Wednesday, October 31, 2012

European Union Plans Stricter Rules On Remote Gambling

European Union Plans Stricter Rules On Remote Gambling

The Remote Gambling Association (RGA) has welcomed the completion of a European Union (EU) Green Paper, 'Towards a comprehensive European Framework for online gambling', which proposes to enhance the safeguards in place to protect consumers, mitigate match-fixing and money laundering, and challenge member states' regimes that infringe EU law.
The Green Paper proposes:
  • Formalizing the exchange of information and cooperation between European gambling regulators by 2013;
  • Centralizing enforcement against non-compliant operators and fraudulent users at EU level, using enhanced measures, such as payment blocking and disabling access to websites;
  • Adopting recommendations on common protection of consumers and on responsible gambling advertising in 2013;
  • Extending the scope of the Anti-Money Laundering Directive to all forms of gambling in 2012;
  • Promoting expertise exchange between regulators against cybercrime;
  • Exploration of the possibility of an EU standard on gambling equipment including gambling software in 2013; and,
  • The adoption of a recommendation on best practices in the prevention and combating of betting-related match fixing in 2013, which would include promoting cooperation and dialogue at an international level on the topic.

Friday, February 1, 2008

The TopTen Marketing Trends for 2008

In 2008 marketers should avoid over-hyped opportunities and focus instead on measuring their campaigns' success, one satisfied customer at a time, according to Drew Neisser, CEO for US-based experiential marketing agency Renegade.

Neisser has published a 'top ten' of marketing industry trends that will be worth considering during the coming year, including:

Time to go green
A "green" plan is no longer a luxury, or an option. Every day, another venerable brand commits to a sustainable future. While there is much "green washing", rating services such as B Corporation will set standards that will have major companies fighting to prove their greenness. Expect to find a new seat being formed in the boardroom: Chief Green Officer (CGO).

Ads in the great outdoors
This year's surprise was the rebound of out-of-home advertising, growing faster than any channel except the internet. Outdoor reinvented itself as a technology-rich means of engaging, entertaining and educating commuters. Mini Cooper tested RFID-activated billboards with personalised messages aimed at Mini drivers, a customised approach that linked old (outdoor) with new (online) transforming an integrated media platform into a cult-building club. So called "narrowcasting" video networks continue to sprout, enabling marketers to put their messages in front of selective targets - from health clubbers, to deli shoppers, movie-goers and pet owners to elevator riders. Innovations like these will drive out-of-home advertising to new heights.

Getting in on the game
Gaming now permeates just about all of society, creating fresh ways for marketers to connect. Millions of non-golfers are swinging virtual clubs as Nintendo's Wii transformed video games. Senior citizen centres bought Wiis to entertain guests and connect with grandkids. MTV invested US$500 million in online games, on top of the millions it spent for AddictingGames. Even B2B marketers will be smart to give gaming a fresh look while blending in messaging, training or recruiting.

Mobile: I can hear you now!
This may be the year in which mobile deserves a closer look as technology improvements create new opportunities. Bluetooth-enabled phones have made it easier for marketers to provide contextually relevant information; the Air Force set up Bluetooth transmitters at racetracks to reach potential recruits. Apple's iPhone partnered with Google and Yahoo to enable ad-supported programming. Cellfire enlisted a million people to receive coupons for anything from burgers to videos. Mobile marketing can deliver highly personalised, and useful, information when and where needed and as long as marketers don't spam, mobile marketing may be the missing link in personalised communications.

Join the club
Wise marketers will capitalise on the growing appeal of social networks. Besides the obvious market leaders (MySpace and Facebook), social networks exist in niches from teens (e.g. Pizco and Tagged) to seniors (e.g. Eons) to photographers (e.g. Flickr), do-gooders (e.g. AllDayBuffet) and even B2B (e.g. LinkedIn and Plaxo). This list is almost endless. Chase's partnership with Facebook has helped make its "+1" credit card the card of choice among college students. Marketers will be smart to create a social network, or take an existing one and make it physical (for example, Second Life held its first offline convention in 2007).

Rise of the widget
Mini software applications (known as "widgets") can provide unprecedented access to hard-to-reach targets, as Facebook and MySpace can attest. Even Microsoft's Windows Vista supports user-written widgets natively. According to ComScore, some 220+ million consumers were using widgets as of May 2007. For example, iLike, which allows Facebook users to share iTunes playlists, grew to over 10 million users in only 10 months. Slide, which creates slideshows and embeds them in social network homepages, claims to be the largest personal media network in the world, reaching 120 million viewers monthly. That's just the beginning of the widget avalanche.

Roll the video
With 70% or more in broadband penetration in the US, streaming video is a "must" marketing tool. eMarketer reported that 123 million Americans watch a video at least monthly, and three-quarters tell a friend about them. Whether a B2B or B2C marketer, video is an enormous opportunity to engage, educate and entertain (those being the new "Three Es" of successful marketing). Lots of brands are producing instructional videos to help customers install or use their product or service. Others create pure entertainment, hoping to build brand affinity or drive traffic. But the ubiquity of video is not without its challenges: With 7 million hours of video online, getting through to the right consumers requires high quality storytelling and judicious editing.

From behavioural to contextual
Marketers will add behavioural targeting to their contextual search efforts. AOL believes in the future of behavioural targeting, having spent some US$275 million on Tacoda Systems, which claims to reach 120 million people in 31 discrete audience segments each month. eMarketer predicted that behavioural targeting will increase ten-fold over the next five years, growing from US$350 million to US$3.8 billion in advertising spend. A test that Renegade ran for Panasonic yielded 50% more imminent buyers of a particular consumer electronics product, making it far better than a simple search-driven strategy.

Focus on the experience
The need to focus on integrated marketing approaches is not new, but what will be new next year is how brand experiences will move to the top of the integration priorities list, becoming the driving force of marketing communications. Events and online initiatives were once treated as below-the-line after thoughts, but marketers increasingly realise that interactive brand experiences can be far more effective than advertising and should be the starting point of a customer conversation.

Marketing as a service
For years, marketers have been more concerned with what they say than what their target hears, resulting in seemingly endless monologues. Those marketers who continually support their customers, providing actual value through each communication, will be the most successful in 2008. The value exchange can take many forms, but only if the marketer understands the needs and aspirations of the customer - and then commits to a genuine dialogue at every point of contact. The HSBC BankCab, which provides free rides to HSBC customers in New York City, is one example of marketing as service, transforming customers into brand evangelists with every free ride. Marketers who treat marketing as a service and deliver real value to customers and prospects alike will undoubtedly triumph. Neisser notes that, while his golf scores are thoroughly unpredictable, his annual predictions have been far above par for the past five years.


More Info:
http://www.renegade.com
Source: Renegade Marketing

About Ireland Blogspot

Found on the Around Ireland blogspot under:


5 UNUSUAL THINGS TO DO ON YOUR IRISH VACATION

In at #4: GO HORSE-RACING



The Irish horse-racing tradition is as strong as ever and with over 300 meetings held at 27 courses annually, you are never very far from the action. Irish race courses have undergone amazing development in recent years. The larger courses offer the very best of facilities as well as some of the biggest races in Europe. The bigger courses are all located near to Dublin but there are lots of smaller courses around the country. The Curragh, Punchestown, Fairyhouse and Leopardstown are perhaps the best known but don't forget Galway with its annual July racing festival that attracts huge numbers of visitors. Most Irish courses allow you to bet with a bookie or on the 'Tote'. Collecting your winnings is easy (so is losing our shirt!), but if all you want is a fun day out with a chance to meet some locals in their original habitat, then this is a way to do it. There is an excellent free beginners guide available from the Horse Racing Ireland website here: http://www.horseracingireland.ie/racing_info/default.asp








Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Internet Marketing Conference - Search Engine Optimisation for Goracing.ie

The basic definition of E-Marketing is:


"..identifying, understanding, collaboratively creating and meeting a segment of human and social needs, wants, desires & wishes digitally"*




Currently there is an online global population of about 1.2 billion - projected to grow to 1.8 billion by 2010. (It's also an interesting fact that there are 70 million blogs on the internet - that's in just four years, with 120,000 blogs being added each day!). There's obviously a huge audience out there, but how do you get your message across? How do you get your website noticed online?



Alot of the Conference seemed to focus on Search Engine Optimisation, using the correct keywords and including them in the text & metadata of your site - so when someone searches for a service/product that you're offering your website comes up in the listing.



70% of internet users use Google as their main search engine. Google offer a service of "Ad words" which more or less have the aim of improving your search rating by providing sponsored links when key words are searched - though the ratio on click throughs on these links is 6:1 as compared to organic (non-sponsored) links which appear on the left hand side of the screen. It's every company's dream to be top of the organic results on the left hand side of the screen. So I did a test: I googled horse racing and this is what came up....


Other ways to improve your search engine "friendliness" included using Blogs - which should be rich in keywords and provide numerous links to your website. You can also include yourself in directories such as browseireland.com or the online Independent Directory to increase your search listings - as these are generally regional, they may be a valid option for individual racecourse sites.



*Adapted from Philip Kotler's original definition of marketing






IRISH RACING THROUGH THE AGES



The specially commissioned "Racing Through the Ages - From Celtic Warrior to Celtic Tiger" is now available for all the view on our website http://www.goracing.ie/

Click here to view directly



Wednesday, October 3, 2007

The Eleven Commandments of PR

The inexorable rise of PR has been noted in the marketing industry during the last three years. As the profession has assumed increased gravitas and earned client respect, it’s appropriate to consider the tenets of what makes great PR work so well.

Here then are the Eleven Commandments of PR:

One: Thou Shalt Integrate
PR’s proper role in the marketing and communications mix is an integral one. In other words it works extremely well for clients if it’s integrated into an overall communications plan that may involve several marketing services suppliers.
It shouldn’t be a choice between advertising and PR - it should be a given that both will perform optimally if they are given equal head-space in the marketing mix.

Two: Thou Shalt Respect The Power Of The Invisible
Although effective advertising is easily recognised and oft lauded, the hallmark of really great PR is sometimes its invisibility. While advertising shouts in an above the line space, the workings of public relations sometimes occur off-stage.
Even though an exceptional result is achieved, the PR deus ex machina is often hidden and for this reason, the industry often doesn’t get the in-your-face attention that advertising does. PR doesn’t need to shout to get its message across.

Three: PR Buildeth Brands
PR is extremely effective as a brand building tool. This tends to surprise a lot of people. PR activations can make a brand come alive for the experiential audience and they can then be publicised to grow the audience footprint. Thus an unforgettable party for 100 people might be talked about and aspired to by millions of potential consumers once it’s been broadcast and written up.
PR can be very effective in major brand building but it’s one of many communications disciplines that generate heat in this kind of marketing arena. However, there are certain areas where PR alone moves the needle: crisis communication, reputation management, investor relations and these are when PR takes the lead.

Four: PR Beateth The Bottom Line
Historically, PR was seen as the poor cousin of the marketing industry but if there are any marketers left who still think and budget this way, then they are the victims of lazy thinking and have been left behind in the PR-fuelled stampede to the tills.
Clients tend to turn to PR when there is budgetary pressure to deliver exceptional sales results with less resource than the previous fiscal. We have seen many clients turn to PR in hard times to drive the message home and get the marketplace to action. If clients have budget available, I will always endorse that advertising spend be allocated.

Five: Have I Got A Proposition For You!
PR is particularly effective if a brand has a complex proposition. It’s sometimes impossible to convey the advantages of a product through advertising if they are many and various simply because it’s too costly to buy the airtime or page space necessary to extol all its virtues.
On the other hand, editorial publicity for a product’s capabilities can often be achieved and with great credibility.

Six: Get With The Programme
The role of PR has always been communication with stakeholders, however the latter is defined. So although that role hasn’t changed, the practice of PR has been transformed by social and technological developments.
These same shifts in society and the modern age must also prompt advertisers to reinvent their offering. PR has always been about reaching and communicating with an audience and the discipline now has many innovative ways to achieve this outside of formal print and electronic channels.
The explosion of interactive technologies such as MXit, YouTube, MySpace and other social networking sites has turbo boosted the channels available to publicists engaging with the youth market, for instance.

Seven: Thou Shalt Commit
PR is at its most effective when client is committed to the discipline. This entails fast-turnaround, cooperation and chemistry.

Eight: Thou Shalt Measure
For PR to earn its place in the sun, it should be answerable to the same rigours expected of other partners in the marketing supply chain. The best PR campaigns are built on a solid foundation of research, strategy, objective-setting and measurement. All too often, clients see PR agencies as inventory suppliers and only want implementation.

Nine: Failure Is An Option
When does PR fail? It can happen and usually there’s very little to finger blame about afterwards if sound strategy and planning were followed. But PR should only fail if implementation is in the hands of the inexperienced. Logically though, PR may fail if any of the following steps are not accounted for or taken for granted: strategy, setting objectives, planning, execution, measurement and evaluation.

Ten: Sticketh To The Knitting
PR is not such a dark art that it can’t be mastered by anyone with an above average IQ, a tertiary education and 20 years experience. It can be learned but do you really have the time to try and do it better than the professional consultancy you’ve just hired? I’ve been in the business for more than two decades and I’m still learning how to perfect my craft every day.

Eleven: Under-Promise And Over-Deliver.
Sometimes, the most valuable and meaningful aspects of working with a top PR firm are the parts you don’t pay for.

The Eleven Commandments of PR were written by Marcus Brewster, one of the leading lights of the PR industry in South Africa

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Go Racing Marquee at National Ploughing Championships



This is the front on the "Go Racing" Marquee at the Ploughing Championships in Tullamore this year (Sept 25th - 27th). This photo was taken on Thursday just after the front had gone up, so still plenty more to be added!



This is HRI's fourth Ploughing Championships and we'll be following a similiar tried and tested formula to that of the previous years. Hector O hEochagain will host on the Tuesday and Wednesday and we have Brendan McArdle for Thursday. We'll be following the same format of three workshop events each day at 11am, 2pm & 4pm part of which will be interviews with the country's top trainers and jockeys; confirmed so far we have Ruby Walsh, Mouse Morris, Frances Crowley, Davy Russell, Jimmy Mangan, Pat Smullen, Eddie Harty, Robert Power, Paddy Flood & Garret Cotter (-many more to confirm over the weekend).



With over 40,000 people from all over Ireland attending the Ploughing each day this is a great opportunity for the racecourses to promote their winter meetings, and most will be in attendance providing information and offers to the public. We'll also be joined by Tote Ireland, the Irish National Stud and RACE (Racing Academy & Centre of Education), who will be on hand with their race simulator giving race riding demonstrations to budding jockeys.

It's a hard few days but well worth the results - let's hope it stays dry!!!