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Broadcom offers $105 billion for Qualcomm in landmark deal

Broadcom offered about $105 billion for Qualcomm, kicking off an ambitious attempt at the largest technology takeover ever in a deal that would rock the electronics industry.

Broadcom made an offer of $70 a share in cash and stock for Qualcomm, a 28 percent premium for the world’s largest maker of mobile phone chips as of the stock’s closing price on Nov. 2, before Bloomberg first reported talks of a deal. The proposed transaction is valued at approximately $130 billion on a pro forma basis, including $25 billion of net debt.

Buying Qualcomm would make Broadcom the third-largest chipmaker, behind Intel and Samsung Electronics. The combined business would instantly become the default provider of a set of components needed to build each of the more than a billion smartphones sold every year. The deal would dwarf Dell Inc.’s $67 billion acquisition of EMC in 2015 — then the biggest in the technology industry.

« This complementary transaction will position the combined company as a global communications leader with an impressive portfolio of technologies and products, » Hock Tan, president and chief executive officer of Broadcom, said in a statement Monday. « We would not make this offer if we were not confident that our common global customers would embrace the proposed combination. »

VIDEO: Man assaulted outside Mugg and Bean

RANDFONTEIN – Footage of a group of white men attacking a black man outside a Randfontein Mugg Bean emerged on social media on Sunday.

VIDEO: Couple assaulted at KFC drive-through, video goes viral

The footage shared by Twitter user @AdvBarryRoux was posted on Sunday and has been shared over two thousand times.

 

Mugg Bean marketing executive, Jacquie Schultz acknowledged that the management of the restaurant chain are aware of the footage.

In a statement, Schultz said, « The footage appears to show passersby involved in a physical altercation outside the restaurant. Mugg Bean management did not witness the incident and the restaurant’s staff and customers were not involved. »

« Mugg Bean management has been advised that the SAPS attended the scene and in conjunction with the Mall management are investigating the incident. »

SAPS communication officer, Captain Ernst, confirmed a case of assault was opened.

Two suspects were arrested by Randfontein police and are due to appear in court on Monday.

 

eNCA

Reimagining marketing: Brand building in the digital age

Kantar Millward Brown recently held an appropriate insights-sharing session for marketers weary with the way things are done. Global media and digital CEO Gonzalo Fuentes spoke of the importance of having a focus on the long-term marketing over the short-term product sales boost.

Reimagining marketing: Brand building in the digital age

Fuentes started on the note that the impact of technology and mature digital channels is undeniable, both on marketing and consumers, with mobile an integral component of any marketing mix. Just think of the way online video consumption has grown, programmatic solutions are everywhere and even native advertising is no longer the new kid on the block, but it’s all about the data at the end of the day. The result is that advertising today is a road full of challenges, especially if you’re aiming for brand-building longevity that resonates with customers.

Kantar Millward Brown's global media and digital CEO Gonzalo, Fuentes.Luckily, Fuentes came equipped with knowledge on which platforms offer the biggest brand rewards or ROI, and how risks can be minimised through learnings from across the consumer journey. It’s the best way to create breakthrough marketing in a connected world. By ‘digital’ he doesn’t just mean what you see on the internet or in apps, but the entire digital ecosystem, from OTT TV to addressable TV and digital radio.

These have brought the opportunity to multiply the channels in which we can access consumers, and it’s only just begun as AI, VR are being increasingly explored and discussed and offer the possibility to influence consumers at specific moments in their decision-making journey, but we need to stop and think this through carefully as they also pose the danger of limiting the potential of advertising. That’s not to say Fuentes is inherently sceptical though. He has been with Kantar for 16 years, and says as a Spanish sociologist and a brand builder, he’s obviously also a bit of a romantic. That said, he can’t deny the fact that opportunities to engage with consumers have changed.

Fuentes asked who has used the following statement in the past week:

While most of the room raised their hands, Fuentes pointed out that consumers don’t necessarily agree with this – in fact, only 3/10 South Africans claim to have seen online advertising relevant to them in the past week, which is expected to drop to just 1/10 if we fast-forward to a market that’s 55% or more digitally-run, as the snowball of information overload gathers more momentum. Even worse? Just 4/10 of those remembering seeing advertising online claim that it was not relevant to them at the moment, expected to drop to 3/10.

While there’s definitely more advertising today than there was three years ago – 67% of respondents agree to this, it’s also a lot more intrusive and annoying today than ever before, say half of respondents, so consumers are fast to block advertising, and aren’t likely to miss what they’ve blocked. In fact, results from Millward Brown AdReaction 2017 show that up to a third of South Africa’s Gen Z has already installed an ad blocker. This is quite alarming as you could find that half of your future target audience might not be even be able to see your ads.

Are you just flipping a coin on your advertising reach?

That’s not to say we all need to panic and fear that brand-building advertising is dying, though. Fuentes even admitted to considering that as a more dramatic title for his presentation.

Josephine Buys
While the Coalition for Better Ads sounds like the title of a Marvel movie, it actually exists. Two of the most powerful publishers, Facebook and Google; with two of the most powerful media-buying organisations, Omnicom and GroupM; along with two of the top five advertisers in the world: PG and Unilever have grouped together as the issue of ad-blocking is real, but Fuentes says even they are only focusing on one aspect of what’s driving current short-term advertising trends…

Programmatic: All about the data

For decades, the marketing industry has relied largely on instinct to determine the attitudinal KPIs to measure the success of brand-building campaigns, and KPIs linked to financial outcomes. This makes marketers far more credible in the boardroom, but pushes marketers away from attitudinal brand measures that can indicate long-term success.

We need to respond to the demand for evidence and the need for speed. Recent industry thinking, notably from the Ehrenberg Bass Institute, has enhanced our understanding of some of these key measures and offered new complementary metrics. Finally, new data sources such as search and social data are providing faster moving brand health indicators.

The moment you do a search online, you add to your digital footprint and you’re bombarded with related advertising. Sadly, there isn’t a lot of African data out there on this. Fuentes says the closest is from Asia’s Comscore. Of all campaigns they measure, 5/10 impressions in Asia are served outside of the target audience. Fuentes likens this strategy to flipping a coin.

Reimagining marketing: Brand building in the digital age
With advertising for FMCG, that goes up to 7/10 impressions being served outside of the target audience and when looking at age groups, that’s also 7/10 impressions being served outside the target audience for 15 to 24-year old millennials. With your consumer hat on, it’s fairly obvious that your digital footprint on household cleaners, for example, is not likely to be very high. The categories with lower engagement and thus with lower data points tend to be less precise. When it comes to demographics, the more specific the group we are trying to reach, the higher the impressions that miss the target audience.

This highlights the importance of audience validation and knowing that you’re reaching your intended audience. Without it, the advertising simply isn’t effective in building your brand. That’s where data fits in, so that you understand who you speak to and how often, as well as the brand lift aspect of how much the marketing activities changed consumers’ attitudinal response to the brand. Now, brands are going beyond online behaviour to understand the impact of brand attitudes. But it’s a little trickier than it sounds…

The digital elephant in the room: Click-through rate

In building your own data sets from attitudinal data, Fuentes said the algorithms are not the problem – it’s the data we shouldn’t trust blindly.

The intuitive value of digital is that it can be measured, and influence the consumer at specific moments of truth. This is partly driven by the quarterly pressure from board rooms, but also driven by the expectation that in a digital world, we should be able to identify the people at the moment of truth…and measure their conversion! Unfortunately much of digital is performance-based advertising, which leads to short term strategies that are not always related to brand building.

In addition, digital metrics sometimes seem more important than the campaign outcome. Sadly, some of those metrics are not that relevant today, like app installs and click-through rate, which Fuentes likens to the elephant in the room. The Einstein quote that “not everything that can be measured counts and not everything that counts can be measured” is relevant here.

The digital elephant in the room... Image credit: Jan Mik © –
So if you’re purely optimising on click-through rates, you’re likely optimising outside your target audience. You need to measure what really matters, even if that means not being optimised on real-time. The actual brand is what matters, as so much data correlates brands with sales. Building good brands is literally good business – and while tempting, short-term strategies aren’t always as efficient.

In the long-term, brands with a clearly defined purpose in consumers’ eyes grow faster than others and within the same category, you can charge up to 16% more for product if you have a strong brand purpose.

This is obviously fulfilling work but as it’s such an intense role, the average lifespan of a chief marketing officer at a specific company these days is just 18 months in the UK, and South Africa is following suit – barely enough time to get to grips with the brand you’re meant to live.

Fuentes spoke of this all coming together as almost the perfect storm for ‘buy me now’ advertising, but it definitely needs to be balanced with longer-term brand building. Shorter term strategies not always as efficient as longer term investments, as better brand purpose underpins value for 12 years’ brand value growth.

Beware the impact of ‘bad ads’

Fuentes shared the following ways to improve your brand-building strategy:

  • Know who you are talking to.
  • Get better data.
  • Be more consumer-centric, as you have zero control over your brand: The marketing industry has largely relied on instinct to determine attitudinal KPIs to measure the success of brand-building campaigns. More recently, these have shifted to include a proven relationship to financial outcomes.

    This shift makes marketers far more credible in the boardroom, and crucially improves the probability of generating positive financial returns on marketing investment.

It’s as simple as having a consumer-centric format that gives the viewer control. Here’s why that’s important…

#BODJHB: Are advertising agencies the cobbler's children? (Part 1)

#BODJHB: Are advertising agencies the cobbler’s children? (Part 1)

During her time at Ogilvy Mather, Lauren Woolf, now founder of Mrs Woolf, recognised a paradox in the advertising world that led her to write a thesis on the subject as part of her MBA at the Berlin School of Creative Leadership…

By Jessica Tennant 27 Oct 2017

Fuentes says as much as 80% of ‘creative time’ for digital is spent on the media plan and just 20% on the actual creative, and the results are telling: Only 27% of South African Gen Z respondents claim to be positive about receiving mobile video ads, with 53% highly annoyed by mobile ad pop-ups and those that auto-play on social media. We clearly need better cross-device creativity.

But it’s not all doom and gloom. Fuentes says, the good news is that many of the metrics that have been the foundation of brand tracking and equity research for years have very well proven relationships to long-term sales. And that recent industry thinking, notably from the Ehrenberg Bass Institute, has enhanced our understanding of some of these key measures and offered new complementary metrics. New data sources such as search and social data are also providing faster-moving brand health indicators.

Andrei Krauchuk © –

Talking ‘mental availability’ for brands with Spark Media

Dr Justin Cohen of Australia’s Ehrenberg-Bass Institute for Marketing Science shared insights from research into marketing with Spark Media’s guests. If you’ve not factored mental availability into your brand messaging, read this now…

By Leigh Andrews 10 Oct 2017

But instead of putting figures front and foremost, Fuentes says creativity in digital still matters, as bad creative can actually drive a negative brand impact, especially when comparing between the top 20% of creatives and the bottom 20% in their database. This is quite serious as consumers exposed to a ‘bad ad’ for your brand are less likely to buy it than those who have not seen your advertising at all! Scary when you consider we’re talking about the same set of consumers that see TV advertising in a positive light.

What SA consumers want from your brand’s advertising

So, if you’re going to interrupt their experience, you might as well make it engaging. Determining what the average South African consumer wants to see is relatively easy: Kantar Millward Brown’s Ad Reaction 2017 shows that a good ad is funny or humorous, tells an interesting story and has good music, while to a lesser effect respondents also like the fancier aspects of advertising that uses special effects, features augmented reality (AR), and features a famous celebrity or social media/online celebrity. It’s not as easy as throwing these elements into the mix though, as you still need to incorporate the brand, while also entertaining and being informative.

The VW Tiguan ‘laughing horse’ is a good example of getting this right:

While telling a great brand story that ultimately won the ad a Silver Lion at Cannes for creative effectiveness, it was also pre-tested in a YouTube and Facebook environment, and in less than 48 hours, led to a significant increase in sales for the brand. It was one of the best automotive TVCs ever tested across newness, brand fit, engagement, enjoyment, brand appeal, relevance and activation. It resulted in 36,000,000 views after across all platforms and 2,100,000 YouTube views after just a month, with 95% Likes from 1,700 ratings.

As opposed to in-market performance, Fuentes points out that when optimising like this, they can replicate any publisher environment, in any device. The bonus of in market measurement is that it delivers different perspectives of the brand funnel, as well as the creative, while understanding the effects of the creative, the formats, and the frequency of the placements. Key among these is that the creativity needs to make the most of the multiple channels available.

Fuentes mentioned that Kantar Millward Brown has worked with the Advertising Research Foundation (ARF) and spoke us through Ad Age’s summary of the ARF’s How Advertising Works Today from 2016, which analysed 5,000 campaigns for 1,000 brands in 41 countries. They have found that while campaigns that use a single channel may have ROI at 100%, those that use two channels result in 19% more ROI – that impact is incremental, so that those who use five channels see +35%. But note that when Fuentes speaks of ‘channel’, it’s not just the traditional ‘visual broadcast’ platforms of TV and digital but also out of home, outdoor and radio.

A word of caution, though: Engaging across multiple platforms obviously means reaching consumers wherever they are, at different times of day. The opportunity to use different channels like this has unfortunately led to the rise of the fragmented or schizophrenic brand. Fuentes quotes Unilever’s Keith Weed who states that brand integration keeps him up at night as it’s so easy to lead to brand fragmentation, which he calls a massive risk that ultimately lessens brands’ power and consistency.

That’s why identifying and deploying advertising ideas before the execution of those ideas is more important than ever. Research proves that a slightly different edit rather than using the same one increases impact best – adapting to the platform serves this purpose best. So a unified approach to the creative strategy that ties in with synergies leads to higher ROI as being exposed to the messaging on more than one media platform leads to more impact. Engaging is only the first step, you then need to make it consistent and adapt the message to the media.

Fuentes ended with the following four thoughts:

  1. Start with what’s easy to measure, with what you’re disciplined enough to do. Then question whether the advertising idea and creative is strong, well-integrated across different media and easily identifiable across those media. What can you measure before you commit the spend?
  2. Measure what matters, not just what you can measure. Fuentes says to start with what’s easy to measure, and has great impact on the marketing investment. You need to ensure you have the right brand strategy that will drive growth, using the brand itself as a key KPI to measure impact, and remember to validate your audience. Also use logical performance metrics if running a tactical campaign.
  3. Avoid perceived “perfect” measurement in silos. You need to talk to your consumer where your consumer is and understand the consumer journey. Fuentes says to be open to probabilistic measures that give an overall perspective of the investment, and that the measurement of synergies is more relevant than touch points on their own.
  4. Explore how survey data can enrich your internal data. Keep in mind what measures you need to drive better targeting, in order to make it even more accurate and more accessible.

That’s how you go about #gettingmediaright. Click through to the KantarMillward Brown press office or follow them on Twitter for the latest insights.

Secrets of Marketing to Gen Z Revealed

“Millennials are the most talked about generation in history … Now people want to know what’s next.”
Connor Blakley, Gen Z Consulting Expert

Considering how much focus has been placed on the millennial generation over the past half-decade, younger generations must be feeling an awful lot like Jan Brady these days: Unseen and unheard.

While there has certainly been good reason for millennials to have been such a major priority to brands, as they are one of the largest generations in American history, this has caused many to lose sight of what — or who — is coming down the pipeline.

Just as businesses and marketing experts are beginning to finally feel as if they understand the millennial generation, an even more enigmatic group is entering the buyers’ market and workforce: Generation Z.

Gen Z, those born between 1996 and 2010, is comprised of roughly 72 million teens and young adults whose buying power already exceeds $44 billion and who influence $600 billion in family spending. These folks will soon represent about 40 percent of American consumers.

For marketers to capture these dollars and reach a generation that has been labeled as “millennials on steroids,” they will need an intimate understanding of how to reach them, where they want to be contacted, and how long they’ve got to do it.

At this point, most advertisers are thinking that this conundrum is a no brainer and social media is undoubtedly the correct approach. If that’s your assumption, your company is in for a rude awakening.

While channels like Instagram and Snapchat are certainly favorites among youngsters, a recent study from Bluecore and NAPCO Research revealed that Gen Z doesn’t turn to social media to connect with brands or find new products.

Marketing to Generation Z

Since Gen Z actually does use social as a means to connect with friends and family, then what is the right portal for brands to connect with them?

Where Brands Can Reach Gen Z

In the aforementioned study, researchers uncovered that 65 percent of Gen Z respondents claimed email as their preferred channel for brand communications. The next largest group claimed that in-store was their favorite modality; this only accounts for 8 percent of respondents.

The reason that Gen Z prefers email comes down to its level of personalization.

When the younger audience was asked which channel feels most personal to them, near identical results were produced: 60 percent of Z’ers stated email while the next largest group, 8 percent, said Facebook.

What this proves is that personalization is only becoming more important with each subsequent generation; and email is the channel that most effectively delivers the experience younger consumers are searching for.

By using robust email marketing tools, business owners and advertisers can leverage compelling templates suited to Gen Z’s likings (more on that in a moment), establish the most opportune times to send emails, A/B test every aspect of communications for optimal performance, and personalize the living heck out of emails with powerful customization options.

How to Drive Gen Z Sales Using Email

When targeting Gen Z consumers with email communications, you’re not going to be able to use the same old tactics that proved fruitful with Gen X and millennials.

First, you need to leverage video. That doesn’t mean you should include videos. It means you must utilize video.

As shown in an infographic from Upfront Analytics, Generation Z watches twice as many videos on mobile as any other generation, with 70 percent watching upwards of 2 hours of YouTube per day.

If you want to reach this audience, video cannot be neglected.

This also points to another important email factor for Gen Z: minimize your text and use lots of images. With Gen Z, marketers have all of eight seconds to grab their attention; four seconds less than with their millennial brethren.

If you have ever read the way Z’ers write, you know grammar has fallen by the wayside and been replaced with emojis, images and GIFs. For this reason, you need to focus more on visuals to incorporate short but impactful written messages.

The bottom line is that videos and images make emails look better, make them easier to scan, increase the likelihood of a share, and make for a more compelling communication; all of which increase you potential for making a sale.

While we’re on the topic of content, it is incredibly important you serve these visitors only the freshest and most relevant materials. This generation has grown up having massive amounts of information thrown at them and they are masters at separating what they think is useful, what’s rubbish, and what they’ve already seen. If you fail to continually serve up new and interesting information, get ready for your followers to unsubscribe.

The next thing you need to consider for your emails is their level of customization and personalization; again, this is what makes email marketing platforms incredibly important for this generation.

To increase personalized components, advertisers should employ an array of opt-in options as it relates to timing, content and frequency so that youngsters can have a high level of communication control.

All of this means mobile optimization is a must. Mobile is the preferred channel, so a seamless mobile experience is of the utmost importance.

Members of Generation Z are not millennials. If you treat them as such, you won’t create loyalty. This group operates under specific “rules of engagement.” Master the art of the personalized visual communication, and you’ll have their attention.

Depending on the type of business you operate, Gen Z might not be your customers just yet anyway, but rest assured, they are coming. Be prepared, and you will prosper.

Generation Z Photo via Shutterstock


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4 Ways to Start Using Video Content in Your Marketing Strategy


Pexels

Read any article about marketing and content from the past few years, and you’ll see people advocating for video as though it’s a two-for-one ROI machine. But if you dive into video without understanding how it earned its throne, you’ll only leave frustrated.

Video gained its popularity by earning more and costing less. As trends in technology have evolved, video has become less expensive to create. At the same time, promotion and tracking tools have made major strides, making it easier for marketers to turn cheaper content into more successful collateral.

Successfully integrating video into your marketing strategy requires more than a budget shift. Before you drop everything and start filming, outline a strategy to get the most from your visual content.

Walk before you run to make thoughtful video content

Just as your bottle of cleaning solution recommends testing a small area first, your video strategy shouldn’t debut as your top investment without careful preparation. Although search engines and social media trends are rewarding video more than ever and pushing marketers toward the platform, a deliberate approach will beat a rash one every time.

Unless your content is well-designed, brand-friendly, and part of a larger message, its effect will be limited. When that happens, video marketing can’t deliver on its promises of high ROI, leaving you and your team to wonder whether video is really as valuable as everyone says.

Don’t get caught up in the crowd of subpar video content. Set up your videos to succeed by following these four steps to align them with your current strategy:

1. Update your documented marketing strategy.

We Went to Animoto’s Social Video Marketing Summit 2017 and Found Out How to Go Viral

On Monday, Animoto, the cloud-based video creation service taking the marketing world by storm, was kind enough to invite us to their office in lower Manhattan for their  Social Video Marketing Summit 2017. Featuring speakers such as Gary Vaynerchuk, Sue Bryce, and Buffer’s Brian Peters, this two-hour summit covered all your most pressing video marketing questions.

From left to right: Susan Bryce, Jason Hsiao, and Brian Peters

(For those of you not lucky enough to receive an invite, a stream of the entire event can be found here.)

And for those of you without the attention span to watch the whole thing, here’s a recap of each speaker’s main points, along with the time at which they enter.

Gary Vee (8:38) –

“This is actually happening”

With his typical flair, Gary got the Summit started, making clear to each and every attendee just how important video is, and will continue to be. He reminded us that, whether we like it not, the digital age is happening, enveloping each and every one of us. Likening it to the introduction of the first printing press, he made it clear that if you want to “win” –defined as “emerging in the consciousness of someone you want to talk to”–you have to learn how to go viral.

“The remote control of our lives”

A few years back, Gary recalled, he realized that the mobile phone was going to drive much more of our decision making than we would ever be conscious of. Thus, he labelled it–while pulling out and pointing to his own iPhone–the “remote control of our lives.” With that in mind, he became determined to understand what works and what doesn’t in the virtual sphere.

Where once content was created “in a silo,” only to be shown to the public as a finished product, Gary believes current content creators need to take seriously the “science behind the art.” That means finding out–through trial-and-error, data collection, observation and the like–what the people want. The market, he says “is always right, not you.”

“I wasn’t shocked by anything”

Despite his penchant for public speaking, Gary claims, he’s a listener more than anything. This is what allowed him to dominate digitally by finding out what the people want by listening to what they said. He didn’t want to be a content creator, for instance, and never imagined himself as such. Nevertheless, he has “to play on other people’s terms,” leading him to where he is now. This is the mark of his famous 51/49 breakdown: give 51% to the other, and make the best of the 49% you get for yourself. Even though he was forced into a role he never imagined for himself, Gary is happy as ever, as he declared later in his talk when discussing his absence of regrets.

Empathy. Gratitude. Patience.

Asked for his keys to success, Gary provided the above^.

Empathy is what allows you to listen to others genuinely. Instead of simply waiting for keywords, or things that relate to you, a true empath will be able to hear others for how they want to be heard, allowing that person to gain actual information regarding what others want.

Gratitude is part of self-understanding, and, as Gary insists, you have “know who you are” before you can be successful in anything. Having gratitude is the ability to look at yourself honestly, being grateful for your gifts and fortunate circumstances and able to accept those things you may lack. Gary’s own example: a 4-times NYT Bestseller, he can’t even put a sentence together. “Tripling down” on his strengths, however, allowed him the opportunity to afford to hire a ghostwriter who could do that for him.

Patience is necessary because, as fast as the digital ecosystem evolves, success does not always come so quickly. It is only through constant failure, reevaluation, and iteration that one reaches the point at which they create something worthwhile.

 

Brian Peters (36:12) –

“Puppies pull heartstrings. Heartstrings create brand loyalty.”

Brian, Digital Marketing Strategist at Buffer, focused his talk on the “power of emotion.” There’s a reason, he said, that puppies are “the epitome of social media.” If you want to get noticed, you have to convey emotion in you content. So how do we do that?

“Let the data drive your decisions”

Just like Gary Vee, Brian stressed that in order to find out what your would-be customers are looking for, you need to listen to them. While for Gary this meant active listening with his ear, for Brian this means reviewing the data. No matter how “stupid” a particular strategy may seem to you, that won’t stop it from being a hit; instead of going off instinct, its important that marketers begin to go off of facts.

Just a couple examples he provided:

  • 92% of people access Facebook only on mobile
  • 55% of people watch videos online every day
  • Square videos, as opposed to the traditional 16×9, generate 70% more engagement and 33% less costs-per-click
  • The optimal timing for a video is 60-90 seconds, while for a Facebook Live stream it is 18-20 minutes
  • For more facts, watch the stream

Test, iterate, improve

While Buffer now produces almost solely successful content, it wasn’t always that way. Just like Gary’s plea for patience, Brian assures us that even the most skilled video marketers bombed at one point or another. Even some of what we may think to be our brightest ideas will ultimately turn out to receive ten views or less. The only way to get better? Do. After doing, review the data, alter your method, and make something slightly better. Do this a hundred times and all the sudden you’ve elevated yourself from an eye-roll to viral.

 

Sally Sargood (1:08:06) –

Animoto‘s own Business Video Specialist, Sally gave us a tour of all that Animoto can do for your business. Have zero clue how to make a video? Have no fear, Animoto is here. I recommend watching this part, as her step-by-step breakdown makes clear the ease with which Animoto will allow you to create professional-level video content with little to no prior experience.

Whether its their pre-designed templates, an easy-to-use homepage, or their always-on-call customer service, Sally made it clear to the audience that Animoto is the answer to any and every question they would have following a conference which urged them to market with video. She also announced the release of Animoto’s holiday-themed playbook, which can be found here. Exciting stuff.

 

Sue Bryce (1:24:22) –

“What do I say?”

If you’re going to market yourself on video, photographer/educator/ entrepreneur Sue Bryce told, you’re going to have to identify what it is you’re selling.

Over and again, she hears from creators who are skeptical of going in front of the camera that they “don’t know what to say.” She herself was once a victim of this mindset. However, she reminds us that it’s not that we don’t have anything to say, but rather often we don’t know how to say it.

For her, the key to finding out how to communicate what it is you want to get across is to become more clear on what exactly it is you’re selling. For example, Sue, a portrait photographer, wasn’t selling photographers, she was selling “the experience of beauty,” as her friend once told her. Once she understood this, it became much easier for her to speak about her product: because she was selling a feeling rather than simply a photo, she had a unique angle to take in her pitch to clients.

“You need me”

However, not any old pitch will work. If you want a client to bite, you need to convince them that more than wanting you, they need you. How?

1. Identify a problem, desire, or need

2. Solve that problem, quell that desire, or satisfy that need and then..

3. They can’t live with you!

And along the way, always remember: “You’re not selling yourself. You’re presenting yourself but you’re selling the knowledge and experience which you can give.” 

“Work on your look”

This doesn’t mean you have to be the prettiest, or most stylish. It means you have to present yourself consciously. Don’t allow any old piece of clothing define you. When you’re going in front of a camera, make sure that what you are wearing and how you are styled reflects on you in the way you want it to. Be quirky, be fun, or be cold, just do you.

Wrap-up 

The clear takeaway from this event is the importance of reaching out to customer and learning what they want. Whether this is through listening, data collection, or the holding of focus groups, each speaker made it clear that the key to their success was by looking outward, not in.

Remember, going viral is about other people, and although we’d like to think it is based totally upon some intrinsic artistic or marketing merit, it is more likely the result of carefully studying of how others have gone viral. Through finding the keys to successful campaigns, coupled with constant efforts and revamp, anyone can become a successful video creator.

Millions of Leaked Files Shine Light on Where the Elite Hide Their Money

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The Paradise Papers

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The offices of Appleby, an offshore law firm, in Hamilton, Bermuda. The company is at the center of leaked documents being called the Paradise Papers.CreditMeredith Andrews for The New York Times

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Nov. 5, 2017

It’s called the Paradise Papers: the latest in a series of leaks made public by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists shedding light on the trillions of dollars that move through offshore tax havens.

The core of the leak, totaling more than 13.4 million documents, focuses on the Bermudan law firm Appleby, a 119-year old company that caters to blue chip corporations and very wealthy people. Appleby helps clients reduce their tax burden; obscure their ownership of assets like companies, private aircraft, real estate and yachts; and set up huge offshore trusts that in some cases hold billions of dollars.

The New York Times is part of the group of more than 380 journalists from over 90 media organizations in 67 countries that have spent months examining the latest set of documents.

As with the Panama Papers, the Paradise Papers leak came through a duo of reporters at the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung and was then shared with I.C.I.J., a Washington-based group that won the Pulitzer Prize for reporting on the millions of records of a Panamanian law firm. The release of that trove of documents led to the resignation of one prime minister last year and to the unmasking of the wealth of people close to President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.

The predominantly elite clients of Appleby contrast with those of Mossack Fonseca — the company whose leaked records became the Panama Papers — which appeared to be less discriminating in the business it took on. Much of the material makes for dull reading: Spreadsheets, prospectuses and billing statements abound. But amid these are documents that help reveal how multinational companies avoid taxes and how the superrich hide their wealth. The records date back to 1950 and up to 2016.

Appleby has offices in tax havens around the world. In addition to its Bermudan headquarters, it works out of places like the British Virgin Islands and the Cayman Islands in the Caribbean; the Isle of Man, Jersey and Guernsey off Britain; Mauritius and the Seychelles in the Indian Ocean; and Hong Kong and Shanghai.

Americans — companies and people — dominate the list of clients. Past disclosures, such as the 2013 “Offshore Leaks” from two offshore incorporators in Singapore and the British Virgin Islands, the 2015 “Swiss Leaks” from a private Swiss bank owned by the British bank HSBC and another leak in 2016 from the Bahamas were dominated by clients not from the United States.

The documents come not only from Appleby, but also from the Singaporean company Asiaciti Trust and official business registries in places such as Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Lebanon and Malta.

Setting up companies offshore is generally legal, and corporations routinely do so to facilitate cross-border transactions such as mergers and acquisitions. Appleby, in a public statement on Oct. 24, after inquiries from I.C.I.J., said that it was “subject to frequent regulatory checks” in “highly regulated jurisdictions.”

“Appleby has thoroughly and vigorously investigated the allegations and we are satisfied that there is no evidence of any wrongdoing, either on the part of ourselves or our clients,” the company said.

But with this latest leak, some wealthy individuals and multinational corporations may think twice about using offshore ownership structures, said Jack Blum, a lawyer who worked for decades on congressional committees investigating money transfers overseas.

“The danger of being found out has increased exponentially,” Mr. Blum said in an interview. “If I were a rich guy looking to hide money offshore so that the tax man won’t get me, my nightmare would be to put it in the hands of somebody whose documents leak.”

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Saudi Crown Prince’s Mass Purge Upends a Longstanding System

In the same stroke, the crown prince has cowed businessmen and royals across the kingdom by taking down the undisputed giant of Saudi finance. And over the last several weeks he has ordered enough high-profile arrests of intellectuals and clerics to frighten the remainder of the academic and religious establishment into acceding to his will as well.

Apolitical scholars who used to speak freely in cafes now look nervously over their shoulders, as Crown Prince Mohammed has achieved a degree of dominance that no ruler has attained for generations.

“It is the coup de grâce of the old system,” said Chas W. Freeman, a former United States ambassador. “Gone. All power has now been concentrated in the hands of Mohammad bin Salman.”

Why the crown prince acted now — whether to eliminate future opposition or perhaps to crush some threat he saw brewing — was not immediately clear.

At 32 years old, he had little experience in government before his father, King Salman, 81, ascended to the throne in 2015, and the prince has demonstrated little patience for the previously staid pace of change in the kingdom.

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Prince Alwaleed bin Talal in Riyadh in 2014. He is best known for his investments in brand-name Western companies.

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Pool photo by Fayez Nudeldine

He has led Saudi Arabia into a protracted military conflict in Yemen and a bitter feud with its Persian Gulf neighbor Qatar. He has taken on a business elite accustomed to state subsidies and profligacy by laying out radical plans to remake the Saudi economy, lessen its dependence on oil and rely instead on foreign investment. And he has squared off against conservatives in the religious establishment with symbolic steps to loosen strict moral codes, including a pending end to the longstanding ban on women driving.

Crown Prince Mohammed’s haste, however, may now come at a price, because the lack of transparency or due process surrounding the anticorruption crackdown is sure to unnerve the same private investors he hopes to attract — including through a planned stock offering of the huge state oil company, Aramco.

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Saudi Arabian businessmen and royals anxious about the crown prince’s plans were quietly moving assets out of the country even before the arrests.

“Some of these are businessmen with international status, and if they are caught in this web then it could happen to anyone,” said James M. Dorsey, who studies Saudi Arabia at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore. “How is that going to inspire confidence and attract foreign investment?”

The Saudi Arabian news media, however, celebrated the arrests as a long-awaited cleanup, appealing to populist resentment of self-enrichment enjoyed by the sprawling royal family and its closest allies.

Almost everyone in the capital, Riyadh, and other big cities like Jeddah has heard stories about princes absconding with vast sums that had been allocated for a public project.

The arrests are “a frontal assault on some members of the royal family and the impunity with which they have operated in the past,” said Bernard Haykel, a professor at Princeton University who studies Saudi Arabia.

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“It was something that had to be done,” he said, even though the absence of a judicial process “sends a chill down the spine of foreign investors.”

President Trump on Sunday appeared to give a tacit endorsement of the arrests in a phone call with King Salman. A White House summary of the call contained no references to the arrests, and said Mr. Trump had praised Crown Prince Mohammed for other matters.

Three White House advisers, including the president’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, returned just days ago from the latest in at least three high-level Trump administration visits to Saudi Arabia this year.

Nearly 24 hours after the arrests were announced, no Saudi authority or spokesman had identified those arrested or the charges against them.

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Prince Mutaib bin Abdullah, right, in Riyadh in 2014. He was removed from his post as chief of a major security service over the weekend just hours before the arrests.

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Fayez Nureldine/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The Saudi-owned satellite network Al Arabiya reported only that a large number of arrests, including 11 princes, had been ordered by an “anticorruption committee” that just hours earlier had been formed under the direction of Crown Prince Mohammed. A royal decree granted the committee powers to detain individuals or seize assets without any trial, process or disclosure.

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A list of those arrested began circulating over social media shortly after midnight Sunday, and by Sunday evening senior government officials were reposting the list. News organization around the region were reporting its contents without contradiction by either the Saudi government or individuals.

In the case of the most politically potent of the detainees, the former security chief Prince Mutaib bin Abdullah, the Saudi government appeared on Sunday to have started a social media campaign seeking to make him the new face of public corruption.

Analysts said the list appeared to reflect individuals with a reputation for self-enrichment and those representing rival power centers within the kingdom. Others included the power broker who once ran the royal court under King Abdullah, and the owner of one of the biggest private media companies in the region.

But another was a top aide to Crown Prince Mohammed himself — Adel Fakeih — who had been considered a driving force behind the ambitious program of economic reform, leaving analysts puzzled about the motives.

In what appeared to be an unrelated episode, a helicopter carrying another Saudi royal, Prince Mansur bin Muqrin, the deputy governor of Asir Province, which borders Yemen, was killed on Sunday along with a number of other officials when their helicopter crashed. Al Arabiya, which reported the crash in a brief dispatch, did not identify the cause.

The history of the house of Saud was sometimes punctuated by violent intrafamily strife in the decades before the founding of the modern dynasty, in 1932. Since then, the family has maintained its unity in part by spreading its top government roles and vast oil wealth among different branches of the sprawling clan. Most important was the division of the three main security services, which constitute the hard power on the ground.

King Salman, however, quickly named his favorite son, Mohammed, as his defense minister, chief of the royal court, a top economic adviser and deputy crown prince. Then, this June, the king removed his nephew, Mohammed bin Nayef, from his position as crown prince and his powerful role of interior minister in charge of the internal security forces, secret police and counterterrorism operations. Evidently anxious to forestall resistance, the king also placed the demoted nephew under house arrest. A campaign of leaks spread rumors that he had become addicted to painkillers and other drugs.

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It was unclear why the crackdown targeted Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who is best known for his past and present investments in brand-name Western companies including Twitter, News Corporation, Apple and the Four Seasons. Prince Alwaleed has been a vocal supporter of the crown prince’s plans to attract outside investors to Saudi Arabia. But when a committee of 34 senior family members — known as the allegiance council — approved Prince Mohammed’s elevation to crown prince, one of the three dissenters was from Prince Alwaleed’s branch of the family, the Talals, according to people familiar with the voting.

Michael Stephens, who studies Saudi Arabia at the Royal United Services Institute in London, recalled the bloody purges other leaders in the region have sometimes used to eliminate rivals. What Crown Prince Mohammed was doing, Mr. Stephens said, “is a more genteel way of making sure there are no challenges to your power.”

Time will tell, Mr. Stephens said, whether the arrests signal a slide into despotism or “whether we will look back and say Mohammed bin Salman is the one guy who saw the wall coming and managed to hurdle it.”

Reporting was contributed by Declan Walsh from Cairo, Neil MacFarquhar from Moscow, Nicholas Kulish from New York, Eric Schmitt from Washington and Mark Landler from Tokyo.


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