Friday 25 March 2011

March 25, 2011

We have worked with Mark a lot to provide our clients with a credible, external coach to ensure they have mastered the skills required to successfully handle media interviews, everything from print to broadcast media.

His ‘homework’ in advance of the sessions is hugely valuable to our clients, his sessions really challenge but with positive effect. He works in partnership with us, so we can deliver seamless, meaningful sessions time after time.

His passion really does set him apart from the rest and we would have no hesitation in recommending him to you.

He is very good at judging the delivery of his expertise too which in this market is so important especially as he is often training CEOs who don’t necessarily believe they need coaching!”

Kate O’Shea

Impact Asia


Monday 4 January 2010

Investor Communications specialists launch IR-TV™ to help listed companies stay in touch with shareholders and attract new investors

Singapore/Bangkok, January 4, 2010 – EIGHT IRIS COMMUNICATIONS (Eight Iris), a leading investor relations specialist firm, and HONG BAO MEDIA (HBM), the leading web television news service, have announced a tie-up to launch Investor Relations Television (IR-TV) for listed and pre-IPO companies in Asia.

Eight Iris specializes in helping companies communicate to potential investors why they should invest in them or retain and build on their existing shareholding.

Through the tie-up with HBM, Eight Iris is adding customised, regular television news coverage for client companies to show off their operations, introduce management to shareholders, and update investors about their latest significant announcements.

In addition to the client companies’ own websites, IR-TV is syndicated to 550,000 institutional investors globally via ThomsonReuters, among other online and mobile channels.

“Top notch clients such as Maybank and Centraland are always looking for more effective ways to reach out to investors – but they aren’t featured on CNBC or Bloomberg every time they have a market-moving announcement to make”, said TH Hong, Managing Director of Eight Iris, “with HBM’s web television news service, we can offer this coverage and ensure it is seen by prospective and current shareholders in an audio-visual way that is more engaging than plain text.”

Headed by former CNBC anchor Mark Laudi, HBM produces credible, informative news programs for the Securities Investors Association (Singapore), Maybank, FTSE and many other leading companies.

“HBM and Eight Iris are an excellent fit”, Laudi said, “Eight Iris provides advice on the messages to be imparted to current and prospective investors, while we make those messages come alive on IR-TV and ensure it gets out to the marketplace.”

Financial terms were not disclosed.


For further information:

TH Hong
Managing Director
Eight Iris Communications
(+66) 8162 16811
th@8iris.com
http://www.8iris.com

Mark Laudi
Managing Director
Hong Bao Media (Holdings) Pte Ltd
(+65) 9017 3534
mark.laudi@hongbaomedia.com
http://www.hongbaomedia.com

Monday 16 November 2009

Macquarie Digital - what all banks and brokerages should consider


Macquarie’s digital offering (right) may not be perfect, but they demonstrate very well how banks and stock brokerages can:

1. Add value beyond execution of trades
2. Foster brand loyalty through education of their target market
3. Showcase the depth and breadth of expertise which even regular clients may not have been aware of

Macquarie is so committed to this they have established their own internal web television department.

However, we would like to offer a few pointers for improvement:

1. More experienced interviewer – she does alright, but could add a little more zing to presentations
2. Tougher questions – these would spice up the presentations and make them more watchable – goes back to the first point
3. Shorter clips = greater chance viewers would watch the clips to their conclusion
4. Call-to-action – what I really miss is “click to download the full research”, “click to view another clip on this subject”, “click to contact your relationship manager/broker”, “click to trade online”, and so on

If you are interested in exploring launching a similar web television program for your company, I am available for a further conversation.

We can help with:

1. Business model – ensuring you earn revenue from it
2. Production – we act as your bolt-on web television station (and we have a pool of multilingual, experienced television presenters)
3. Presentation skills training – to ensure your analysts and brokers come across as their best
4. Syndication – ensuring your content reaches your clients, and prospective clients

Best wishes

Mark Laudi

Thursday 27 August 2009

Booz & Co: The shift to "private-label media" is on

Here is an excellent report from Booz & Co about what they call “private-label media”: web television channels of companies on their own websites.

It gives concrete examples of how companies have used web television content to drive interaction with their communities.

We think there needs to be greater emphasis on syndicating the content beyond the creator's website. But these comments leapt out at me (please also watch the video and take part in the poll to the right of this column):
These marketers recognise that with the right mix of content, utility, community and product, they can create compelling premium experiences for consumers. And they see that these efforts deliver powerful benefits in brand building, relationship building and lead generation.

These are not digital infomercials; the best private-label media connect consumers directly to brands.

With their own digital media, marketers can achieve a broad set of marketing objectives – branding, consumer insight, and even lead generation – often at a higher return on investment and lower overall cost.
For most marketers, the lure of such a proposition will prove irresistible.
As a result, we expect the movement toward private-label media to be one of the lasting developments that emerge from the current upheaval.

Please also watch the video and take part in the poll to the right of this column. Naturally, I welcome your thoughts and comments.

Cheers
Mark

Wednesday 8 July 2009

WheelsTV Asia and Hong Bao Media to produce broadcast content for Singapore, China and other Asian markets

Hi everyone

We've just sent out this news release:

SINGAPORE, Wednesday, 8 July, 2009 – WheelsTV Asia Private Limited, operator of one of the world’s most popular web television channels about cars, www.wheelstv.asia, and Hong Bao Media (Holdings) Pte Ltd, the leading producer of web television news channels in Singapore, today announced they have signed a broadcast content production agreement ahead of WheelsTV Asia’s launch early next year.

The strategic partnership between WheelsTV Asia and Hong Bao Media will result in the production of up to 300 hours of high-definition motor vehicle broadcast content per year to be aired over six different platforms, including cable and satellite TV, IPTV, Broadband, video-on-demand, and mobile phones.

"WheelsTV Asia is delighted to partner with Hong Bao Media for our upcoming WheelsTV Asia Network. Mark Laudi and his staff bring the highest professional standards to this partnership and we look forward to working with Hong Bao Media as our primary production partners for many years to come," said Jerald Barisano, Chairman & CEO of WheelsTV Asia Private Limited.

"We met with and interviewed more than twelve different production houses throughout Asia, before finally selecting Hong Bao Media as our production partner. WheelsTV Asia and our partner company in the USA, WheelsTV North America, has produced award winning motor vehicle content over the last fifteen years, and we were looking for a production partner that would maintain these production values for our Asian programming. After a rigorous selection process involving more than twelve different production houses across Asia, we selected Hong Bao Media for their broadcast expertise, and high professional standards,” added Mr Barisano.

Hong Bao Media will use its established broadcast studio in Singapore as its primary production facility.

“Today’s announcement reiterates that television of the future will be further segmented to suit niche audiences and Channels with specific subject matter expertise, and able to broadcast on internet, mobile and out-of-home channels offer both cost-effective syndication opportunities and are well positioned to meet the needs of advertisers looking for measurable results,” said Mark Laudi, Managing Director of Hong Bao Media (Holdings) Pte Ltd.

“We are delighted to have been selected by WheelsTV Asia to produce its programs, in particular given the strong growth in car ownership in many parts of the region which are certain to drive viewership of the channel,” added Mr Laudi.



FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:

Mr Jerald Barisano
Chaiman & CEO
WheelsTV Asia Private Limited
Tel. (+65) 6507 4437
Mobile (+65) 9612 7119
jerryb@wheelstv.net

Mr Mark Laudi
Managing Director
Hong Bao Media (Holdings) Pte Ltd
Tel. (+65) 6223 2249
Mobile (+65) 9017 3534
mark.laudi@hongbaomedia.com


About WheelsTV Asia:

WheelsTV Asia Private Limited is the ultimate automotive related content provider crossing multiple distribution platforms throughout Asia. It has obtained the exclusive license for Asia from its subsidiary y company, WheelsTV USA, and owns the rights to its programming, trademark, logo and branding for a minimum of 10 years.

WheelsTV Asia, based in Singapore, has been distributing programming since 2006 and is poised to expand its television capabilities along with multiple digital platforms including online, VOD and mobile.
The automotive category has a broad appeal especially among Asian consumers as their disposable incomes rise disproportionably to the rest of the world. The opportunity to provide entertaining and informative programming to the only region where automobile purchases will show growth, not only provides a service to industry and potential buyers, but allows WheelsTV Asia to be the preeminent automotive communication company in Pan-Asia.

About Jerald Barisano:

Mr Barisano, along with his brother James, was one of the original creators of WheelsTV in the USA in 1989, and has over 30 years experience in the broadcast industry. He was the trackside television announcer for the inaugural Singapore Formula I Grand Prix, the first ever night race, on MediaCorp Channel 5 in Singapore in September 2008. Mr Barisano is active in the Singapore community, his wife Jennifer and he are Singapore Permanent Residents, and he is an active member of the American Chamber of Commerce, the American Association and the Boston University Alumni Association of Singapore.

About Hong Bao Media:

Hong Bao Media (Holdings) Pte Ltd creates, produces and syndicates web television channels. Established in 2002, it currently produces news and commentary about Singapore and Malaysian stock markets and syndicates these under the brand Investor Central via Thomson Reuters, MSN, SingTel, StarHub, MobileOne, PropertyGuru and many others. It has also created news channels and programs for SingTel, FTSE, Maybank, Phillip Securities, EMC, Datacraft, Neptune Orient Lines, World-Check and many others.

About Mark Laudi:

Mr Laudi is an award-winning journalist and broadcaster, well-known to radio and television audiences in the Asia Pacific.

During his seven year career at CNBC Asia Pacific, he held almost every position in the newsroom, including Producer and Australia Editor, and in front of the camera as Stock Reporter, Anchor and Field Reporter. At age 28, he launched CNBC Australia in Sydney as Bureau Chief.

In Singapore, he was a member of the inaugural production and presentation team of English-language talk radio station 938LIVE, which followed a four year career on ABC Local Radio in Western Australia and South Australia.

Monday 29 June 2009

DIY online video: Producing brand enhancing content

Responding to client requests, we are now offering workshops for companies wanting to produce their own online video programs.

Different companies have different needs. Our multinational clients in particular demand web television, which enhance their brands and look, feel and sound like televison programs. We continue to produce such content for them.

But we have also found that some of our smaller clients, with a "start-up mentality" of doing everything themselves, want to give it a try and do it in-house.

For these clients, these 1-day workshops give them the skills they need to produce respectable online video, and get them started on the way to earning a return on that investment.

If you are in the publishing industry, click here for a brief description.

If you are in the banking and stock broking industries, click here for a customised description.

For all other industries, please click here.

Btw, I frequently get asked why we differentiate between "online video" and "web television".

What better way to demonstrate than with a web TV program (duration: 2:20)


(If the video doesn't play, click here)

Naturally, I would be happy to continue the conversation - as well as provide some real examples of both - at the Asian Publishing Convention in Manila mid-July.

I look forward to meeting you there.

Cheers
Mark

Tuesday 12 May 2009

Investor Central: Now on ThomsonReuters


I'm delighted to announce Hong Bao Media's news channel Investor Central is now being syndicated through ThomsonReuters' new web television portal Reuters Insider.

This means our web television content is now able to reach 550,000 institutional investors globally.

These are fund managers, research analysts, investor relations specialists, stock brokers, sales traders, investment bankers, private bankers, compliance managers and a host of other people who manage other people's money.

The video above shows you the audience break-down and a demonstration of the portal (please email me for a high-res version).

We are very excited about this because:
1. It is a ringing endorsement of Investor Central content, focusing on coverage of Singapore and Malaysia-listed stocks through fundamental analysis
2. It opens the door to us extending our coverage to other markets globally
3. It allows us to give our branded content clients global exposure to a high value, targeted audience

The portal is similar to YouTube in that:
1. It is web-based – no applications needed to be downloaded
2. It is powered by Adobe Flash technology, so the image quality is very good and web TV programs cannot be pirated
3. Web TV programs can be tagged with keywords, making content easy to find
4. Users can create a favourites list, so they can get exactly the content they want
5. Users can forward links to clips to their friends, comment on programs and provide feedback to program producers
6. Web TV programs can be viewed in full-screen

But the portal is different from YouTube in that:
1. It does not allow users to upload content – all content is professionally produced
2. It is only accessible to paid-up subscribers of the Reuters 3000 Xtra Terminal (details, more details), which increases the value of the audience.
3. Content on Reuters Insider is auto-transcribed, allowing for programs to be searched by keywords and for users to jump to those parts which interest them most.

So, if you:
1. Want to increase your profile and raise awareness among 550,000 institutional investors globally, or
2. Create your own television news channel to engage your target audience

I would be happy to make myself available for further discussion.

Best wishes
Mark Laudi

Monday 2 March 2009

Screens in taxis: case study

We have had some surprising results from a campaign we ran for a branded content client using TV screens in taxis.

For two weeks, a 30-second promo was screened on iCabTV, which is installed in the headrests of the passenger seats of 1,000 taxis in Singapore.

The call-to-action was for viewers to send the keyword "dinner" and their name to a shortcode, with a view to being invited for dinner with the country manager of ipac financial planning, Greg Campbell.

I'm pleased to say we beat the target number of invited guests handsomely.

The reason this was surprising was:

1. Financial advisory is a tough job, particularly now during the financial crisis. We had feared viewers would not respond well to a dinner with a financial planner.
2. The call-to-action did not offer instant gratification. Unlike a "mention this keyword at Starbucks for a free frappuccino" campaign, the invite to a dinner is a much harder sell.

In the event, the client was delighted. They weren't looking for, say, 20,000 respondents to a "come to our office for free movie tickets" campaign, of which few if any were potential customers.

We conducted an interview with Jim Chuang, CEO of UZoneMedia, the company that runs iCabTV, demonstrating the screens and providing more information on reach and the return-on-investment.

Watch it here.

If you are not yet a member of the Hong Bao Media Facebook Group, please join here.

Wednesday 11 February 2009

Does online video work?

Online video

Hulu who?

Feb 5th 2009 | SAN FRANCISCO
From The Economist print edition


After much confusion, it is becoming clear what works in online video

IN THE spring of 2007 Jason Kilar was trying to beef up the video offerings of his employer, Amazon, the world’s largest online retailer, when he got a call from a headhunting firm. Would he consider running Hulu, a new joint venture by two “old media” giants, NBC Universal and News Corp? The idea was to enter the confusing online-video market by starting a service from scratch—and doing it properly. Mr Kilar said yes. He showed up in his new office in Santa Monica, near Los Angeles, and with his small team started scribbling ideas on the “whiteboard” wallpaper.

The excitement as well as the confusion had started in 2006, when a young website, YouTube, shot out of nowhere to become that year’s “next big thing”. Within months, YouTube sold itself to Google, the world’s largest internet firm. YouTube had risen so fast by making it easy to watch and share videos in any web browser, and by making it almost as easy to upload home-made videos to its site. Such “user-generated content” seemed to be the future.

In one sense this turned out to be correct. YouTube went on to dominate web video as measured by the number of videos that users watch (see chart). Its social and even political importance are hard to overstate. From “Obama Girl” videos and tutorials about tying shoelaces or folding origami to Yoga and aerobics instruction, YouTube has changed lives. But there was a catch. Advertisers, by and large, will not touch user-generated content with a barge pole. Its quality is variable, to say the least; its content occasionally off-putting. No brand wants to be near it. And much of it is illegal—pirated from large media companies and uploaded by fans. Media giants, led by Viacom, were suing. So there was a threat of costs and no promise of revenues. YouTube is undoubtedly a phenomenon, but it is not a business.






So others showed up hoping to fill that gap. Until recently, says Shahid Khan, a video analyst at IBB Consulting, there were only question-marks. Did a new service need user-generated content as well as professional videos? Was it better to aggregate the content of many media companies or to be an outlet for just one? Would people prefer to download films or television shows to their computers, then transfer them to their iPods, as Apple was betting? Or would they prefer “streaming” a video just once? If so, might they be persuaded to install a bespoke video application onto their computers, or would they insist on watching videos inside their web browsers? Would they pay to watch, or would advertising provide the revenues?

Almost every permutation has been tried. From Amazon to Apple, from Netflix to Joost, from ABC to CBS’s TV.com, companies old and young started serving videos over the internet. Into this mess Mr Kilar tried to enter with the service that was to be Hulu. The bloggers at first scoffed: it turns out that Hulu can mean “cease and desist” in Swahili. But then they started paying attention.



Tune in for the answers
Today, even though advertising is destined for a depression, Hulu appears to have clarified much of the confusion. Mr Kilar will not say what revenue or profit Hulu is making. But it seems to be successful by any measure. Although Hulu is still far behind YouTube (see chart), users have been flocking to it, watching 216m videos in December. Just as importantly, Hulu’s inventory for advertisers appears to be sold out. So Hulu is in the rare position of being able to increase inventory (through new content and more views) and make money from it. Hulu now has more than 100 advertisers, including big brands such as McDonald’s, Bank of America and Best Buy.

It therefore appears that Mr Kilar has, in effect, answered a lot of the questions. He contemplated user-generated content, then decided that “the world didn’t need yet another” YouTube; so Hulu has only professional content, and advertisers love it. He also talked with his bosses at NBC Universal and Fox and agreed that aggregating the content of many was “something potentially much larger” than piping out the videos of just two. Hulu now offers content from more than 110 partners.

Mr Kilar also bet on streaming via the web, rather than letting users download. Rivals such as Joost have made the same choice. Films and TV differ from music, says Mike Volpi, Joost’s boss, in that people watching tend to sit still, whereas people listening tend to move; and people usually watch a show only once but listen to a song again and again. There is a place for Apple’s model of downloading and buying videos—children, for example, like to watch the same TV programme many times—but that market is likely to be smaller.

Mr Kilar was also early to choose the right way of streaming video: through the browser, with a simple and sleek design. He began, he says, with the idea that the site should “not look like Tokyo at night”—in other words, it should be as simple as YouTube is cluttered. And the service should be so easy to use that “my mother would be proficient on it in 15 seconds or less, with no help from me.” Mr Kilar, who began his career at Walt Disney, wanted Hulu to offer the same rich-but-clean experience as Disney’s theme parks do.

Accordingly, he decided against making users download a special piece of software, which would not have “passed the mom test.” This turned out to be correct. Joost started by offering video through its own software application, but lost out to Hulu and did an about-face. A few weeks ago it discontinued its downloadable application and began streaming only through the browser. This late conversion was Joost’s “biggest flaw”, says IBB’s Mr Khan, and now leaves it far behind.

The browser-based approach favours streaming rather than downloads, but that does not mean that the paid-for download model is dead. Mr Khan thinks that some viewers will want to own content, and that may become a premium option on free services such as Hulu.

But the bigger lesson from Hulu’s success is that supporting streamed video with advertising, rather than charging for downloads, turns out to work very well. Hulu’s ads are few and short, with a subtle countdown timer that makes them even more bearable. In some cases viewers can even choose which ad to watch, so it is more likely to be relevant to their interests. And people tend to remember the advertisements they see on Hulu much better than they recall television ads, says Mr Kilar, so advertisers are pleased.

It is too early to declare Hulu the winner. It “has done a very good job,” admits Joost’s Mr Volpi, but “the die has not been cast yet.” Mr Khan thinks Amazon’s offering may become more compelling, and that TV.com, formerly a provider of television listings and now a streaming site owned by CBS, may yet come from behind. But for the moment it appears that YouTube proved that people would watch videos online—whereas Hulu is proving that advertisers will foot the bill.

Sunday 8 February 2009

What keeps S'pore execs awake at night: Negative media publicity worries them

We concur with Weber Shandwick that it is "surprising and alarming" that many executives underestimate the influence of online media.

Even as they repeatedly tell us they are online more than they are watching, listening to or reading traditional television, radio and print offerings, they still tell researchers they think traditional media have a bigger influence on their reputations.

Ironically, the two SPH-owned newspapers which wrote (articles below) about the research by Weber Shandwick and the Economist Intelligence Unit come to two different conclusions:

The Straits Times report says "traditional media is still what matters".

The Business Times report ends with "it [new media] matters because people today live online".

Naturally we think the Business Times is closer to the mark.

That's not to say we advocate a wholesale switch away from traditional media. No new media has ever fully replaced another, as the prevalence of cinema and radio in a world of cable TV and online media indicates.

But for executives to fear reputational damage from tightly controlled traditional media and not from loosely-controlled new media defies logic.

Time to wise up to the well-documented influence bloggers have, and moreover, use these to proactively manage reputations than merely react when someone else has said something about them.

What keeps S'pore execs awake at night
Negative media publicity worries them; traditional media more credible
Business Times

(SINGAPORE) Singapore executives are the world's most concerned about negative stories in the media, research by Weber Shandwick and the Economist Intelligence Unit shows. Some 97 per cent of the Singapore executives surveyed saw negative media coverage as the greatest perceived cause of reputation damage, as compared to 89 per cent in China, 81 per cent in Hong Kong, and 76 per cent in other Asian countries.

Negative media coverage is the greatest perceived cause of reputation damage across the globe. Online customer complaints are also seen as reputation spoilers - and again Singapore executives fret the most about them. These concern 84 per cent of Singapore executives, compared to 71 per cent of executives globally.

The research was conducted among 703 senior executives across North America, Europe, Asia Pacific and other markets, in more than 20 industries in 62 countries.

Another interesting finding was that traditional media is considered more influential than online media globally. In fact, Australia, China, and Hong Kong see traditional media as more than twice as influential as new media. Traditional media forms include television, radio and newspapers, while new media forms include websites, blogs and social networks.

Research also found that executives in Asia Pacific, like their global peers, trust traditional media in online forms more than strictly online media itself. Only 8 per cent or less of the global executives surveyed saw online videos, social networking websites, Wikipedia and photo-sharing websites as potential reputational hazards.

With consumer-generated media exploding on the Internet and powerful bloggers on the rise, Weber Shandwick finds it 'surprising and alarming' that executives everywhere vastly overlook new media's potential as a reputation spoiler. However, it is clear that while online media is on the rise, traditional media is still what matters.

S'pore bosses most thin-skinned about bad press: Survey
Straits Times


BOSSES here are far more likely to tear their hair out when their firm's reputation takes a hit than executives anywhere else in the world. About 97 per cent of respondents to a new survey said they were concerned about negative media stories about their firms or themselves, compared with an average of 84 per cent worldwide. Customer complaints on websites or in the media also made executives here uneasy: 84 per cent would be concerned compared with 71 per cent worldwide.

Global public relations firm Weber Shandwick and the Economic Intelligence Unit, a research firm linked to the Economist magazine, surveyed more than 700 senior executives from 62 countries, including 62 from Singapore. Sixty per cent of those surveyed came from firms with annual revenue of more than US$500 million (S$758 million). The survey - conducted online in June and July last year - found that while 99 per cent of executives used the Internet to get a feel of their company's reputation, just 57 per cent worldwide found it 'useful' in their judgment and 47 per cent here found the Internet useful.

Most bosses - 62 per cent worldwide and 66 per cent in Singapore - still found traditional media like newspapers and television news more influential. They were also 'blind to the blogosphere' - online journals where people write about products, culture and issues. 'Like executives elsewhere, those in the Asia-Pacific region believe that the least effective way to protect corporate reputations online is to build relationships with influential bloggers. Only 12 per cent of Asian executives...consider this strategy helpful,' said the survey.

A Weber Shandwick spokesman added that 'today's leaders are increasingly facing new reputational challenges as the Internet grows and new digital platforms gain acceptance'. If a company hits trouble online, its actions could draw 'instant comment from an array of audiences', for which there are no 'digital erasers'. A separate snap poll by Interactive Marketing Magazine seemed to indicate the same wariness towards new media.

Almost half of the 206 respondents said that advertisers should stay away from offensive or defamatory blogs, while another 17 per cent said that advertisers should simply not go near blogs at all.
Yet social media specialist Melvin Yuan, who is also the digital strategies director of public relations firm Waggener Edstrom, felt that there were companies who were 'ahead of the curve'. 'While there are companies that are totally oblivious to new media, there are also those that are very nimble,' he said, adding that 'your reputation in real life is very much affected by what happens online too. It matters because people today live online'.