35 million clicks on advert in Nettby community

[Correction: Oterhals writes in his blog that Göteborg-Posten, and therefore also Media Culpa, got the figures wrong. The Lypsyl ad was shown 35 million times, not clicked on.]

I just arrived at the World Association of Newspapers and the 61th World Newspaper Congress/15th World Editors Forum in Göteborg, Sweden. While waiting for the next session to begin I am reading a few summaries of things that I missed earlier during the congress. Yesterday there was a Digital Round Table seminar which included Jo Christian Oterhals, Chairman of the board at Nettby community AS in Norway. Nettby, with more than 700,000 registered users, is widely popular, and profitable. Each member pays 35 Norwegian kroner for a 20 day long membership and the site made 13.2 million kroner in profits (unclear during which period).

Oterhals revealed some impressive numbers during a recent collaboration with lip balm company Lypsyl, where members could send kisses to other Nettby users. The first two weeks user sent more than 2 million kisses and the ad got more than 35 million clicks in total.

During the round table, Martha Stone, Director, SFN project, World Association of Newspapers presented some interesting facts from the World Digital Media Trends report. She said that about 25 percent of the total revenue online goes to media companies and the rest goes to Google. She also said that Scandinavia is the region which is leading the trend that online editions one day will produce higher revenues that the printed papers, with Swedish daily Aftonbladet as an example where this has already happened (when it comes to ad revenue).

Footnote: Check Editors Weblog for more.

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TeliaSonera to sell iPhone in Nordic and Baltic region

This could possibly be the shortest press release this year, but the 30 words issued this morning from TeliaSonera will still create a significant buzz in the market. The Swedish-Finnish telecom operator has signed an agreement with Apple to sell the iPhone in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia “later this year”.

IDG has an “interview” with a press officer at Telia who does not reveal anything more than the press release. Quite amusing.

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Schibsted takes community site to Spain

The Norwegian community site Nettby is quite a success. It has currently more than 650,000 members with 10,000 more added each week. According to Propaganda, the site has 50 million page views per day (that would mean that each member would visit almost 80 pages per day…?). Anyway, the site’s owner Schibsted is planning to launch Nettby in Spain as a part of the site for the free daily 20 Minutos.

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TV show the most popular podcast in Norway

The tv show “Norges Herligste” (Norway’s Loveliest?) has become the most popular podcast in Norway with about 90,000 downloads to date. That makes it the most popular podcast right now, according to Itunes.

In the show, two brothers, Bård and Vegard Ylvisåker, travels around the country and interviews odd and interesting people. From what I can tell, this is a format that was first launched in Sweden when Fredrik & Filip did a show called “100 höjdare”, a format later sold to some 6 or 7 countries.

Via Vassa Eggen.

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The bad reputation of PR

“Don’t tell my mother I work in an advertising agency – she thinks I play piano in a whorehouse”, is a well-known quote. Maybe the same could be said about the PR profession.

Last week I noticed a public relations term that I haven’t encountered before – Black PR, meaning the practice of paying journalists for coverage. Apparently this is a common practice in for example Russia and other nearby countries. PR Week recently wrote that the Ukrainian Association of Public Relations (UAPR) for the first time ever had made a resolution condemning a black PR campaign. The campaign in question was allegedly arranged by telecommunications company Altimo and designed to “smear Norwegian rival Telenor and the country of Norway”.

“Telenor has submitted planning documents from Altimo to the UAPR, which it claims show various journalists were paid off – $4,000 for a story, in one instance – and that Altimo had a clear and deliberate strategy to destroy the reputation of its rival. Altimo, owned by Russian company Alfa, has insisted the documents are false and, in turn, accused Telenor of waging a smear campaign against its company.”

The opposite of “black PR”, according to one comment in the article, is “Western-style communications”. But not all Western countries seem to be as “clean” as we wish to think. At least not if we should believe Toni Muzi Falconi, a Senior Counsel at an Italian management consultancy. He recently participated in the PR Formos 2007 (pdf) conference in Vilnius, Lithuania to discuss ethical and “black” PR practices and published his speech on his blog. It lists a number of cases from Italy that could be described as black PR.

After the conference he blogged about some of the other findings.

An April 07 study of the business community in Lithuania about the role of black pr revealed that:
– 35% believe that all public relations agencies indulge in those practices and specifically 50% say that those practices are mostly used to gain direct advantages for their clients, while 47% say that they are used to smear their clients competitors.
– A good 33% of the sample say that they have been themselves victims of black pr and the same number believe that in Lithuania the practice is more widespread than elsewhere.
– Some optimism in the 32% who say the phenomena in decreasing while 28% insist that it is instead increasing.
– Finally 47% believe black pr is not a crime, 40% indicate that it is less serious than bribing a public official while 10% say it is the same.

Inga Latkovska, from Latvia, was quoted saying “that in her country it was easy to bribe the media”.

Yaryna Klyuchkovska, from Ukraine, estimated that “some 50% of the pr spent goes in those practices, without even considering political pr where it certainly much higher”.

Thorsten Lutzler of the DPRG, the German public relations association, said that black PR is also conducted in Western Europe and “that 54% of the German public believes that pr is propaganda”. He also stated that the DPRG had a new policy to go out in public and denounce every bad practice.

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Readers go online, journalists prefer paper

twodonkeys

Lars Bringert and Bertil Torekull wrote in Dagens Nyheter earlier this week about the paper vs online dilemma for journalism (read good vs bad). And while readers flock online, journalists still prefer “dead tree” journalism. Kristine Lowe writes about the situation in Norway:

“Despite how Norway’s most successful newspaper, both in terms of profits and readers, is the online version of VG, aspiring journalists would rather work for VG’s print version. The former is currently hiring, the latter firing. Still, while 1510 applied for summer jobs in VG this year, the printed tabloid, VG online only received 162 applications. Öyvind Naess, VG’s Human Resources director, said he thought this indicated that journalism education was still stuck in ‘old patterns of thinking’ (via Kampanje).”

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