November 18th, 2009
As reported in this week’s Media, marketers, in their rush to embrace social networking, are neglecting more basic online media formats. A new Asian survey, conducted by Edelman and Brandtology, indicates that forums and bulletin boards, rather than social networking sites, are key for reaching and interacting with target audiences.
The Digital Brand Index study aimed to identify the most widely talked-about technology brands across Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Taiwan. The study, which will be expanded to Japan and Korea in the coming months, covered a total of 800,000 mentions of 233 major technology brands on 4,348 online channels including forums, blogs, social networking sites and news websites.
Recent phenomenon Twitter was found to be the most commonly used channel in India and Australia, but in other markets, particularly Southeast Asia, technology-related forums emerged as the main platform for discussion - for example, in Singapore, 90% of conversation took place on forums.
Of the technology sector brands discussed online, Google and Microsoft ranked in the top 10 in all markets. Google was the most widely discussed brand in both India and Malaysia, while Nokia had the highest number of mentions in China. The brand Intel was popular in a number of geographical markets including Hong Kong, India, Indonesia and Malaysia and Taiwan.
To find out more about the research we conduct in the Technology sector, please visit: http://b2binternational.com/China/b2bsectors/informationtechnology.php
Alternatively, to learn more about branding studies, please visit: http://b2binternational.com/China/research/cn/branding.php
Posted in Asia, Australia, Brands, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Online Marketing, Singapore, South East Asia, Survey, Taiwan, Technology sector | No Comments »
October 30th, 2009
Asia’s most influential business executives are maintaining their spend in the traditional areas of media, while also increasing significantly what they spend on forms of digital media. This is according to Ipsos MediaCT’s BE:ASIA 2009 Survey, conducted among more than 9,500 members of Asia’s business elite across Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand.
The research found that these business decision-makers have not reduced their use of international print and broadcast media. In acknowledgment of the recession, some cuts were found to have been made in business travel spend.
About 67% of respondents read one or more international print publications, with a huge 98% claiming to have read the latest issue of a printed magazine or newspaper. The Wall Street Journal Asia is the most popular daily title with a 17% share, and Time is the favoured weekly magazine being read by 23% of respondents. CNN, with 29%, is the most popular international TV channel.
There has been a significant increase in digital uptake this past year. Since the same survey took place last year, there has been a particular increase in reference to blogs (49% reading one in the past month and 11% contributing a post during this time). 63% had visited an international media owner’s website within the past month (Yahoo News, with a weekly reach of 33%, is the most prevalent); 29% had used social networking sites; and 27% had accessed the internet via a mobile device – a massive eightfold increase since 2006.
Posted in Asia, Growth, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Market Research, Media, Media Industry, Philippines, Recession, Singapore, South Korea, Survey, Taiwan, Thailand | No Comments »