1. Xavier Adam

    MD at Xavier Adam Public Relations

    18 October 2000 18:28pm

    Avatar-blank-50x50

    Welcome everyone to this great new forum, I'd be interested to know who else is out there, this forum will be educational but also a chance for us to share and learn.

    Where are you going for your news, do you value the online publications or is it the nationals that carry the weight ?

  2. Ashley Friedlein Staff

    CEO at Econsultancy

    19 October 2000 07:02am

    Ashley Friedlein

    I don't know which sources 'carry the weight' (I guess it depends on who you are trying to attract - volume versus targeting etc.) but I don't rely on the nationals at all for news any more.

    I used to be an avid Guardian on a Monday reader (quite a Bible if you're working in the Media industry) but only read it occasionally now. I sometimes make the effort to read the dotcom Telegraph on a Thursday and the @chieve section in the weekend Telegraph. To be honest, I haven't been that impressed with any of the nationals e-business coverage - perhaps working in the industry it feels to 'mainstream'.

    I find online sources MUCH better if it is news you want. I get a mixture of things emailed to me each day:
    The Register's news: http://www.theregister.co.uk
    Revolution's news: http://www.revolution.haynet.com/
    Netimperative's round ups: http://www.netimperative.com

    I also get press releases sent to me by Internetwire (http://www1.internetwire.com/iwire/home ) though this is US focused.

    There are a couple of other more technical and specialist e-mails I get sent on topics such as eCRM, marketing, broadband etc.

    For news on competing Internet consultancies I use this site's moreover feed (http://www.e-consultancy.com/providers/ ) - Razorfish cutting staff by 10%...

    For industry comment, useful tips and advice and discussing issues with 'real' people I clearly use this site's discussion forums and have the relevant content e-mailed to me each day through the email digest function. For the same reason I belong to a couple of egroups (usability, eCRM, FirstTuesday) that do a similar thing.

    For features, analysis and more leisured reading (tube, weekends, lunchbreaks etc.) I read most of the industry trade press titles: Revolution, New Media Age, Red Herring, Business 2.0, e-Business, The Standard. I also read things like the Harvard Business Review and McKinsey Quarterly on or offline, but mostly offline.

    For more detailed research then I would either resort to paid for research (likes of Jupiter, Forrester etc.) or use freely available research on the web - the white papers search function on this site ( http://www.e-consultancy.com/knowledge/whitepapers/search.asp ) is very useful for that.

    That's it! I don't think there is enough time to take on any more so it would be a question of dropping some in the favour of others. Once I get round to buying a PDA I am sure to use the AvantGo service (http://avantgo.com/frontdoor/index.html ) for getting the content I want from the nationals. I very much doubt I would then buy the nationals for their e-business coverage, but I would continue to buy them for more general weekend reading.

  3. Xavier Adam

    MD at Xavier Adam Public Relations

    21 October 2000 15:36pm

    Avatar-blank-50x50

    I'd second Net Imperative - not always the most cutting edge news (it's hard to fill three channels each day with UK Internet news) - but a reliable source that now arrives at the same time everyday.

    I tell everyone I meet in the business that if they're not they should be signed up for the daily updates.

    On 7:2:49 19 October 2000 ashley wrote:
    >I don't know which sources 'carry the weight' (I guess it
    >depends on who you are trying to attract - volume versus
    >targeting etc.) but I don't rely on the nationals at all
    >for news any more.
    >
    >I used to be an avid Guardian on a Monday reader (quite a
    >Bible if you're working in the Media industry) but only
    >read it occasionally now. I sometimes make the effort to
    >read the dotcom Telegraph on a Thursday and the @chieve
    >section in the weekend Telegraph. To be honest, I haven't
    >been that impressed with any of the nationals e-business
    >coverage - perhaps working in the industry it feels to
    >'mainstream'.
    >
    >I find online sources MUCH better if it is news you want.
    >I get a mixture of things emailed to me each day:
    >The Register's news: http://www.theregister.co.uk
    >Revolution's news: http://www.revolution.haynet.com/
    >Netimperative's round ups: http://www.netimperative.com
    >
    >I also get press releases sent to me by Internetwire
    >(http://www1.internetwire.com/iwire/home ) though this is
    >US focused.
    >
    >There are a couple of other more technical and specialist
    >e-mails I get sent on topics such as eCRM, marketing,
    >broadband etc.
    >
    >For news on competing Internet consultancies I use this
    >site's moreover feed (http://www.e-
    >consultancy.com/providers/ ) - Razorfish cutting staff by
    >10%...
    >
    >For industry comment, useful tips and advice and
    >discussing issues with 'real' people I clearly use this
    >site's discussion forums and have the relevant content
    >e-mailed to me each day through the email digest function.
    >For the same reason I belong to a couple of egroups
    >(usability, eCRM, FirstTuesday) that do a similar thing.
    >
    >For features, analysis and more leisured reading (tube,
    >weekends, lunchbreaks etc.) I read most of the industry
    >trade press titles: Revolution, New Media Age, Red
    >Herring, Business 2.0, e-Business, The Standard. I also
    >read things like the Harvard Business Review and McKinsey
    >Quarterly on or offline, but mostly offline.
    >
    >For more detailed research then I would either resort to
    >paid for research (likes of Jupiter, Forrester etc.) or
    >use freely available research on the web - the white
    >papers search function on this site (
    >http://www.e-consultancy.com/knowledge/whitepapers/search.-
    >asp ) is very useful for that.
    >
    >That's it! I don't think there is enough time to take on
    >any more so it would be a question of dropping some in the
    >favour of others. Once I get round to buying a PDA I am
    >sure to use the AvantGo service
    >(http://avantgo.com/frontdoor/index.html) for getting the
    >content I want from the nationals. I very much doubt I
    >would then buy the nationals for their e-business
    >coverage, but I would continue to buy them for more
    >general weekend reading.

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