Sign in

Business
Digiday
The Digiday Podcast is a weekly show on the big stories and issues that matter to brands, agencies and publishers as they transition to the digital age.
Total 411 episodes
12
...
78
9
Go to
Tasty’s Ashley McCollum: Big video view counts aren’t everything

Tasty’s Ashley McCollum: Big video view counts aren’t everything

BuzzFeed food brand Tasty has reached 1.8 billion views  monthly on its Facebook videos, but it's looking increasingly beyond views to driving real-world action. Besides making food videos for social feeds, the brand is also selling merchandise like customized cookbooks. Ashley McCollum, general manager of Tasty, joins us on the Digiday Podcast.  
36:1801/11/2017
Washington Post’s Jed Hartman: The industry needs to stop whining about the duopoly

Washington Post’s Jed Hartman: The industry needs to stop whining about the duopoly

While Google and Facebook hamper publishers' efforts to grow digital ad dollars, The Washington Post CRO Jed Hartman said on this week’s Digiday Podcast that publishers need to figure out their unique value and stop "whining about the platforms."
27:1725/10/2017
Conde Nast's Craig Kostelic: 'We’re completely embracing programmatic'

Conde Nast's Craig Kostelic: 'We’re completely embracing programmatic'

The Food Innovation Group is home to legacy brands like Bon Appétit, but in the shift to digital, the magazine has become a complement to Bon Appétit's digital and social offerings. With the majority of the group's revenue now also coming from digital, it's embracing programmatic advertising. “Programmatic is an activation method versus a buying strategy. If display [advertising] is a function of getting more programmatic, there’s a huge opportunity to streamline and create less friction [in transactions]," said Craig Kostelic, chief business officer of Food Innovation Group and Condé Nast’s Lifestyle Collection, on this week’s Digiday Podcast.
38:0818/10/2017
The New York Times’ Meredith Kopit Levien on driving subs and the NYT as a lifestyle brand

The New York Times’ Meredith Kopit Levien on driving subs and the NYT as a lifestyle brand

The New York Times is one of a few privileged publishers that have transitioned into a subscription business, and to do this, it started behaving like a consumer brand, according to the Times’ evp and COO Meredith Kopit Levien. She talks about subscriptions, advertising, differentiating from free alternatives and more on this week’s Digiday Podcast.
42:1011/10/2017
Politico’s Poppy MacDonald: We’re not worried about the waning Trump bump

Politico’s Poppy MacDonald: We’re not worried about the waning Trump bump

Politico has successfully steered its business model from advertising to subscriptions. Today, with 25,000 Politico Pro subscribers and a 90 percent renewal rate, Politico gets over 50 percent of its revenue from its high-priced subscription services. The key lies in focusing on the coverage that has been pivotal for Politico, according to Politico President Poppy MacDonald. The publisher has not wavered from its original brand of policy and politics journalism, so it’s managed churn and avoided the impact of the Trump bump. Macdonald discusses subscriptions, Trump bump and more on this week's podcast.
28:0304/10/2017
Spirited Media’s Jim Brady: Growing audience through display advertising is ‘not natural’

Spirited Media’s Jim Brady: Growing audience through display advertising is ‘not natural’

On this week’s Digiday Podcast, Spirited Media’s Jim Brady talks about building a local news media business that's sustainable. The key to economic success for Spirited Media lies in a scaled events business rather than the display advertising relied on by most publishers in local news markets.  
28:3027/09/2017
Quartz’s Kevin Delaney: Advertising is still a great business model for news

Quartz’s Kevin Delaney: Advertising is still a great business model for news

On this week’s Digiday Podcast, Quartz’s co-president and editor-in-chief Kevin Delaney defended the advertising business model and discussed the pivot to video, venturing into lifestyle and more.
36:0720/09/2017
Turner’s Howard Shimmel: Facebook’s not competing with TV

Turner’s Howard Shimmel: Facebook’s not competing with TV

As TV media networks continue to get pulled into the digital and social ecosystems, Facebook's growing video demands and efforts to become a giant video platform seem like a threat to TV's ad dollars. On this week's Digiday podcast, Howard Shimmel, chief research officer at Turner, argued that Facebook and TV exist in different spaces and Facebook can't compete with TV on ad viewability, impressions and other metrics.
30:1313/09/2017
Business Insider’s Henry Blodget: ‘We don’t want to aim for reach growth anymore’

Business Insider’s Henry Blodget: ‘We don’t want to aim for reach growth anymore’

On this week's Digiday Podcast, CEO and co-founder of Business Insider Henry Blodget said the publisher, which has over 10 million followers across social media platforms, is not trying to grow reach anymore. As the publisher's focus shifts to deepened engagement and frequency, it faces questions: whether an ad-driven model is better than a subscription model, how to monetize social and web video and how to approach the ever-growing need for video on platforms. Blodget answers these questions and more in the episode.
41:5106/09/2017
ABC’s Colby Smith: Follow the audience to grow digital, social reach

ABC’s Colby Smith: Follow the audience to grow digital, social reach

The answer to digital and social audience growth challenges for Colby Smith, vp of ABC News Digital, is to follow the audience. Since adopting this approach two years ago, the news network's digital division has produced content across all major social and digital platforms and seen convincing results. Smith discusses that and more on this week's Digiday Podcast.
31:1930/08/2017
The Onion’s Mike McAvoy: ‘There’s no money in news feed video’

The Onion’s Mike McAvoy: ‘There’s no money in news feed video’

Last year, Univision acquired The Onion under its Fusion Media Group division. Since then, The Onion and Gizmodo Media Group combined their sales operations. On this week’s Digiday Podcast, The Onion’s president and CEO Mike McAvoy said the consolidation has grown its reach, allowing it to sell more branded content.
32:2923/08/2017