Vox Media, HP and Critical Mass are among Digiday Worklife Awards winners

Vox Media, HP and Critical Mass took home Digiday Worklife Awards. 

Vox Media has won Best Employer for Parents, which set out to award the employer who had proven to be the most accommodating and flexible for working parents. Some perks for parents at the New York-based media company include 100% employer-paid parental leave for primary or secondary caregivers, flexible work from home policies and parents’ rooms.  

Tracy Keogh of HP  has taken home HR Leader of the Year. Keogh has built development programs geared toward retaining women and minorities, spearheaded the creation of a video series that looked into bias in hiring and reinvented the company’s leadership development programs among other accomplishments. 

Also taking home a role-specific award is Critical Mass CEO Dianne Wilkins, who received Top Boss. Culture first proponent Wilkins initially joined Critical Mass during a hiatus in her professional golf career and is now at the helm of the 950-employee strong global agency. 

Seven winners have been pre-announced, with seven categories still remaining. The final seven will be revealed at the Digiday Fall Awards Gala, which will take place at The Lighthouse in New York City on Nov. 14. These remaining seven include Most Innovative Culture, Most Passionate Employees, Most Dedicated to Employee Growth, Most Dedicated to Employee Wellness, Most Committed to Diversity and Inclusion and Most Committed to the Community/Social Good and Employer of the Year. 

See the full list of pre-announced winners below. 

Most Collaborative Culture
Forsman & Bodenfors New York

Most Engaged Employees
Lippe Taylor

Most Committed to Work-Life Balance
Acceleration Partners

Best Employer for Parents
Vox Media

Best On-Boarding Process
Wavemaker – Wavemaker Welcome

HR Leader of the Year
Tracy Keogh, Chief Human Resources Officer, HP Inc.

Top Boss
Dianne Wilkins, CEO, Critical Mass

The post Vox Media, HP and Critical Mass are among Digiday Worklife Awards winners appeared first on Digiday.

Public Expresses Favorable Views of a Number of Federal Agencies

Americans express overwhelmingly favorable opinions of federal agencies like the Postal Service, the National Park Service, NASA and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) despite historically low levels of public trust in the federal government.

The post Public Expresses Favorable Views of a Number of Federal Agencies appeared first on Pew Research Center.

Public Expresses Favorable Views of a Number of Federal Agencies

Americans express overwhelmingly favorable opinions of federal agencies like the Postal Service, the National Park Service, NASA and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) despite historically low levels of public trust in the federal government.

The post Public Expresses Favorable Views of a Number of Federal Agencies appeared first on Pew Research Center.

What Losing 100,000 Twitter Followers Over Night Taught Me About My Business Priorities

I’m in Instagram unfollow jail. Again. And I don’t like it. At all. And it’s amazing at the same time because it reminds me of the power dynamic I’m operating under. We live in the land of the free and the home of the brave, yet as soon as I save up enough bravery to…

Cross-Channel Attribution: A Bad Idea That Gets Worse With Time

“Data-Driven Thinking” is written by members of the media community and contains fresh ideas on the digital revolution in media.  Today’s column is written by Kevin Hill, founder and CEO at VuPulse. Sure, I’ve love to be able to tell you that attribution has been solved and all your marketing and ROI worries are done andContinue reading »

The post Cross-Channel Attribution: A Bad Idea That Gets Worse With Time appeared first on AdExchanger.

How Ad Tech Is Grappling With Consumer Consent Issues

The IAB Tech Lab is proposing technical standards it hopes will ready its members for the fast-approaching California Consumer Privacy Act, or CCPA, legislation geared toward shining a light on data brokerage and giving consumers more control over how ad tech accesses data. The trade org has established a working group to prepare for the…

‘We’re very actively looking’: Dotdash’s Neil Vogel on digital media M&A

This is a buyer’s market in digital media — and Dotdash is establishing itself as an acquirer.

On Tuesday, Dotdash announced its fourth acquisition of 2019, buying Liquor.com for an undisclosed price. The purchase, along with former Clique title My Domaine, will allow Dotdash to offer beverage and spirits advertisers “the biggest cocktails and spirits place on the internet,”

Dotdash CEO Neil Vogel spoke about the Dotdash’s growing brand portfolio and the broader M&A picture for media. The conversation has been edited and condensed.

How quickly are you going to be able to fold this new site into what you’re doing?
It usually takes us three months or less to transition onto our tech stack. We take that three months and do deep dives on their content. We bring the editorial teams in and we understand what they want to do, what they’d do if they had unlimited resources. We spend three months hashing out content, then we get them on our platform. We are initially most concerns with the tech, the product and the content, then we will figure out the revenue. To bring it to advertisers in the best way, we need it on our platform. We have three months to meet the advertisers, say hello, let existing the deals run out, and then we get going. In every instance of the four things we bought, we actually believe they’re a fraction of the things we could be if the library gets to the right size. Byrdie’s twice the size it was when we bought it.

Outside of ads, what’s the opportunity you see with Liquor.com?  
With Liquor, there’s virtually no commerce business right now. We think there’s a very big opportunity there; Byrdie has an events opportunity. If we can build the audiences, then we can figure out what to do. We come from a place of understanding media, but we have a fairly large commerce and transactional business now. We really like Byrdie and My Domaine and Liquor as a platform to sell things.

It seems like most of what people are buying, though, is focused on advertising. Would you look to buy something designed purely to power revenue diversification? 
I’m not sure there’s anybody out there that we’d buy just for that purpose. If we found a compelling events platform, we’d definitely look at it. We’ve looked at commerce platforms that were interesting but weren’t right for us. We are really most concerned with building vibrant, loyal audiences and building brands, and the money will follow. When the money comes first, you have to do a lot of weird things, like buy a lot of traffic or grow unnaturally to fulfill things you’ve sold. We’ve never felt comfortable doing that. We’ve seen the outcome when you do that.

So are you still in the market? 
Oh yeah. We’re very, very actively looking. We’re super-disciplined in what we like. We like service journalism, we like evergreen content. It’s going to be health and wellness, finance, home, food, travel. Those are areas we’re really focused on.

I think a lot of people went into the year expecting an avalanche of M&A activity. It’s been a bit more muted. Why do you think that is? 
I can only speak for us. I don’t like so much talking about the bigger, more traditional media businesses. The name everyone talks about, it probably makes sense for them to get together. you can run a few of them on the same platform, and you maybe have a different outcome.

Why do you think there haven’t been more big, non-media businesses acquired by media companies this year? 
I just can’t think of a commerce platform or events platform [that’s out there]. They may exist: Do you want to buy a music festival? I’m sure those exist. There isn’t really anything that fits. You can figure out capabilities or learn them. If we want to do events, you can hire those people. But the thing that’s really hard, and it’s hard for us, brands are really really hard. Some of our brands are 20, 30 million Comscore uniques a month. And they’re not nearly as well-known as brands that are a third their size. It’s not an accident that the things we’re buying are branded.

The post ‘We’re very actively looking’: Dotdash’s Neil Vogel on digital media M&A appeared first on Digiday.

Clients Are to Advertising Creatives What Editors Are to Writers

The sound of tearing paper can be heartbreaking. Especially if the paper has some of your writing on it and is currently being ripped in two (no, wait, make that four). That’s a flashback to the distant days when I worked on a local newspaper. Back in 1987, we typed and submitted our copy on…

Barron’s Is Bringing Finance to Prime Time With New Show on Fox Business Network

Barron’s, the weekly financial publication, is coming to TV for the first time. Its new show, Barron’s Roundtable, premieres Friday at 10 p.m. on the Fox Business Network. Barron’s editor at large Jack Otter will host the show, which “will bring to life Barron’s and Barron’s approach to covering the financial business world,” said Almar…