This is Tomorrow

Ashley's take on, well, everything

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      9 Nov 2011

      Instant #Instagram magazine. Shiny Shiny's Autumn Collection #shinyautumn #magcloud

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      via magcloud.com

      I just played a very small part in a really lovely project that was collaboration between the teams from Sutro and Shinyshiny.tv

      Over the past few weeks Shiny Shiny has been running a competition, sponsored by speaker company Orbitsound, which encouraged readers to send in (or rather tweet about) Instagram pictures they had taken that reflect Autumn.

      Not only did we get over a 100 entries, but the standard of the pics was exceptionally high.

      So we have taken the best 30 or so of them and compiled a digital/iPad magazine that's available from Magcloud here

      http://www.magcloud.com/browse/issue/295305

      You can also buy a printed version if you fancy too. The iPad version looks great and the mag is very easy to make as we used the Magcloud tie-up with Flickr. The design and lay out is fairly basic, but here's hoping that Magcloud upgrade the service to give users a little more flexibility.

      You can also see some of the best on the website here - http://www.shinyshiny.tv/2011/11/top_10_shinyautumn_photo_competition_entries...

      It worked brilliantly as a competition too, so if any brands fancy running something similar with us again (you just provide some knock out prizes) please get in touch.

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      28 Feb 2011

      Sky cools on UK's most read magazines. But what does their closure mean for publishing?

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      via mediaweek.co.uk

      Huge news this morning from Sky which has anounced that it is to massively cut its magazine output. The hero brand for customer publishing for many years now is to close Sky Sports Magazine and Sky Movies Magazine, which are each published every two months and have a combined circulation of nearly eight million copies, and reduce the distribution of its flagship Sky Magazine, which has an average circulation of 7.3 million copies, and its frequency from 12 issues per year to four. http://www.mediaweek.co.uk/news/1057214/Sky-close-magazines-job-cuts-loom/#

      The magazines will be replaced by email and reflects the company's shift from print based promotion throught to digtial products. There is also some speculation that rising paper prices and the increased cost of postage might have forced the company's hands.

      Sky Magazine has been a poster publication for the customer publishing industry for many years now. It was produced by John Brown Publishing but is now put together in house. The Sky Movies mag is however produced externally by Future Publishing.

      So where does this leave the customer publishing industry? Well while losing a flagship title is clearly a blow, the industry as a whole has never been stronger. February saw a host of new wins for agencies including some imaginative social media driven projects http://www.sutrodigital.com/880/branded-content/customer-publishing-agencies-... You can read more about new projects here http://www.apa.co.uk/news It seems that print projects are not dying, but are being used in a more strategic way. In some respects customer publishing agencies will probably be the last companies producing print magazines. They may have to deal with rising print and mail costs but a business model in which many of those costs are met by the brand is obviously a lot more robust than one in which the cost of magazine is met by advertising (on a downward spiral) and consumer purchasers (also struggling in many areas according to the latest ABCs).

      So I don't think that Sky's decision will have a huge impact on the industry as a whole. The leading supermarket magazines are still posting very healthy figures and many brands still see print as the premium way of engaging with consumers. Sky's magazines were always more vulnerable given their huge circulation and the fact they offered TV listings which are available in many other places.

      There is also the emergence of digital opportunities for customer publishing agencies namely video content, iPad magazines, blogs as well as websites. It is these opportunities which are keeping my agency Sutro very busy indeed.

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      13 Sep 2010

      New project - Sutro Digital - so what exactly is a social branded content agency?

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      via sutrodigital.com

      I haven't posted here for a few days largely because of I have been working on a new project - Sutro Digital

      You can find out more about the company here http://www.sutrodigital.com/232/about-sutro/sutro-digital-all-you-need-to-kno...

      but essentially we are a content agency that works with brands to create content that we share with their customers via social media.

      We think our social emphasis and the broad range of experience of the founders (customer publishing, PR, blogging, social media) makes us unique in the UK.

      Brands now have an amazing opportunity to enegage with their customers via social media. However we resolutely beleive that igniting some of that conversation should be quality, old fashioned content.

      We already have an amazing team in place, but as time goes by we will also be looking for freelance writers, developers and designers. So if that's you get in touch ashleyatsutrodigitaldotcom

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