Bullring attracts shoppers with River Publishing title
30 Nov 2004 | by Daniel Farey-Jones,
to Birmingham's city centre, introducing a true destination shopping experience. "The River Publishing team ...
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-enabled touch-screen kiosks set up throughout Bristol, along with a wireless "cloud" to allow people in the city ... , city centres or rail stations. Here they are in a different mind-frame from when they are in the home ... to replicate the campaign in other cities after the Bristol trial is finished. Nicola Young, head of direct ...
to Birmingham's city centre, introducing a true destination shopping experience. "The River Publishing team ...
and smelling of salmon. Yup, a commercial for Audi, featuring car-sized fish driving through a nocturnal city
. From here, it's difficult to imagine a world of parochial-looking American town and city newspapers ... city papers, The New York Times in particular, remotely focused on foreign news and sophisticated ... -elegant glories of a US provincial city's best-hotel-in-town at some corporate- bonding hooley, (actually, rather ...
1991: Political correspondent, The Times 1997: Transport correspondent, The Times 2000: City ...
of bus stops around the city is part of a through-the-line campaign for Aquafresh devised by Michaelides ... , from Hotbed Publishing, claims an international circulation of 45,000 in cities including London, New ...
LONDON - 'Sex and the City' star Sarah Jessica Parker's skimpy outfit on posters for Lux soap has
's international network includes offices in San Francisco, where it is headquartered, New York, Mexico City, Paris ...
Do you think of yourself as a department store shopper? Probably not. Yet, if you live in a UK city...- let's be honest, we love it. It's no surprise that any major city regeneration nowadays is not complete until that big department store name is added to the city's marketing literature. Birmingham is a ...
London's inward investment agency, London First Centre, has been rebranded Think London as it spearheads a campaign to lure foreign firms to the capital. Michael Charlton, chief executive of Think London, said that although the city had 'unquestionable strengths' as an international base, it was being ...