Image details: Weblog Opens Up The World Of Maiko Or Young Geisha served by picapp.com

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