Staff Reporters
Apr 17, 2014

Media360Asia video highlights: Collaborating on content

Highlights of a discussion on collaborative content at the recent Media360Asia summit.

wide player in 16:9 format. Used on article page for Campaign.

Brands can no longer create content in isolation if they want to communicate well with their target audience. That was the takeaway from a panel around the theme of collaborative content, featuring Dean Dacko, SVP of marketing products at Malaysia Airlines; Chris Davies, director of sales and marketing at BBC Global News; Hari Krishnan, MD of Asia Pacific & Japan at LinkedIn; and Jayant Murty, director of strategy, media and integrated marketing at Intel. Adam Najberg, digital editor of the Wall Street Journal, moderated.

This is the third in a series of exclusive highlight videos taking you inside Media360Asia—an invitation-only event held on 19 February in Hong Kong. For the earlier videos and more highlights from the conference, please see our online Media360Asia archive and the March 2014 Campaign Asia-Pacific.

 

Source:
Campaign Asia
Topics

Related Articles

Just Published

13 hours ago

StackAdapt launches integrated platform to connect ...

Marketers can now use one workflow to trigger emails from ad views and personalise campaigns using real-time purchase signals.

14 hours ago

Heineken trusts Korean football fans with keys to ...

An activation in Seoul sees Korean fans ordering, paying for, and pulling their own pints without bar owners or security present. Just to be able to watch live football.

15 hours ago

Woolley Marketing: How much transparency is too ...

Trust in advertiser-agency relationships hinges not on absolute transparency, but on reasonable openness that empowers both sides without drowning them in irrelevant details, says Darren Woolley.

15 hours ago

Publicis Japan bolsters creative leadership with ...

EXCLUSIVE: Ryutaro Seki, formerly with Google, and Naho Manabe, a 20-year Hakuhodo veteran, join Publicis Groupe Japan as the agency strengthens its creative bench.