Friday, September 13, 2013

Evolving to serve in the digital age

I am sharing with you all an interview of Ringier Trade Media's President Michael R. Hay, as he looks back on 15 years of serving metalworking, plastics and food industries and eyes what's in store for thousands of our readers worldwide.

***
THERE wasn’t a lack headlines in July 1997. What should have been the big story – Hong Kong’s handover to China by the United Kingdom – was quickly eclipsed by the financial crisis that knocked out Thailand and quickly pummelled more economies across Asia. Industrial projects ground to a halt, banks shut down, and investments dried up.To observers, only China was unmarked by the pounding that the rest of the region was taking.

B2B multimedia publisher Michael R. Hay agreed with this observation and saw positive prospects for trade media in China. In contrast to the rest of Asia, investments were still pouring in to China and industrial activity was ramping up. Domestic companies, for instance, were venturing into OEM operations to serve international demand for competitively priced products and components.

“I saw that in China that manufacturers had a very strong need for information and knowhow – on technology and on manufacturing. They were learning how to market and create their products but they were still very backward in technology in terms of production and manufacturing," recalls Mr Hay, president and publisher of Ringier Trade Media – one of the most successful industrial media companies in the region.

In this dearth of information, Mike saw potential to publish trade magazines for core industries. He identified Plastics Processing and Packaging as two of these industries requiring technology to achieve greater levels of efficiency and reach global standards.

“I saw a real opportunity there, because plastics manufacturing consumption was rapidly rising 15 years ago and China was very active in developing export markets, which require packaging, so it seemed like a natural fit,” he explains.

It was 15 years ago, he set up Ringier Trade Media with joint business partner, the Swiss media giant Ringier AG. Although at that time the B2B sector was a huge departure for the Swiss firm, having always been in the commercial sector, they have been supportive from the get-go.An incident early on proved to be a very pleasant surprise and also gave Ringier AG a great deal of confidence of the potential of B2B magazines.

In March of 1998, Ringier Trade participated in the trade show Sinopack in Guangzhou, with the prototype of their first magazine International Plastics News for China(国际塑料商情). To their amazement, they got nearly 3,000 requests for subscriptions in just three days. “We were just overwhelmed. The booth was just swamped with visitors to the trade show trying to sign up for subscription – we had to fight them off. It was amazing,” Mike recalls.

“Then the same thing happened a few months later at Chinaplas, also in Guangzhou. We reintroduced our International Plastics News for China. Again the booth was just absolutely overwhelmed with people demanding to get sample copies of the magazine,” he adds.

China at that time had a very high demand and respect for product and machinery made in Taiwan, and Ringier Trade was the first publishing operation to set up in Taiwan with the specific objective of helping Taiwan exporters break into the China market. “So really, you know, 50% of the business was coming from Taiwan, and we also discovered that we had another opportunity not just for China, but also had a great opportunity to introduce Taiwan machinery makers to markets in Latin America, USA, Europe, and we did this by establishing partnerships through our partner media. So it was a very good story that we have for our clients in Taiwan: that we are present in China, Europe, Latin America, and so on,” says Mike.

In the 15 years since, Ringier Trade has added over 30 titles to its portfolio including for other core industries, including Metalworking and Food & Beverage. The company has also partnered with international publishing firms with significant markets in the United States, Latin America and Europe as well as setting up co-branded titles in India. “We were basically the first B2B media company from this area to set up kind of a joint venture in India and build a bridge between two great trading centres,” says Mike.

Keeping pace with developments

As the core industries developed and specialised, Ringier Trade introduced new titles to serve their requirements. These included for instance, Rubber World for China(国际橡胶商情)and Reinforced Plastics China(增强塑料-中国版) in Plastics, and International Mold & Die Making News for China(国际模具制造商情 and Automotive Engineering International China(国际汽车工程-中 文版 in Metalworking. The expansion of print media has also been territorial; English trade journals were the natural progression to serve the Plastics, Metalworking and Food & Beverage industries in South East Asia and the Middle East and Africa.

The company also holds 20 specialised conferences annually. While organizing these events is very time- and labor-intensive, this form of communication and interaction is booming. “There still remains a very great need for companies to build relationships, to create business networks. People still want to meet people. People still want to develop those contacts and build trust and confidence with their suppliers and potential customers and you do that through events. So that’s what led me into the conference business,” Mike explains.

In the opposite direction is digital marketing in which Ringier Trade has directed a lot of resources in the past six or seven or so years. “Money, people and time have gone to enhancing our website, industrysourcing.com, and all our digital services – whether it's the occasional webinar, web TV, the showrooms that we have – and this all never stops. The technology changes, so you have to change – constant reinvention, re-investment just to keep up with the technology. And then smartphones change the game dramatically so we have to change again,” he says.

The future is content marketing

As Ringier Trade celebrates its 15th anniversary, Mike sees B2B communications evolving to incorporate content marketing. A whole new style of advertising, content marketing is not the easiest concept to explain to an advertisers so he has personally been meeting with select clients to introduce what Ringier can offer them.

“In the digital age, the communication process will be very text-driven, image driven, more informative, and present a company through thought leadership, and that builds up trust and generates inquiries in a bit more of an indirect way,” he says. “So that is one area of change that will change the way we will incorporate our content. In the past, the mandate to the editors was produce the best quality content that you can for the magazine. Today, it's totally turned on its head. I tell our editors that they are content directors, they're brand managers, and most importantly, the most important brand now is what they do in digital.”
- See more at: http://us.industrysourcing.com/news/278013.aspx#sthash.QoYIqb4C.dpuf
THERE wasn’t a lack headlines in July 1997. What should have been the big story – Hong Kong’s handover to China by the United Kingdom – was quickly eclipsed by the financial crisis that knocked out Thailand and quickly pummelled more economies across Asia. Industrial projects ground to a halt, banks shut down, and investments dried up.To observers, only China was unmarked by the pounding that the rest of the region was taking.

B2B multimedia publisher Michael R. Hay agreed with this observation and saw positive prospects for trade media in China. In contrast to the rest of Asia, investments were still pouring in to China and industrial activity was ramping up. Domestic companies, for instance, were venturing into OEM operations to serve international demand for competitively priced products and components.

“I saw that in China that manufacturers had a very strong need for information and knowhow – on technology and on manufacturing. They were learning how to market and create their products but they were still very backward in technology in terms of production and manufacturing,”recalls Mr Hay, president and publisher of Ringier Trade Media – one of the most successful industrial media companies in the region.

In this dearth of information, Mike saw potential to publish trade magazines for core industries. He identified Plastics Processing and Packaging as two of these industries requiring technology to achieve greater levels of efficiency and reach global standards.

“I saw a real opportunity there, because plastics manufacturing consumption was rapidly rising 15 years ago and China was very active in developing export markets, which require packaging, so it seemed like a natural fit,” he explains.

It was 15 years ago, he set up Ringier Trade Media with joint business partner, the Swiss media giant Ringier AG. Although at that time the B2B sector was a huge departure for the Swiss firm, having always been in the commercial sector, they have been supportive from the get-go.An incident early on proved to be a very pleasant surprise and also gave Ringier AG a great deal of confidence of the potential of B2B magazines.

In March of 1998, Ringier Trade participated in the trade show Sinopack in Guangzhou, with the prototype of their first magazine International Plastics News for China(国际塑料商情). To their amazement, they got nearly 3,000 requests for subscriptions in just three days. “We were just overwhelmed. The booth was just swamped with visitors to the trade show trying to sign up for subscription – we had to fight them off. It was amazing,” Mike recalls.

“Then the same thing happened a few months later at Chinaplas, also in Guangzhou. We reintroduced our International Plastics News for China. Again the booth was just absolutely overwhelmed with people demanding to get sample copies of the magazine,” he adds.

China at that time had a very high demand and respect for product and machinery made in Taiwan, and Ringier Trade was the first publishing operation to set up in Taiwan with the specific objective of helping Taiwan exporters break into the China market. “So really, you know, 50% of the business was coming from Taiwan, and we also discovered that we had another opportunity not just for China, but also had a great opportunity to introduce Taiwan machinery makers to markets in Latin America, USA, Europe, and we did this by establishing partnerships through our partner media. So it was a very good story that we have for our clients in Taiwan: that we are present in China, Europe, Latin America, and so on,” says Mike.

In the 15 years since, Ringier Trade has added over 30 titles to its portfolio including for other core industries, including Metalworking and Food & Beverage. The company has also partnered with international publishing firms with significant markets in the United States, Latin America and Europe as well as setting up co-branded titles in India. “We were basically the first B2B media company from this area to set up kind of a joint venture in India and build a bridge between two great trading centres,” says Mike.

Keeping pace with developments

As the core industries developed and specialised, Ringier Trade introduced new titles to serve their requirements. These included for instance, Rubber World for China(国际橡胶商情)and Reinforced Plastics China(增强塑料-中国版) in Plastics, and International Mold & Die Making News for China(国际模具制造商情)and Automotive Engineering International China(国际汽车工程-中 文版)in Metalworking. The expansion of print media has also been territorial; English trade journals were the natural progression to serve the Plastics, Metalworking and Food & Beverage industries in South East Asia and the Middle East and Africa.

The company also holds 20 specialised conferences annually. While organizing these events is very time- and labourintensive, this form of communication and interaction is booming. “There still remains a very great need for companies to build relationships, to create business networks. People still want to meet people. People still want to develop those contacts and build trust and confidence with their suppliers and potential customers and you do that through events. So that’s what led me into the conference business,” Mike explains.

In the opposite direction is digital marketing in which Ringier Trade has directed a lot of resources in the past six or seven or so years. “Money, people and time have gone to enhancing our website, industrysourcing.com, and all our digital services – whether it's the occasional webinar, web TV, the showrooms that we have – and this all never stops. The technology changes, so you have to change – constant reinvention, re-investment just to keep up with the technology. And then smartphones change the game dramatically so we have to change again,” he says.

The future is content marketing

As Ringier Trade celebrates its 15th anniversary, Mike s ees B2B communications evolving to incorporate content marketing. A whole new style of advertising, content marketing is not the easiest concept to explain to an advertisers so he has personally been meeting with select clients to introduce what Ringier can offer them.

“In the digital age, the communication process will be very text-driven, imagedriven, more informative, and present a company through thought leadership, and that builds up trust and generates inquiries in a bit more of an indirect way,” he says.“So that is one area of change that will change the way we will incorporate our content. In the past, the mandate to the editors was produce the best quality content that you can for the magazine. Today, it's totally turned on its head. I tell our editors that they are content directors, they're brand managers, and most importantly, the most important brand now is what they do in digital.” - See more at: http://us.industrysourcing.com/news/278013.aspx#sthash.9oEX6uNq.dpuf

THERE wasn’t a lack headlines in July 1997. What should have been the big story – Hong Kong’s handover to China by the United Kingdom – was quickly eclipsed by the financial crisis that knocked out Thailand and quickly pummelled more economies across Asia. Industrial projects ground to a halt, banks shut down, and investments dried up.To observers, only China was unmarked by the pounding that the rest of the region was taking.

B2B multimedia publisher Michael R. Hay agreed with this observation and saw positive prospects for trade media in China. In contrast to the rest of Asia, investments were still pouring in to China and industrial activity was ramping up. Domestic companies, for instance, were venturing into OEM operations to serve international demand for competitively priced products and components.

“I saw that in China that manufacturers had a very strong need for information and knowhow – on technology and on manufacturing. They were learning how to market and create their products but they were still very backward in technology in terms of production and manufacturing,”recalls Mr Hay, president and publisher of Ringier Trade Media – one of the most successful industrial media companies in the region.

In this dearth of information, Mike saw potential to publish trade magazines for core industries. He identified Plastics Processing and Packaging as two of these industries requiring technology to achieve greater levels of efficiency and reach global standards.

“I saw a real opportunity there, because plastics manufacturing consumption was rapidly rising 15 years ago and China was very active in developing export markets, which require packaging, so it seemed like a natural fit,” he explains.

It was 15 years ago, he set up Ringier Trade Media with joint business partner, the Swiss media giant Ringier AG. Although at that time the B2B sector was a huge departure for the Swiss firm, having always been in the commercial sector, they have been supportive from the get-go.An incident early on proved to be a very pleasant surprise and also gave Ringier AG a great deal of confidence of the potential of B2B magazines.

In March of 1998, Ringier Trade participated in the trade show Sinopack in Guangzhou, with the prototype of their first magazine International Plastics News for China(国际塑料商情). To their amazement, they got nearly 3,000 requests for subscriptions in just three days. “We were just overwhelmed. The booth was just swamped with visitors to the trade show trying to sign up for subscription – we had to fight them off. It was amazing,” Mike recalls.

“Then the same thing happened a few months later at Chinaplas, also in Guangzhou. We reintroduced our International Plastics News for China. Again the booth was just absolutely overwhelmed with people demanding to get sample copies of the magazine,” he adds.

China at that time had a very high demand and respect for product and machinery made in Taiwan, and Ringier Trade was the first publishing operation to set up in Taiwan with the specific objective of helping Taiwan exporters break into the China market. “So really, you know, 50% of the business was coming from Taiwan, and we also discovered that we had another opportunity not just for China, but also had a great opportunity to introduce Taiwan machinery makers to markets in Latin America, USA, Europe, and we did this by establishing partnerships through our partner media. So it was a very good story that we have for our clients in Taiwan: that we are present in China, Europe, Latin America, and so on,” says Mike.

In the 15 years since, Ringier Trade has added over 30 titles to its portfolio including for other core industries, including Metalworking and Food & Beverage. The company has also partnered with international publishing firms with significant markets in the United States, Latin America and Europe as well as setting up co-branded titles in India. “We were basically the first B2B media company from this area to set up kind of a joint venture in India and build a bridge between two great trading centres,” says Mike.

Keeping pace with developments

As the core industries developed and specialised, Ringier Trade introduced new titles to serve their requirements. These included for instance, Rubber World for China(国际橡胶商情)and Reinforced Plastics China(增强塑料-中国版) in Plastics, and International Mold & Die Making News for China(国际模具制造商情)and Automotive Engineering International China(国际汽车工程-中 文版)in Metalworking. The expansion of print media has also been territorial; English trade journals were the natural progression to serve the Plastics, Metalworking and Food & Beverage industries in South East Asia and the Middle East and Africa.

The company also holds 20 specialised conferences annually. While organizing these events is very time- and labourintensive, this form of communication and interaction is booming. “There still remains a very great need for companies to build relationships, to create business networks. People still want to meet people. People still want to develop those contacts and build trust and confidence with their suppliers and potential customers and you do that through events. So that’s what led me into the conference business,” Mike explains.

In the opposite direction is digital marketing in which Ringier Trade has directed a lot of resources in the past six or seven or so years. “Money, people and time have gone to enhancing our website, industrysourcing.com, and all our digital services – whether it's the occasional webinar, web TV, the showrooms that we have – and this all never stops. The technology changes, so you have to change – constant reinvention, re-investment just to keep up with the technology. And then smartphones change the game dramatically so we have to change again,” he says.

The future is content marketing

As Ringier Trade celebrates its 15th anniversary, Mike s ees B2B communications evolving to incorporate content marketing. A whole new style of advertising, content marketing is not the easiest concept to explain to an advertisers so he has personally been meeting with select clients to introduce what Ringier can offer them.

“In the digital age, the communication process will be very text-driven, imagedriven, more informative, and present a company through thought leadership, and that builds up trust and generates inquiries in a bit more of an indirect way,” he says.“So that is one area of change that will change the way we will incorporate our content. In the past, the mandate to the editors was produce the best quality content that you can for the magazine. Today, it's totally turned on its head. I tell our editors that they are content directors, they're brand managers, and most importantly, the most important brand now is what they do in digital.” - See more at: http://us.industrysourcing.com/news/278013.aspx#sthash.9oEX6uNq.dpuf
THERE wasn’t a lack headlines in July 1997. What should have been the big story – Hong Kong’s handover to China by the United Kingdom – was quickly eclipsed by the financial crisis that knocked out Thailand and quickly pummelled more economies across Asia. Industrial projects ground to a halt, banks shut down, and investments dried up.To observers, only China was unmarked by the pounding that the rest of the region was taking.

B2B multimedia publisher Michael R. Hay agreed with this observation and saw positive prospects for trade media in China. In contrast to the rest of Asia, investments were still pouring in to China and industrial activity was ramping up. Domestic companies, for instance, were venturing into OEM operations to serve international demand for competitively priced products and components.

“I saw that in China that manufacturers had a very strong need for information and knowhow – on technology and on manufacturing. They were learning how to market and create their products but they were still very backward in technology in terms of production and manufacturing,”recalls Mr Hay, president and publisher of Ringier Trade Media – one of the most successful industrial media companies in the region.

In this dearth of information, Mike saw potential to publish trade magazines for core industries. He identified Plastics Processing and Packaging as two of these industries requiring technology to achieve greater levels of efficiency and reach global standards.

“I saw a real opportunity there, because plastics manufacturing consumption was rapidly rising 15 years ago and China was very active in developing export markets, which require packaging, so it seemed like a natural fit,” he explains.

It was 15 years ago, he set up Ringier Trade Media with joint business partner, the Swiss media giant Ringier AG. Although at that time the B2B sector was a huge departure for the Swiss firm, having always been in the commercial sector, they have been supportive from the get-go.An incident early on proved to be a very pleasant surprise and also gave Ringier AG a great deal of confidence of the potential of B2B magazines.

In March of 1998, Ringier Trade participated in the trade show Sinopack in Guangzhou, with the prototype of their first magazine International Plastics News for China(国际塑料商情). To their amazement, they got nearly 3,000 requests for subscriptions in just three days. “We were just overwhelmed. The booth was just swamped with visitors to the trade show trying to sign up for subscription – we had to fight them off. It was amazing,” Mike recalls.

“Then the same thing happened a few months later at Chinaplas, also in Guangzhou. We reintroduced our International Plastics News for China. Again the booth was just absolutely overwhelmed with people demanding to get sample copies of the magazine,” he adds.

China at that time had a very high demand and respect for product and machinery made in Taiwan, and Ringier Trade was the first publishing operation to set up in Taiwan with the specific objective of helping Taiwan exporters break into the China market. “So really, you know, 50% of the business was coming from Taiwan, and we also discovered that we had another opportunity not just for China, but also had a great opportunity to introduce Taiwan machinery makers to markets in Latin America, USA, Europe, and we did this by establishing partnerships through our partner media. So it was a very good story that we have for our clients in Taiwan: that we are present in China, Europe, Latin America, and so on,” says Mike.

In the 15 years since, Ringier Trade has added over 30 titles to its portfolio including for other core industries, including Metalworking and Food & Beverage. The company has also partnered with international publishing firms with significant markets in the United States, Latin America and Europe as well as setting up co-branded titles in India. “We were basically the first B2B media company from this area to set up kind of a joint venture in India and build a bridge between two great trading centres,” says Mike.

Keeping pace with developments

As the core industries developed and specialised, Ringier Trade introduced new titles to serve their requirements. These included for instance, Rubber World for China(国际橡胶商情)and Reinforced Plastics China(增强塑料-中国版) in Plastics, and International Mold & Die Making News for China(国际模具制造商情)and Automotive Engineering International China(国际汽车工程-中 文版)in Metalworking. The expansion of print media has also been territorial; English trade journals were the natural progression to serve the Plastics, Metalworking and Food & Beverage industries in South East Asia and the Middle East and Africa.

The company also holds 20 specialised conferences annually. While organizing these events is very time- and labourintensive, this form of communication and interaction is booming. “There still remains a very great need for companies to build relationships, to create business networks. People still want to meet people. People still want to develop those contacts and build trust and confidence with their suppliers and potential customers and you do that through events. So that’s what led me into the conference business,” Mike explains.

In the opposite direction is digital marketing in which Ringier Trade has directed a lot of resources in the past six or seven or so years. “Money, people and time have gone to enhancing our website, industrysourcing.com, and all our digital services – whether it's the occasional webinar, web TV, the showrooms that we have – and this all never stops. The technology changes, so you have to change – constant reinvention, re-investment just to keep up with the technology. And then smartphones change the game dramatically so we have to change again,” he says.

The future is content marketing

As Ringier Trade celebrates its 15th anniversary, Mike s ees B2B communications evolving to incorporate content marketing. A whole new style of advertising, content marketing is not the easiest concept to explain to an advertisers so he has personally been meeting with select clients to introduce what Ringier can offer them.

“In the digital age, the communication process will be very text-driven, imagedriven, more informative, and present a company through thought leadership, and that builds up trust and generates inquiries in a bit more of an indirect way,” he says.“So that is one area of change that will change the way we will incorporate our content. In the past, the mandate to the editors was produce the best quality content that you can for the magazine. Today, it's totally turned on its head. I tell our editors that they are content directors, they're brand managers, and most importantly, the most important brand now is what they do in digital.” - See more at: http://us.industrysourcing.com/news/278013.aspx#sthash.9oEX6uNq.dpuf
THERE wasn’t a lack headlines in July 1997. What should have been the big story – Hong Kong’s handover to China by the United Kingdom – was quickly eclipsed by the financial crisis that knocked out Thailand and quickly pummelled more economies across Asia. Industrial projects ground to a halt, banks shut down, and investments dried up.To observers, only China was unmarked by the pounding that the rest of the region was taking.

B2B multimedia publisher Michael R. Hay agreed with this observation and saw positive prospects for trade media in China. In contrast to the rest of Asia, investments were still pouring in to China and industrial activity was ramping up. Domestic companies, for instance, were venturing into OEM operations to serve international demand for competitively priced products and components.

“I saw that in China that manufacturers had a very strong need for information and knowhow – on technology and on manufacturing. They were learning how to market and create their products but they were still very backward in technology in terms of production and manufacturing,”recalls Mr Hay, president and publisher of Ringier Trade Media – one of the most successful industrial media companies in the region.

In this dearth of information, Mike saw potential to publish trade magazines for core industries. He identified Plastics Processing and Packaging as two of these industries requiring technology to achieve greater levels of efficiency and reach global standards.

“I saw a real opportunity there, because plastics manufacturing consumption was rapidly rising 15 years ago and China was very active in developing export markets, which require packaging, so it seemed like a natural fit,” he explains.

It was 15 years ago, he set up Ringier Trade Media with joint business partner, the Swiss media giant Ringier AG. Although at that time the B2B sector was a huge departure for the Swiss firm, having always been in the commercial sector, they have been supportive from the get-go.An incident early on proved to be a very pleasant surprise and also gave Ringier AG a great deal of confidence of the potential of B2B magazines.

In March of 1998, Ringier Trade participated in the trade show Sinopack in Guangzhou, with the prototype of their first magazine International Plastics News for China(国际塑料商情). To their amazement, they got nearly 3,000 requests for subscriptions in just three days. “We were just overwhelmed. The booth was just swamped with visitors to the trade show trying to sign up for subscription – we had to fight them off. It was amazing,” Mike recalls.

“Then the same thing happened a few months later at Chinaplas, also in Guangzhou. We reintroduced our International Plastics News for China. Again the booth was just absolutely overwhelmed with people demanding to get sample copies of the magazine,” he adds.

China at that time had a very high demand and respect for product and machinery made in Taiwan, and Ringier Trade was the first publishing operation to set up in Taiwan with the specific objective of helping Taiwan exporters break into the China market. “So really, you know, 50% of the business was coming from Taiwan, and we also discovered that we had another opportunity not just for China, but also had a great opportunity to introduce Taiwan machinery makers to markets in Latin America, USA, Europe, and we did this by establishing partnerships through our partner media. So it was a very good story that we have for our clients in Taiwan: that we are present in China, Europe, Latin America, and so on,” says Mike.

In the 15 years since, Ringier Trade has added over 30 titles to its portfolio including for other core industries, including Metalworking and Food & Beverage. The company has also partnered with international publishing firms with significant markets in the United States, Latin America and Europe as well as setting up co-branded titles in India. “We were basically the first B2B media company from this area to set up kind of a joint venture in India and build a bridge between two great trading centres,” says Mike.

Keeping pace with developments

As the core industries developed and specialised, Ringier Trade introduced new titles to serve their requirements. These included for instance, Rubber World for China(国际橡胶商情)and Reinforced Plastics China(增强塑料-中国版) in Plastics, and International Mold & Die Making News for China(国际模具制造商情)and Automotive Engineering International China(国际汽车工程-中 文版)in Metalworking. The expansion of print media has also been territorial; English trade journals were the natural progression to serve the Plastics, Metalworking and Food & Beverage industries in South East Asia and the Middle East and Africa.

The company also holds 20 specialised conferences annually. While organizing these events is very time- and labourintensive, this form of communication and interaction is booming. “There still remains a very great need for companies to build relationships, to create business networks. People still want to meet people. People still want to develop those contacts and build trust and confidence with their suppliers and potential customers and you do that through events. So that’s what led me into the conference business,” Mike explains.

In the opposite direction is digital marketing in which Ringier Trade has directed a lot of resources in the past six or seven or so years. “Money, people and time have gone to enhancing our website, industrysourcing.com, and all our digital services – whether it's the occasional webinar, web TV, the showrooms that we have – and this all never stops. The technology changes, so you have to change – constant reinvention, re-investment just to keep up with the technology. And then smartphones change the game dramatically so we have to change again,” he says.

The future is content marketing

As Ringier Trade celebrates its 15th anniversary, Mike s ees B2B communications evolving to incorporate content marketing. A whole new style of advertising, content marketing is not the easiest concept to explain to an advertisers so he has personally been meeting with select clients to introduce what Ringier can offer them.

“In the digital age, the communication process will be very text-driven, imagedriven, more informative, and present a company through thought leadership, and that builds up trust and generates inquiries in a bit more of an indirect way,” he says.“So that is one area of change that will change the way we will incorporate our content. In the past, the mandate to the editors was produce the best quality content that you can for the magazine. Today, it's totally turned on its head. I tell our editors that they are content directors, they're brand managers, and most importantly, the most important brand now is what they do in digital.” - See more at: http://us.industrysourcing.com/news/278013.aspx#sthash.9oEX6uNq.dpuf
THERE wasn’t a lack headlines in July 1997. What should have been the big story – Hong Kong’s handover to China by the United Kingdom – was quickly eclipsed by the financial crisis that knocked out Thailand and quickly pummelled more economies across Asia. Industrial projects ground to a halt, banks shut down, and investments dried up.To observers, only China was unmarked by the pounding that the rest of the region was taking.

B2B multimedia publisher Michael R. Hay agreed with this observation and saw positive prospects for trade media in China. In contrast to the rest of Asia, investments were still pouring in to China and industrial activity was ramping up. Domestic companies, for instance, were venturing into OEM operations to serve international demand for competitively priced products and components.

“I saw that in China that manufacturers had a very strong need for information and knowhow – on technology and on manufacturing. They were learning how to market and create their products but they were still very backward in technology in terms of production and manufacturing,”recalls Mr Hay, president and publisher of Ringier Trade Media – one of the most successful industrial media companies in the region.

In this dearth of information, Mike saw potential to publish trade magazines for core industries. He identified Plastics Processing and Packaging as two of these industries requiring technology to achieve greater levels of efficiency and reach global standards.

“I saw a real opportunity there, because plastics manufacturing consumption was rapidly rising 15 years ago and China was very active in developing export markets, which require packaging, so it seemed like a natural fit,” he explains.

It was 15 years ago, he set up Ringier Trade Media with joint business partner, the Swiss media giant Ringier AG. Although at that time the B2B sector was a huge departure for the Swiss firm, having always been in the commercial sector, they have been supportive from the get-go.An incident early on proved to be a very pleasant surprise and also gave Ringier AG a great deal of confidence of the potential of B2B magazines.

In March of 1998, Ringier Trade participated in the trade show Sinopack in Guangzhou, with the prototype of their first magazine International Plastics News for China(国际塑料商情). To their amazement, they got nearly 3,000 requests for subscriptions in just three days. “We were just overwhelmed. The booth was just swamped with visitors to the trade show trying to sign up for subscription – we had to fight them off. It was amazing,” Mike recalls.

“Then the same thing happened a few months later at Chinaplas, also in Guangzhou. We reintroduced our International Plastics News for China. Again the booth was just absolutely overwhelmed with people demanding to get sample copies of the magazine,” he adds.

China at that time had a very high demand and respect for product and machinery made in Taiwan, and Ringier Trade was the first publishing operation to set up in Taiwan with the specific objective of helping Taiwan exporters break into the China market. “So really, you know, 50% of the business was coming from Taiwan, and we also discovered that we had another opportunity not just for China, but also had a great opportunity to introduce Taiwan machinery makers to markets in Latin America, USA, Europe, and we did this by establishing partnerships through our partner media. So it was a very good story that we have for our clients in Taiwan: that we are present in China, Europe, Latin America, and so on,” says Mike.

In the 15 years since, Ringier Trade has added over 30 titles to its portfolio including for other core industries, including Metalworking and Food & Beverage. The company has also partnered with international publishing firms with significant markets in the United States, Latin America and Europe as well as setting up co-branded titles in India. “We were basically the first B2B media company from this area to set up kind of a joint venture in India and build a bridge between two great trading centres,” says Mike.

Keeping pace with developments

As the core industries developed and specialised, Ringier Trade introduced new titles to serve their requirements. These included for instance, Rubber World for China(国际橡胶商情)and Reinforced Plastics China(增强塑料-中国版) in Plastics, and International Mold & Die Making News for China(国际模具制造商情)and Automotive Engineering International China(国际汽车工程-中 文版)in Metalworking. The expansion of print media has also been territorial; English trade journals were the natural progression to serve the Plastics, Metalworking and Food & Beverage industries in South East Asia and the Middle East and Africa.

The company also holds 20 specialised conferences annually. While organizing these events is very time- and labourintensive, this form of communication and interaction is booming. “There still remains a very great need for companies to build relationships, to create business networks. People still want to meet people. People still want to develop those contacts and build trust and confidence with their suppliers and potential customers and you do that through events. So that’s what led me into the conference business,” Mike explains.

In the opposite direction is digital marketing in which Ringier Trade has directed a lot of resources in the past six or seven or so years. “Money, people and time have gone to enhancing our website, industrysourcing.com, and all our digital services – whether it's the occasional webinar, web TV, the showrooms that we have – and this all never stops. The technology changes, so you have to change – constant reinvention, re-investment just to keep up with the technology. And then smartphones change the game dramatically so we have to change again,” he says.

The future is content marketing

As Ringier Trade celebrates its 15th anniversary, Mike s ees B2B communications evolving to incorporate content marketing. A whole new style of advertising, content marketing is not the easiest concept to explain to an advertisers so he has personally been meeting with select clients to introduce what Ringier can offer them.

“In the digital age, the communication process will be very text-driven, imagedriven, more informative, and present a company through thought leadership, and that builds up trust and generates inquiries in a bit more of an indirect way,” he says.“So that is one area of change that will change the way we will incorporate our content. In the past, the mandate to the editors was produce the best quality content that you can for the magazine. Today, it's totally turned on its head. I tell our editors that they are content directors, they're brand managers, and most importantly, the most important brand now is what they do in digital.” - See more at: http://us.industrysourcing.com/news/278013.aspx#sthash.9oEX6uNq.dpuf

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Out of the ordinary: Elastic Electronics


I am sharing a very interesting feature article from the University of Michigan about “Stretchable gold conductor that grows its own wires.” How cool is that, right?

According to the article, networks of spherical nanoparticles embedded in elastic materials may make the best stretchy conductors yet, engineering researchers at the University of Michigan have discovered.

Flexible electronics have a wide variety of possibilities, from bendable displays and batteries to medical implants that move with the body.

"Essentially the new nanoparticle materials behave as elastic metals," said Nicholas Kotov, the Joseph B. and Florence V. Cejka Professor of Engineering. "It's just the start of a new family of materials that can be made from a large variety of nanoparticles for a wide range of applications."

Finding good conductors that still work when pulled to twice their length is a tall order—researchers have tried wires in tortuous zigzag or spring-like patterns, liquid metals, nanowire networks and more. The team was surprised that spherical gold nanoparticles embedded in polyurethane could outcompete the best of these in stretchability and concentration of electrons.

"We found that nanoparticles aligned into chain form when stretching. That can make excellent conducting pathways," said Yoonseob Kim, first author of the study to be published in Nature on July 18 and a graduate student in the Kotov lab in chemical engineering.

To find out what happened as the material stretched the team took state-of-the-art electron microscope images of the materials at various tensions. The nanoparticles started out dispersed, but under strain, they could filter through the minuscule gaps in the polyurethane, connecting in chains as they would in a solution.

"As we stretch, they rearrange themselves to maintain the conductivity, and this is the reason why we got the amazing combination of stretchability and electrical conductivity," Kotov said.

The team made two versions of their material—by building it in alternating layers or filtering a liquid containing polyurethane and nanoparticle clumps to leave behind a mixed layer. Overall, the layer-by-layer material design is more conductive while the filtered method makes for extremely supple materials. Without stretching, the layer-by-layer material with five gold layers has a conductance of 11,000 Siemens per centimeter (S/cm), on par with mercury, while five layers of the filtered material came in at 1,800 S/cm, more akin to good plastic conductors.

The eerie, blood-vessel-like web of nanoparticles emerged in both materials upon stretching and disappeared when the materials relaxed. Even when close to its breaking point, at a little more than twice its original length, the layer-by-layer material still conducted at 2,400 S/cm. Pulled to an unprecedented 5.8 times its original length, the filtered material had an electrical conductance of 35 S/cm—enough for some devices.

Kotov and Kim chiefly see their stretchable conductors as electrodes. Brain implants are of particular interest to Kotov.

"They can alleviate a lot of diseases—for instance, severe depression, Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease," he said. "They can also serve as a part of artificial limbs and other prosthetic devices controlled by the brain."

Rigid electrodes create scar tissue that prevents the electrode from working over time, but electrodes that move like brain tissue could avoid damaging cells, Kotov said.

"The stretchability is essential during implantation process and long-term operation of the implant when strain on the material can be particularly large," he said.
Whether in the brain, heart or other organs—or used for measurements on the skin—these electrodes could be as pliable as the surrounding tissue. They could also be used in displays that can roll up or in the joints of lifelike "soft" robots.

Because the chain-forming tendency of nanoparticles is so universal many other materials could stretch, such as semiconductors. In addition to serving as flexible transistors for computing, elastic semiconductors may extend the lives of lithium-ion batteries. Kotov's team is exploring various nanoparticle fillers for stretchable electronics, including less expensive metals and semiconductors.

Kotov is a professor of chemical engineering, biomedical engineering, materials science and engineering and macromolecular science and engineering.

The study is titled "Stretchable Nanoparticle Conductors with Self-Organized Conductive Pathways." The work is funded by the STX foundation in Seoul, South Korea; U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science; Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency; Air Force Office of Scientific Research; and National Science Foundation. U-M is pursuing patent protection for the intellectual property and seeking commercialization partners to help bring the technology to market.

Description: Networks of spherical nanoparticles embedded in elastic materials may make the best stretchy conductors yet, engineering researchers at the University of Michigan have discovered.


LEFT: an electron microscope image of the gold nanoparticles in a relaxed sample of the layer-by-layer material. The nanoparticles are dispersed. RIGHT: a similar sample stretched to a little over twice its original length, at the same magnification. The nanoparticles form a distinct network

Watch and embed the video at www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQ7_TPSSfys.


Monday, July 15, 2013

Siemens call for image submissions



Hello everyone!

This is your chance to submit images created using Siemens PLM Software.  The Siemens PLM Software 2014 Global Image Program is now underway and calling for submissions of images. This program is held every year as part of the company’s support for the creation of innovation by individuals as well as businesses.

Products from every industry will be considered, be it CAD images, innovative new products or products for daily use. The objective of the competition is for participants to submit an image of a product idea which can be used commercially or individually, created using Siemens PLM Software.

Images will be judged by industry professionals who will consider the following:
·         Overall dramatic impact/aesthetics of image
·         How much the image represents maximum usage of Siemens PLM Software products
·         Complexity of image
·         Image innovation
·         Degree to which the image incorporates virtual and real elements
·         Image clarity/high-quality resolution

The top 24 images will be selected and each contributor will be awarded an iPad®. Each of the shortlisted images will be published in next year’s Siemens PLM Software calendar.

Details of Siemens PLM Software 2014 Global Image Program
Entry period: May 1 to September 30 2013 (EST)
Submission: Full details on how to submit an entry are posted on the Entry Submission Page.
Please visit the following website to view winning entries from past years’ Global Image Programs.

So what are you waiting for? Send in your entries now!