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  • Vijesti

    Wüsthof Sharp Systemic Brand Identity with Gigodesign wins Red Dot Award

    How to win a Grand Prix in Cannes?

    The best of Latvian and Estonian advertising

    Enjoy the summer with Cinedays Film Factor 20

    Lokomotiva and SentecaCommerce signed a partnership for 12 European markets

    Virtual Drumming with Fernando Machado, Karolina Galácz, and Thomas Kolster

  • Tema sedmice
    daljinski-naslovnica

    Television Audience Measurement: In Serbia, the media are in a race to the bottom for every extra “click”, while in Croatia HTV has undermined the principle of joint monitoring

    This global pandemic, coronavirus, cuts across all geographical borders regardless of cultures and language. What is the role of Public relations today?

    Slaven Fischer: Creativity doesn’t reside in buildings but in people, no matter where they are. It’s natural for people to work from home.

    Janja Božič Marolt: As in every crisis, there will be a lot of victims and some winners in the communications industry of the region.

    Shortcutting Video: New Study Highlights the Effectiveness of 2-second Ads

    Topic of the Day: Can artificial intelligence replace human intelligence and emotions. Is technology a servant or a master?

  • Intervju

    Miranda Mladin: Keeping consumers’ attention is every brand’s biggest challenge

    Nataša Mitrović: I understood that the Balkans should be my primary target area and that, once I had become a shark in the Balkans, then I could make my way “back” into the big world and swim in the sea with the other sharks.

    Ivan Stanković: I admit to having great fun and enjoying myself enormously working on my show, What I am to you and who I am to myself.

    Scott-Gould-naslovnica

    Scot Gould: Stop doing anything that you do that isn’t valuable, tell everyone about that offering, and don’t stop!

    lazar-naslovnica

    Lazar Džamić: We are experts at preferring the byways, swamps, and chasms, so that we can keep on going in circles, lost in space

    Irena-naslovna

    Irena Kurtanjek: Contributing to the Communities in which we Operate is the Foundation of Nestlé’s Business

  • Kolumna

    Sponsors? What that?

    misa-naslovnica

    Miša Lukić: What can start-ups learn from sperm?

    Do Brands Always Need to Sell Aggressively to Grow?

    Price of Hate

    The Advertising Industry: From Alchemists to Distributors and Back Again

    Milena Garfield: It’s not long since I said: If it ain’t live, it’s dead

  • Dnevnik

    Diary of a Methuselah #176 Will our industry come out of this better and smarter?

    Diary of a Methuselah #159: Ivo Pogorelić and Zoran Todorović weren’t attractive enough for sponsors in Sarajevo

    Diary of a Methuselah #157: The Young Leaders of Tomorrow, a great event for young people who are ready to assume responsibility for the future of industry

    Diary of a Methuselah #156: I’ve been writing my Diary for three years now, and I don’t think I wrote anything smart

    Diary of a Methuselah #154: Three days at the PRO.PR Conference

    Diary of a Methuselah #153: Portal Media Marketing starts a new life today

  • Mladi lideri

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    Mladi liderji – Saša Droftina, Luna \TBWA: Želela bi, da bi se spremenil odnos do pitchev

    Mladi Lideri Kristina Gregorc

    Mladi liderji – Kristina Gregorc, Mercator: Zelo sem optimistična in izjemno ponosna in vesela, da sem del tako velike in uspešne ekipe

    Mladi Lideri

    Mladi liderji – Maša Crnkovič, Futura DDB: Največji izziv je vpeljava podatkov in feedback-a uporabnikov v procese dela

    Young leaders – Aneta Nedimović, New Moment Belgrade: Articulating ideas and the value of those ideas is an art form and a skill

    Mladi liderji – Matjaž Muhič, ArnoldVuga: Želel bi več časa za razmislek, za delo, za raziskovanje

  • Tri pitanja

    Robert Wester: Strategic communications is at the top of the European Commission’s agenda

    Chris Pomeroy: Tourism in 2019 accounted for 1 in 10 jobs on the planet and until now it was resilient to all manner of crisis

    Andrey Barannikov: The role of PR in Russia is changing and becoming more strategically important both for brands and communication agencies

    francis-ingram-naslovnica

    Three questions for Francis Ingham, Managing Director of the Public Relations and Communications Association (PRCA) & Chief Executive of the International Communications Consultancy Organization (ICCO)

    3 questions for Svetlana Stavreva, President of the International PR association (IPRA): Today, people are demanding that organizations do what they promised

    Three questions for Petra Krulc, Senior Vice President of Celtra

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Home Opinion

How bravery and teamwork across media will usher in a new age of advertising

Challenging cross-industry pivots into accountability and collaboration are crucial for future success

17/08/2018
in Opinion
3 min read
How bravery and teamwork across media will usher in a new age of advertising

Drugi jezik na kojem je dostupan ovaj članak: Bosnian

By: Megan Clarken, President, Watch, Nielsen

Source: Nielsen

I love the media industry. We have the ability to shape the world. We raise awareness; we create connections among people from across the world; we create joy.

But it’s no secret that our industry is facing unprecedented challenges.

People are making their voices heard, driving a cultural shift unlike anything we’ve seen before. Claims of so called fake news have created mistrust even among venerable institutions; reports of sexual abuse and discrimination in the entertainment world have raised legitimate concerns about management practices and policies; and apprehension over privacy on social media platforms has focused a harsh light on advertising practices in an increasingly selective and contextual consumer environment.

The diverse voices behind these cultural changes are requiring the media industry to look carefully at whose voices we listen to and communicate with—particularly through ad campaigns. Yet the business challenges created as the industry shifts have become the focus for many. In the world of advertising, we hear voice after voice admiring the problems of comparability between digital and traditional business models, admiring the problem of competition, admiring the problem of consumer advertising appetite and the fight for attention.

What we don’t hear enough is the acknowledgement of the outstanding hard work that exists behind the scenes to do something about these things and evoke evolution. Trust me—the body of work is immense, and the industry is making progress.

The industry is working to address the growing cultural challenges and do something about them. The TimesUp movement is responding with force to the discrimination and sexual abuse issues unfolding inside of our industry. News organizations are doing some of their best work ever in reporting the news and uncovering scandal and prejudice. Networks, studios and individuals are holding themselves and everyone else accountable for personal actions. Social media companies are owning up to past shortcomings and taking bold steps to improve practices.

There is also much is being done to transform the way media and advertising work. The examples of the industry’s collaboration can be seen in the Media Rating Council’s work on viewability, dealing with different opinions of what viewability should be. It can be seen in the consortium of leading television publishers that have banded together to standardize the selling of audience segments in order to deliver cross-publisher targeting and independent posting for advanced audiences. We see it from our clients—both media buyers and sellers—who are working with us to take concrete steps forward to evolve the currency that our industry transacts on to more accurately reflect the world we share.

It’s not necessarily intuitive to see the role that a measurement company plays in this cultural conversation. But at its core, audience measurement is about reflecting the way real people live their lives. It’s a way to understand who they are, the stories they watch and listen to, and what resonates with them. What provokes consumers also provokes what we do—not just at Nielsen but across this industry. The media industry accounts for more than $100 billion in advertising dollars each year and has the power to shape our views in ways that last way beyond the initial experience.

Each stakeholder across the media landscape has a role to play to help keep our industry vibrant. Broadcasters, networks, advertisers, agencies, actors, data providers—we are the threads that create the delicate fabric of our industry. To truly evolve our industry, stakeholders across media need to work together.

It’s essential that we work as a team to keep the fabric of media tight and strong. Like any fabric—if a single thread becomes loose, it can compromise the entire fabric. And without the media industry, the world would be a less integrated, less informed and less connected place. But keeping the integrity of the fabric—the industry—takes courage.

In my years in the media industry, I’ve found that courage takes strong personal values. Values are inside of us and are instilled in us as children. And I’ve found that while my behaviors and attitudes—how I think or act—have shifted, my values remain the same. When I think about those values in the context of my role with Nielsen, I’ve found my values align with what we do: reporting with integrity, with honesty and with truth.

The goal of audience measurement is to provide a foundation of truth. That truth brings uniformity to the fabric through the knowledge we share with the players we serve. It does so by bringing reality to both the buyers and the sellers of content and advertising, providing assurance that those transactions can be made from a basis of trust. This is our role as part of the media industry team to keep the fabric of our ecosystem tight. No lose ends, no shredding threads—that takes teamwork. The stakes are high, but the rewards, not just for the industry, but for the value that they brings to the world, are priceless.

Tags: MediaMegan ClarkenMetricsNielsen
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