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Wednesday, 3 August 2011

Family Guy 'most social' TV show


Family Guy 'most social' TV show

Family Guy was the US show that attracted most social network activity in July, according to research by New York-based SocialGuide.

The social data firm monitors comments about TV shows aired on US terrestrial and cable networks, analysing activity on check-in services and social networks such as Twitter and Facebook.

Based on a sample of more than 10.5 million 'social TV comments,' Family Guy took a 5.9% share of comments attributed to unique users and 2.6% of overall comments.

More at http://www.c21media.net/news/detail.asp?area=1&article=62030

Friday, 3 June 2011


I am delighted to be joining the board of Enteraction as a non-executive director. Enteraction are unique in Europe in being able to provide a platform (called Gameshaper) for social games and applications for 3rd party brands and media properties.

I hope to work with Enteraction to provide strategic and business development support for their projects and to use Gameshaper for some of my own developments in the social gaming space.

Peter, CEO Spirit digital media


Monday, 2 May 2011

Zev Suissa joins Spirit

Digital content business Spirit Digital Media hired digital specialist Zev Suissa as Creative Director to oversee a development slate of original properties for multiple platforms. He previously worked for Agility Studios. Spirit Digital Media is a UK media firm headed by former Endemol executive Peter Cowley.

Thursday, 3 February 2011

Can 'The Daily' ever make money


News Corp's Ipad newspaper 'The Daily' launched this week in New York http://www.thedaily.com/. The digital newspaper has cost $30m to get to launch and will cost $500k per week to run.

Subscriptions will be $0.99 per week or $39.99 per year.

Whether the content is good or not is being debated widely on blogs and in news articles, so I want to focus on whether it can make money from it's cover price alone. Of course, if the newspaper gains enough subscribers it can attract advertising money, but in its growth period, it will be reliant on subscription revenues.

To cover the running costs for a year ($25m) it will need to gain over 600k annual subscriptions, and that is before it has paid for the investment ($30m). The Times paywall in the UK has only attracted 50k+ subscribers after many months of marketing.

Wednesday, 26 January 2011

digital books sales may 'overtake' print sales by 2014

As reading moves to eReaders and book sales move on-line, publishers and retailers will struggle in this new world
  • 10.5m people in the US now own a dedicated e-reader
  • 10m iPads sold in the US in 2010
  • $1b was spent on eBooks in 2010
  • half of book sales in 2014 will be digital
More details from the Bookseller

Saturday, 15 January 2011

On-line Video Views pass 6 billion/month









UK viewers watched more than six billion online content videos and 527 million online video ads in November last year, according to ComScore figures

Full release here

Google (mostly via YouTube) ranked highesr for viewing viewing sessions, attracting 34.4 m people watching 2.8 billion videos.

ITV served the most on-line video ads:

Saturday, 1 January 2011

Book publishing finally goes digital ready for 2011

There are a number of interesting news articles coming out about the rise of eBooks and how digital media is being used by book publishers to innovate and diversify.

The bookseller published an article in September 2010 that started to suggest that e-book sales are beginning to cannibalise printed books, especially in the genre of romance and science fiction.

The Times published a story on 1st January 2011 analysing the growth of romance e-books. According to Nielsen BookScan data, in 2009, 2% of all traditional books sold were in the 'romance and sagas' category, compared with 14% f all e-books sold in 2009.

In the last week of December, Amazon said its Kindle machine was the best selling product in the retail website's history. Amazon is believed to have sold 8m in 2010, up from 2.4m in 2009. There have been 14m sales on iPads since it launched in early 2010.

US bookseller Barnes & Noble said digital books were outselling physical ones of it website, with the retailer selling nearly 1 million e-books on Christmas Day alone.

According to the Bookseller, Random House Groups Uk's e-book sales increased 800% year-on-year in 2010. Random House also launched an innovative new book 'Mortal Kiss' with teen website Stardoll. In the US, the group believes they could achieve 10% of sales via eBooks in 2011.

And finally Daniel Winner's blog analyses the market after attending a recent conference. He is taken with Pearson's diversification in to its on-line world 'Poptropica' and predicts a rich future for digital book publishing if the industry embraces the opportunity.

Also, keep an eye on The Bookseller's website http://www.thebookseller.com/.