Published at 08:54, Saturday, 19 May 2012
THE Lanes Shopping Centre in Carlisle has won a marketing award for using local people in an advertising campaign.
Commercial director David Jackson and marketing manager Janet Murray collected the award at a dinner in London.
Marketing experts from across the retail property industry were celebrated at the annual shopping centre marketing awards, organised by British Council for Shopping Centres.
Janet said: “We initiated a campaign using local faces to reflect our retail brands and create a clear identity for The Lanes, producing a set of commercials that were eye-catching, retail focused and unique to Carlisle.”
The feedback from the BCSC marketing awards said the campaing showed; “strong involvement with retailers and encouraging performance in both sales and footfall”.
It added: “Using store managers in the TV adverts to promote brands is truly collaborative. The inclusion of external observations from other business shows the impact and a noticeable difference locally.
“And rarely do you see this level of participation or collaboration with retailers when putting together a marketing campaign.”
The award was presented by rugby player Austin Healey.
Joe Hendry, leader-elect for Carlisle City Council, said: “I’d like to pass on my congratulations to The Lanes in achieving this nationally recognised marketing award.
“Collaboration with their retailers and local businesses has proven to be a success for all concerned. Their innovative approach should be commended, well done to The Lanes.”
Last week, The Lanes retailer Debenhams announced it was planning a multi million upgrade to its store, due to begin on May 28.
PMcClounie@cngroup.co.uk
Published by http://www.newsandstar.co.uk
Online Shopping Giant MyReviewsNow.net Adds New “Designer Marque” Store for Handbags, Gifts and More - PR-USA.net
Online shopping for luxury designer handbags at fantastic prices has just become more enjoyable and rewarding, now that MyReviewNow.net has added the Designer Marque store to its popular virtual shopping mall.
Offering a huge selection of handbags, gifts, accessories and more from top name designers including Gucci, Dior, Valentino, Burberry, Fendi and more, Designer Marque also features an interactive blog to help online shoppers connect with great fashion tips, hot deal alerts, and exclusive promotions and giveaways.
MyReviewsNow.net is delighted to add Designer Marque to our virtual shopping mall, commented Todd Maxwell of MyReviewsNow.net. Now, people can shop for luxury designer handbags, gifts, accessories and more without having to deal with crowded malls. They can also bring home some of the worlds hottest products, and all with the click of a mouse. Its an easy, enjoyable, rewarding and fun way to shop!
Designer Marque, the new online store that features luxury designer handbags, gifts, accessories and more is now open via MyReviewsNow.nets Apparel & Fine Jewelry Portal. Access o the virtual mall is free, and theres no registration or membership required.
For more information or media inquiries, contact Lina Andrade at info(at)myreviewsnow(dot)net. Press release issued by SEOChampion.com.
About MyReviewsNow.net
A virtual shopping mall of services, products and publications available online, MyReviewsNow.net is a business directory that sets itself apart from similar sites by offering both professional reviews and customer testimonials on the Internets hottest offerings in a fun, simple format that is easy for visitors to shop and enjoy.
About SEO Champion
SEO Champion was started in 1999 and is owner operated by Michael Rotkin, SEO Specialist for over 17 years. Michael Rotkins goal for his clients is to own keyword placements for the top 3 slots organically, so that his clients can earn a higher return on investment from their advertising dollars. Rotkin realizes the value of SEO over Pay-Per-Click campaigns, where click-throughs are generally
more expensive and harder to convert into sales. SEOChampions intense work ethic can be seen in daily and weekly reports that show progress through organic keyword gain. This effort is the reason his SEO firm has been able to build a loyal client base for many years. Learn more at SEO Champion.
Expand Your Ecommerce business with iPad Shopping Application Development at Unbelievable Rates - PRLog (free press release)
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Building work at Bluewater dining area takes shape (From This Is Local London) - This is london Calling
Building work at Bluewater dining area takes shape
2:50pm Saturday 19th May 2012 in News By Jim Palmer
CONSTRUCTION is well underway at Bluewater shopping centre’s Wintergarden dining area.
Dartford MP Gareth Johnson visited the building work last Friday (May 11) to mark the completion of the pouring of 200,000 litres of concrete to support the floor.
When it is completed in the Autumn, the Wintergarden will seat 50 per cent more diners, with 1,000 places and ten food brands.
Mr Johnson said: “It is very exciting to see Bluewater evolving once again. The redevelopment of the Wintergarden joins the Plaza and Glow in broadening Bluewater's already extensive offer, not only for visitors from throughout the South East, but for the immediate local community.
"I am also delighted, but not surprised, that Bluewater remains committed to creating other benefits for the community through this project, including employment and training."
Book review: Tales from the Mall, by Ewan Morrison - scotsman.com
Welcome to a new kind of 21st-century storytelling. This remarkable collection of writing is hard to categorise in any orthodox sense, but it is a brilliant and often profound form of literature that says more about the modern human condition than a hundred more conventional novels might.
Tales from the Mall
by Ewan Morrison
Cargo, 340pp, £9.99
Tales from the Mall contains short stories, various kinds of non-fiction including essays, journalism, etymology, history and social comment – and most impressively – modern folk tales culled from interviews with people working in or regularly interacting with shopping malls.
Morrison’s fiction to date has dabbled with themes of consumerism, capitalism and commercialisation, and this collection can be seen as a culmination of that obsession. In the erudite introduction he explains his fascination with shopping malls, these colossal, unreal spaces that have taken over our lives yet that seem curiously under-examined in modern culture.
The genius of Tales from the Mall is that Morrison plays everything with a straight bat. General consensus amongst well-educated types is that malls are evil, soulless places, a malaise of modern life to be scorned. But Morrison here reveals a much more complex ecosystem, a subtle and strange interaction between humans and the spaces we inhabit, and it is a genuinely revelatory read in that respect.
So we encounter the separated couple who use the mall as a neutral space for the handover of the kids, the woman using it for the scene of an illicit affair, the Muslim woman who uses the mall to power-walk in a space without fear of abuse from local teenage boys.
There are pieces of writing here that will make you cry, others that will give you a warm glow about humanity, and still others that will make you despair at the state of the world.
The interplay between straight fiction, collected true stories and Morrison’s impeccably researched non-fiction is often mesmerising, and the cumulative emotional power comes as a shock, and truly makes you look at the world in a different light.
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Chance to learn more about Town Team plan for Buxton - buxtonadvertiser.co.uk
THE group behind Buxton’s bid for a share of Portas funding are holding a Town Team Workshop later this month.
The Buxton Portas Group are hoping to become one of 12 “Portas Pilots” – towns which will test out recommendations made by shopping tsar Mary Portas in a government- commissioned report aimed at reviving the country’s high streets and town centres.
A Town Team is a key element of the effort to revive Buxton and this aspect of the project will go ahead whether or not the bid is successful.
The workshop will explain more about the team and give people the chance to have their say.
Voluntary groups and private businesses have been invited but the event is open to anyone who can make a contribution.
The workshop is on May 28 from 7pm to 9.30pm. The venue is not yet confirmed but space is limited so anyone wanting to attend should email their name, organisation (if any) and a contact phone number to pilotgroup@buxtontownteam.org.uk.
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Women and shopping explained - heraldsun.com.au
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Gal's shopping Bible - The Mercury
YOU should be a financial planner," suggested my husband this week as I explained just how much money I had saved by buying a new jacket.
Yes, how much MONEY I SAVED BY BUYING A NEW JACKET!
If you are struggling to understand that concept, you're clearly not trying hard enough.
Or you are a man?
I have recently come to understand that the method by which I approach shopping is slightly unconventional.
Others (male others) have been known to refer to it as bats crazy. This seems harsh. I call it Creative Shopping Logic.
You see, in my head, there is a parallel economy where I can justify pretty much any purchase.
I visit this happy place often.
It's peaceful and there are unicorns. Men, not so much.
On the downside, my parallel economy can sometimes go a little bit Zimbabwe around the time they decided the solution to their financial crisis was to print a lot more money.
That did not work out so well for them but we will not mention it again because it is not in the spirit of deluded fantasia, which is mandatory when you are justifying the purchase of gold glitter shoes.
Uncensored, here are some of the thoughts that pop into my head when I'm shopping:
I haven't had a parking fine in ages so this $240 dress is actually free"
These jeans are 40 per cent off which means I have made a profit of $80. I am practically rich. Now what should I spend that on?"
There is a $20 EFTPOS minimum and I am buying three boxes of Cruskits only, so this $10 worth of chocolate is essentially free (and as an added bonus contains no kilojoules!). Now I'm at the airport on my way to another city, so therefore this imported copy of Vanity Fair for $15.95 is not that expensive."
"If I was addicted to the pokies, I would be spending a fortune and have nothing to show for it so this $150 necklace is a bargain. I'm going to park really carefully for the next few months and that means I have at least $180 worth of non-fines to spend for free in this shop right now."
At this point, you will either be muttering "why did they give the crazy lady a newspaper column" or you will be nodding vigorously in solidarity and taking notes for the next time you are tempted by ANOTHER pair of black ankle boots (yes I agree, they are really flattering, they go with everything and you totally need them. Just think about the parking fines you will not get and take those black babies home. After all, they are free!).
Am I the only one who does this? Don't be ridiculous.
Many women are familiar with the parallel shopping economy.
We particularly love the way its so marvellously quarantined from pesky things like inflation, interest rates, the fluctuating Aussie dollar and, you know, common sense.
Give a girl some wine and promise not to tell her partner/father/therapist and she will let you into some of the fabulous justifications she uses when shopping. Like this:
"I have this thing called Medicare Shopping ," a co-worker admitted. "My closest Medicare is next door to Sportsgirl and if I take my son to the paediatrician it's a $300 bill that's about $200 in Sportsgirl money. An ordinary doctor visit is a just top or a scarf ($35). Hospital visits or dentist bills covered by the private health fund are just an added bonus. My fashion style is best summed up as hypochondria accessorised with extra dental hygiene."
It turns out Medicare shopping with free money is a popular pastime, an added bonus being that it is cash and therefore untraceable by spouses.
Now you know why Medicare branches are so thoughtfully located in shopping centres.
You never knew money could be free, did you? Welcome to the delusion. Would you like the receipt in the bag?
Another feature of my parallel economy is the formula I use to assess the cost of an item before I pony up my cash. It's complex yet stunningly simple: boring things should be free socks and cutlery, I'm talking to you. Frugality comes more easily when you are not emotionally invested, I find.
Consider this example. Over dinner a few nights ago, I was telling off several members of my family for using my special shampoo and conditioner instead of their own.
"I've told you all a thousand times, it's a waste," I barked. "That stuff is EXPENSIVE." I may as well have said, "Your hair doesn't matter as much as mine. It's short. You can use whatever. I can't. So stop it."
Silently, I congratulated myself for being so thrifty. "I'm being thrifty," I said smugly and out loud for added emphasis.
As my husband regarded me quizzically, I continued: "My shampoo and conditioner are more expensive than yours, so on a cost per use basis, it is nuts for you to use it."
"So how does that formula apply to those gold shoes you bought and haven't worn," he asked in an unexpected counter-attack. "How much do they cost per wear?"
I hate it when someone challenges my logic, particularly my shopping logic. I generally prefer it to remain unchallenged with unicorns.
Mia Freedman is publisher of Mamamia.com.au
Her new ebook The Gift Of Sleep is at thegiftofsleep.com.au
MasterCard: Mobile shopping taking root in emerging markets - Philippine Star Online
MANILA, Philippines - The gap in online shopping between established and growth markets is narrowing in the Asia-Pacific largely due to increased enthusiasm for mobile shopping in Southeast Asia markets, according to the latest MasterCard Worldwide Online Shopping Survey.
The survey, which serves as a benchmark that measures consumers’ propensity to shop online, was conducted across 25 markets between Dec. 5, 2011 and Feb. 6 this year.
The report for the Asia-Pacific region included interviews with 7,373 respondents from 14 markets who were asked questions about their online shopping habits. The survey and its accompanying reports do not represent MasterCard’s financial performance.
In terms of online shopping and purchase intent, the results show that once again, the gap is closing for online shopping in Asia-Pacific markets between the “mature” and “emerging” markets.
Thailand leads the pack both in terms of online shopping (80 percent) and likelihood to make an online purchase in the next six months (93 percent), alongside China.
Korea (84 percent) and Malaysia (79 percent) also show high intent to purchase over the next six months, with Vietnam also showing similarly high intent to purchase (87 percent) despite a low percentage of people using the Internet for online shopping (61 percent).
Overall, big increases occurred in Thailand (+13 percent), Australia (+10 percent), Indonesia (+15 percent), New Zealand (+9 percent) and the Philippines (+15 percent) in terms of online shopping, with declines recorded in India (-14 percent), Singapore (-10 percent), and Korea (-17 percent), although the latter still had high intent to purchase (84 percent).
In keeping with the Southeast Asian theme of growth in this space, Vietnam, which was introduced into the study this year, boasts an index score comparable to Malaysia and Indonesia.
“This survey shows that the markets once considered to be emerging in Southeast Asia are now in fact challenging — and in some cases overtaking — traditional and mature online markets in the region,” said Philip Yen, group head for emerging payments in the Asia-Pacific, Middle East Africa of MasterCard Worldwide.
“On top of this, smartphones are gradually becoming the trusted device of choice for shoppers in our region and MasterCard is continually innovating to ensure convenience and security for consumers when they purchase online,” Yen added.
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