Omnicom’s Wren tops global pay league after $10m haul
Posted in: UncategorizedLONDON – John Wren, the Omnicom chief executive, was the mostly highly paid marketing services executive in 2007, taking home $10.4m (£5.3m).
LONDON – John Wren, the Omnicom chief executive, was the mostly highly paid marketing services executive in 2007, taking home $10.4m (£5.3m).
LONDON – Allianz Insurance has appointed Joshua G2 as lead strategic agency for its motor and home insurance DM products after a four-way pitch.
LONDON – Consumers are calling on brands, rather than governments, to take responsibility for reducing the impact of climate change, according to a global study by Havas Media.
LONDON – As Microsoft and Yahoo! feel the fall-out from the deal that wasn’t, Stephen Foster looks ahead to Yahoo!’s annual board meeting and an interesting suggestion for a new director.
LONDON – Tesco has been named the most valuable brand on the high street, worth £8.6bn, almost £4bn more than rival Sainsbury’s, according to a valuation consultancy report.
NEW YORK – Cablevision Systems has won the race to buy New York tabloid Newsday, after Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation dropped out.
LONDON – Klaus Wuebbenhorst, chief executive of market research company GfK, has hit out at Sir Martin Sorrell after the he said that GfK staff should be worried about their jobs if its planned merger with TNS goes ahead.
LONDON – Absolut Vodka has broken its first ever TV commercial in the UK, made by TBWA\Chiat\Day, New York.
By David A Utter for WebProNews
Disaster may have affected a million people
The company organized some of its resources to assist the humanitarian efforts going on in Myanmar, where thousands have died or are missing after a cyclone tore through the country.
Although the military rulership of Myanmar, still called Burma by many countries, isn’t the most open of governments, their borders are as open as any to satellites.
Fortunately for relief efforts in the wake of the Myanmar cyclone disaster, the government’s continued refusal to grant visas to relief workers isn’t hindering Google from trying to help. The search advertising company showed on its LatLong blog a new layer for Google Earth that shows where to find all of the known healthcare centers (as of a 2002 survey) in the country.
The new layer, developed by Direct Relief International, may be downloaded by any Google Earth client:
We color-coded the sites by the capacity of the facility so that you can visually differentiate between larger hospitals, specialized medical units, and clinics/rural health centers.
By combining layers showing the governmental and nongovernmental health facilities that we work with, and the physical impact, we can focus our response on those points of access to healthcare that are serving the most affected communities. Using this geospatial information in conjunction with situation reports from the field enables us to more efficiently target our assistance.
Google also set up a cyclone relief donations page, backed by its Checkout service. Visitors may donate to Direct Relief International and to Unicef from the page to help relief efforts.
Aside from the fact the headline would put Dr. Seuss to shame, the context of ad and story really couldn’t get much worse…
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NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — From day one, Liz Cahill made it her goal to "bring back Lee," the iconic brand that had lost a bit of its "power," she said, amid a sea of sub-brands. The task sounds daunting, but Ms. Cahill is enthusiastic about the opportunities she sees ahead for Lee, particularly those created by new-media platforms.