by Richard Bagnall on November 19th, 2009.
The great and the good of the PR measurement industry gathered last night for the annual AMEC Awards, and it was a “scorcher” of an evening, as a tabloid-inspired Nick Grant put it. With winners from as far afield as Australia, Germany, Dubai and right here at Metrica towers, our industry seems in rude health.
Trevor Morris, Visiting Professor of Public Relations at the University of Westminster and chair of AMEC’s judging panel, noted the high quality of entries put before the judging panel. His opening remarks served as a great reminder of the attributes that make good PR measurement programmes great, and in turn provide maximum value to the clients we work with:
The number of companies winning awards last night (I lost count at ten – and I don’t mean glasses of wine!) shows that we’re getting the message as an industry, and our clients are getting greater insight from our measurement as a result.
One final thought from last night – Geordie Greig, editor of the London Evening Standard, spoke of the reasons behind the decision to adopt a free distribution model, and insisted that, had the paper not gone free, it would not have been in circulation today. Greig also mentioned that certain UK national papers are losing in excess of £100,000 a day. With closure the only other apparent outcome, I’m fascinated by the concept that newspapers may have to become free outlets to survive, just as news outlets and the NLA begin to charge people for accessing online content.
The death of the newspaper has been announced time and time again, but perhaps we are approaching the point where the only “scorcher” left is print itself going up in flames.
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