The tablet market continues to heat up with Apple unveiling its next generation iPad on Wednesday.
“The PC is no longer the center of your digital world but rather just a device,” said Apple CEO Time Cook, in announcing the new iPad (not called iPad 3, as first rumored).
Indeed, the tablet has caught on in real estate, too. In the 2011 Center for REALTOR® Technology survey, when respondents were asked about the most valuable tool they started using in the last year, they cited the tablet most often. Respondents said the tablet, including devices like the iPad and Galaxy, help them stay connected, save time, and increase productivity.
At a launch event on Wednesday, Apple announced that its newest version of the iPad will have a high resolution screen — four times as many pixels as the iPad 2 and a higher resolution than most standard TVs. It will also feature a high-resolution camera on the back. The new iPad will boast a faster processing chip and will be available in a super-fast 4G wireless version. It’ll be thicker than the iPad 2 to accommodate a larger battery due to the upgrades in the screen resolution.
The new iPad will be available starting March 16 for $499 for the Wi-Fi only version and $629 for the 4G version of the device, which will be sold by Verizon Wireless and AT&T.
Meanwhile, Apple said it will be dropping its price of the iPad 2 to $399, in competing with lower-priced tablets like Amazon’s $199 Kindle Fire.
Tag Archives: Bedford Hills Homes
Downtown Bedford Hills New York | Bedford Hills Real Estate
Bedford Hills NY Real Estate for Sale | How to Get Ahead in Advertising
The marketing and advertising world is constantly changing, and so is the way you advance through it.
Recently my business partner and I met with some human resources folks to talk about how our people are faring on the job. Sure, we spent time on performance evaluation, but the real purpose is people development. Nothing enthuses me more than seeing everyone perform up to their full level of potential.
We used to develop people by making them into great specialists, i.e., great advertising people. This meant we taught them to know the client’s business, their competition, their consumer, and of course the ins and outs of how to develop great advertising.
These days the conversation is less about how to make people better specialists, and more about how to make them better generalists. You still have to know the client’s business, but also the ins and outs of advertising, retail and digital.
Put another way, advancement is not so much a straight line through one discipline, but tacking like a sailboat across various disciplines. We will always need specialists, but it’s the generalists who will advance the farthest in agencies of the future.
Some people embrace this approach naturally, teaching themselves about shopper marketing or social media; others purposely change jobs to gain experience. Sadly, some people put their heads in the sand and ignore or even criticize different channels.
My own perspective is that I’d be bored doing the same thing, the same way, for more than a couple of years. I’m grateful that my current job brings new challenges every day, and the chance to try a new way of marketing my clients’ products and services.
The course to growth and advancement
These are some of the buoys in the water that can mark your path to growth and advancement:
Advertising. Yes, advertising. Companies still spend billions of dollars on it. Television is still the fastest way to build awareness of a message, and it’s adapting to a digital world with time-shifting, pre-roll and on-demand programming. A good agency executive gets familiar with all of it.
Retail. Most agency people don’t take the time to understand Retail, whether it’s promotion or shopper marketing. You will perish for lack of knowledge because retailers are gaining so much of your clients’ marketing budgets and this discipline has become much more strategic in the past decade.
Digital. For all the industry trade press coverage of “digital”, the people with practical experience are still a narrow subculture. Your agency may have hired some brand-name experts but you only benefit if you’re working on a digital assignment. You can study Digital but there’s no substitute for experience.
Channel planning. You can only be a true generalist if you know how to combine everything in a way that will drive your client’s business. This seems obvious but it amazes me how seldom it actually gets done, and even then it is not usually done from a true consumer perspective. Just a few years ago, the easy, almost lazy thing to do was draw up a spider chart and “surround the consumer” with as many “touchpoints” as possible. That never really worked.
How to Get Ahead in Advertising
You’ve become a generalist. You understand Advertising, Retail, Digital and Channel Planning. In one of these you’re a specialist. This is how you get ahead in advertising.
Where you work is also part of the equation. Your agency or consultancy may be held back by a traditional view, antiquated organizational structure, lack of capability in specific disciplines, or the lack of a media department that years ago was spun off into a separate agency. The biggest restraint, however, is when an agency loses its ability to know the client’s business, their competition, their consumer, and how to provide business solutions.
The “agency” only loses its ability to the extent its employees lose it. You can control your own development. Familiarize yourself with other disciplines, be a great generalist, but never lose sight of the need to be able to solve a client’s business problems. The path onward and upward isn’t a straight line anymore. You’ll have to be patient and continually improve yourself.