New Site — and Semantic Technologies — May Help The Publishing Industry Sail To The New Media World
Photo Courtesy: Flickr/KitAy
A little over five hundred years ago, Columbus sailed to a new world. Today, the media industry is on a long, strange trip of its own, as traditionally print-focused media companies continue to try to figure out how to evolve their models to fit the New Web World.
Perhaps TheMediaBriefing.com, a new site from startup Briefing Media Ltd., can help them navigate these tumultuous waters and again set foot on solid ground. Founded by Neil Thackray (who headed up the launch of The Industry Standard in Europe) and Rory Brown (formerly a managing director at Incisive Media, which purchased Searchenginewatch.com and the Search Engine Strategies Trade Shows from Jupitermedia, now WebMediaBrands, in 2005), the site combines exclusive original content from media industry executives with specialist sources of information for the industry drawn from the web’s wealth of bloggers, social media, newspapers, analyst reports, research data and traditional trade media.
The founders’ background in media means they very much understand how challenging the space is today, and how important it is for media companies to harness insight into how they’re going to survive the changes underway. “A lot of publishers I know are actively trying to clone their brand in APAC, because it will be five or ten years before they’re hit there by the digital challenge, but that’s part of the problem as well,” says Brown. “People are trying to find a way of replicating the past. A new iPad app, for instance, is just harping back to ways people used to make money, so the site talks a lot about the digital challenge openly, and doesn’t really try to fudge those issues. This is mass disruption going on. The best way you can get through it is experiment and learning from others.”









A recent report from Gilbane Group senior analyst Lynda Moulton makes good reading for enterprise business leaders who want to better understand why and how their organization can – and should – consider semantic software technologies as core to turning the vast amount of information business units possess into knowledge that they can act on.




