When The Huffington Post’s weekly iPad magazine Huffington transitioned from a pay model to free last August, advertising was intended to sustain the tablet-native title, as consumers had resisted paying for it. Almost a year postlaunch, it looks like advertisers are rejecting it, too. A review of six recent issues found just one sponsor, for United Healthcare. Most issues feature a couple of promotions for HuffPost apps but no outside ads. Is Huffington poised to go the route of News Corp.’s disastrous The Daily and other failed tablet pubs? The publisher insists the answer is no. “We are more committed than ever to Huffington,” said Rhoades Alderson, HuffPost’s senior director, communications. “We love this product and so do our readers. .. It’s still an infant, but we’re way ahead on our year-one strategy to establish the brand and a core audience.” Huffington is being revamped with more of a lifestyle focus under the guidance of its new editor John Montorio. The magazine’s previous editor, HuffPost executive editor Tim O’Brien, left earlier this year to become publisher of the opinion website Bloomberg View. In addition to Huffington’s editorial shift, a new publishing platform will allow the magazine to move onto the mobile Web, enabling it to achieve “much greater scale beyond the iPad universe,” Alderson said. As for the dearth of ads, the spokesman noted that the magazine had not been included in companywide packages. Still, Paramount and United Healthcare... Continue reading at 'AdWeek'
[ AdWeek | 2013-05-27 00:00:00 UTC ]
The 2022 ALA Annual Conference, the first in-person annual conference since 2019, set a new high-water mark for the return to U.S. in-person events in the book business. Continue reading at Publishers Weekly
[ Publishers Weekly | 2022-07-01 04:00:00 UTC ]
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Playboy will stop running photographs of naked women in its print edition after more than six decades, the magazine said Tuesday.Although it will continue to publish "sexy, seductive pictorials," as Playboy put it in a statement, the magazine will end more than six decades of full nudity when a... Continue reading at Advertising Age
[ Advertising Age | 2015-10-13 00:00:00 UTC ]
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