The document outlines the production plan for a new hip hop magazine over 3 weeks in August 2017, which includes tasks such as meeting the staff, finding an artist to interview, conducting a photo shoot, designing the layout, inserting articles, finding advertisers, and distributing the finished magazine.
The document outlines plans for producing a new hip hop magazine over several weeks, including interviewing an artist for the first issue, designing layouts, inserting articles and advertisements, and finalizing and distributing the first issue by the end of August. Key tasks include finding stories, photographing the artist, designing covers and pages, sending the issue for printing, and distributing copies to stores and websites. The production schedule is detailed week-by-week from August 8th to 29th.
Maryasiye Kircin - Contents Page and DPS AnalysisMaryasiye Kircin
This document analyzes the contents page and double page spread (DPS) of a music magazine called XXL.
It examines the use of images, language, and layout design elements like subheadings and page numbers to attract and engage the target audience. Key aspects discussed include the use of slang language and natural poses in images to create rapport with readers and represent hip hop culture authentically.
The document also considers how these magazine design elements could be applied to a new music magazine called PULSE to attract its intended readership through consistent branding, relatable content, and visually appealing star images that convey the right connotations.
This document contains Claire Olney's planning and research for a music magazine project. It includes screenshots documenting the steps taken to design the front cover and contents page templates. It also contains research on established music magazines, their conventions, target audiences, and publishers. The research focuses on the magazines Q and NME. Target audiences are analyzed using theories by Katz, Maslow, and socio-economic categories. The document finds that music magazines target mainly males aged 16-35 and aim to inform and educate readers on music trends.
This document analyzes the layout and design elements of a music magazine contents page and double page spread (DPS) interview feature. It describes the purpose and design of various elements like subheadings, page numbers, images, and pull quotes. It notes how these elements are used effectively in Q Magazine. The writer intends to replicate several of these design elements in their own eclectic music magazine, such as using one page for a large image and fitting the article onto the other page for the DPS, and featuring the artist's name prominently in the background or masthead. The goal is to create an engaging layout while also competing with the design of Q Magazine.
The document summarizes the conventions and sales information of four magazines - Prime Living, Now, FourFourTwo, and Match. It describes the pictures, mastheads, teasers, colors, and target audiences of each magazine cover. Prime Living targets wealthy residents of Houston, selling 40,000 copies. Now targets females interested in celebrity gossip, selling 540,000 weekly. FourFourTwo focuses on soccer and sells 111,000 copies a week, making it the best-selling soccer magazine, outpacing Match by 5,000 copies.
Maryasiye Kircin conducted primary research through a Survey Monkey questionnaire to inform the development of their proposed music magazine, PULSE. The questionnaire received responses from 10 people across various age ranges from under 13 to over 26. The results showed that the majority of respondents would expect to see images of artists on the cover of a hip-hop/rap magazine and find interviews and gossip to be the most important interior content. Respondents also indicated that promotions for concert tickets and YouTube/TV advertisements would be most appealing. Considering these findings, Maryasiye plans to feature a unique artist on the cover of PULSE along with descriptive copy, and include competitions and promotions in the magazine.
The document is a mood board created by Claire Olney for a magazine planning assignment. It summarizes the fonts, color schemes, films, and artists selected to represent the eclectic genre of the magazine. Three fonts were chosen - 'River Drive' for its messy style, 'Constantine' for its formal spread, and 'Mermaid' for its bold formality. Potential house colors of light blue, black, gold, white, and red were selected. The films 'The Perks of Being a Wallflower' and 'Teenage Dirtbag' were included for their appeal to younger audiences. Seven artists ranging from Shawn Mendes to George Ezra were featured representing different music styles relevant to the
The document discusses research conducted for a student's music magazine coursework project on hip hop genres. It includes an analysis of an existing hip hop magazine called Vibe and a questionnaire distributed to students aged 14-20 about their music preferences and what they want in a magazine. Key findings from the questionnaire indicated that most listeners were 14-16, listened to hip hop and R&B, and preferred gossip features in a magazine that costs £1-2.
The document outlines plans for producing a new hip hop magazine over several weeks, including interviewing an artist for the first issue, designing layouts, inserting articles and advertisements, and finalizing and distributing the first issue by the end of August. Key tasks include finding stories, photographing the artist, designing covers and pages, sending the issue for printing, and distributing copies to stores and websites. The production schedule is detailed week-by-week from August 8th to 29th.
Maryasiye Kircin - Contents Page and DPS AnalysisMaryasiye Kircin
This document analyzes the contents page and double page spread (DPS) of a music magazine called XXL.
It examines the use of images, language, and layout design elements like subheadings and page numbers to attract and engage the target audience. Key aspects discussed include the use of slang language and natural poses in images to create rapport with readers and represent hip hop culture authentically.
The document also considers how these magazine design elements could be applied to a new music magazine called PULSE to attract its intended readership through consistent branding, relatable content, and visually appealing star images that convey the right connotations.
This document contains Claire Olney's planning and research for a music magazine project. It includes screenshots documenting the steps taken to design the front cover and contents page templates. It also contains research on established music magazines, their conventions, target audiences, and publishers. The research focuses on the magazines Q and NME. Target audiences are analyzed using theories by Katz, Maslow, and socio-economic categories. The document finds that music magazines target mainly males aged 16-35 and aim to inform and educate readers on music trends.
This document analyzes the layout and design elements of a music magazine contents page and double page spread (DPS) interview feature. It describes the purpose and design of various elements like subheadings, page numbers, images, and pull quotes. It notes how these elements are used effectively in Q Magazine. The writer intends to replicate several of these design elements in their own eclectic music magazine, such as using one page for a large image and fitting the article onto the other page for the DPS, and featuring the artist's name prominently in the background or masthead. The goal is to create an engaging layout while also competing with the design of Q Magazine.
The document summarizes the conventions and sales information of four magazines - Prime Living, Now, FourFourTwo, and Match. It describes the pictures, mastheads, teasers, colors, and target audiences of each magazine cover. Prime Living targets wealthy residents of Houston, selling 40,000 copies. Now targets females interested in celebrity gossip, selling 540,000 weekly. FourFourTwo focuses on soccer and sells 111,000 copies a week, making it the best-selling soccer magazine, outpacing Match by 5,000 copies.
Maryasiye Kircin conducted primary research through a Survey Monkey questionnaire to inform the development of their proposed music magazine, PULSE. The questionnaire received responses from 10 people across various age ranges from under 13 to over 26. The results showed that the majority of respondents would expect to see images of artists on the cover of a hip-hop/rap magazine and find interviews and gossip to be the most important interior content. Respondents also indicated that promotions for concert tickets and YouTube/TV advertisements would be most appealing. Considering these findings, Maryasiye plans to feature a unique artist on the cover of PULSE along with descriptive copy, and include competitions and promotions in the magazine.
The document is a mood board created by Claire Olney for a magazine planning assignment. It summarizes the fonts, color schemes, films, and artists selected to represent the eclectic genre of the magazine. Three fonts were chosen - 'River Drive' for its messy style, 'Constantine' for its formal spread, and 'Mermaid' for its bold formality. Potential house colors of light blue, black, gold, white, and red were selected. The films 'The Perks of Being a Wallflower' and 'Teenage Dirtbag' were included for their appeal to younger audiences. Seven artists ranging from Shawn Mendes to George Ezra were featured representing different music styles relevant to the
The document discusses research conducted for a student's music magazine coursework project on hip hop genres. It includes an analysis of an existing hip hop magazine called Vibe and a questionnaire distributed to students aged 14-20 about their music preferences and what they want in a magazine. Key findings from the questionnaire indicated that most listeners were 14-16, listened to hip hop and R&B, and preferred gossip features in a magazine that costs £1-2.
This document analyzes the contents page and double page spread (DPS) of a music magazine.
The contents page uses bold page numbers and headings to help readers quickly find topics of interest. It also lists band indexes to showcase which bands are featured. The DPS focuses on an interview with the band Kasabian, using a large central image of the band along with a bold title spanning two pages. Design elements like drop caps, pull quotes, and standfirst text are intended to draw readers into the article. Color schemes and language aim to present information in an engaging yet serious manner for the target audience.
The document outlines plans for two hip hop magazines called "President" and "STATE". Key details include:
- The magazines will have a monthly release schedule and target an audience of 16-35 year olds.
- "President" will use a blue and white color scheme while "STATE" will use red and black. Both will be priced at £3.
- The front covers will feature images of famous hip hop artists and quotes to attract readers.
- Inside pages will have large headlines and photos along with interviews and articles.
- Hand drawn drafts of sample front and inside pages were created to plan out the magazine designs.
The document provides details about Chloe Haynes' media studies coursework for a music magazine. It includes step-by-step descriptions of creating the front cover and contents page, with images showing the progress. It also includes research on established music magazines, conventions of music magazines, target audiences and publishers.
The document summarizes how the media product challenges conventions of existing rock magazines. Key conventions included are:
1. The masthead on the front cover stands out using bright colors that fit the house style.
2. Images typically feature all-male rock bands, but the main image shows a female rock star challenging this convention.
3. Regular features like interviews, artist profiles, and concert listings are included on the contents page following conventions.
4. The double page interview spread includes pull quotes, a large central image, and column-formatted text, drawing inspiration from conventions of other magazines.
The documents provide information about the development of two magazine concepts - GE Magazine and TRAP Magazine.
For GE Magazine, the masthead uses gold, black and white colors and the font "LEMON/MILK". It will be released weekly and target an audience of ages 13-25.
For TRAP Magazine, the masthead uses red, black and white colors. It will focus on hip hop music and be released monthly due to its higher price. The target audience is ages 16+ of both genders.
This document provides details about Ollie Long's plans for two rap/hip-hop magazines called "ANTI" and "Major". It includes information about the target audience, which will be mainly males aged 15-45 from socioeconomic classes C1, C2, and D. Ollie also discusses the magazine layout, colors, mastheads, and includes mood boards and draft designs. The production plan outlines tasks like choosing content, conducting interviews, and incorporating photographs over a two week period.
The document analyzes the front cover and contents page of a Billboard magazine issue from September 2010. On the front cover, the main image features Selena Gomez to portray her as more mature. The main cover line hints at her discussing personal topics in an interview. Smaller side stories aim to entice readers. The contents page displays the issue's charts, sections, and featured artists through images and page numbers to guide readers. Standard formatting and colors create a consistent house style across pages.
This magazine cover targets a rock and indie music audience aged 16-29. The large red title stands out against the black background. The main image shows a band that could be featured in the main article. Additional images and text provide information on bands and articles inside the issue, including a free poster. While there is some empty space, key elements like the price and issue date are included.
Phoebe Regnault is submitting a magazine flat plan for Image Magazine. The main article will feature an interview with artist Imani about her new album and include photos of Imani. The plan includes 12 pages of articles on artists like Nicki Minaj, Drake, Beyoncé and Jay Z along with 1 contents page, 3 ad pages, 3 review pages, 1 competition page, and 1 page previewing next week's issue. The magazine will have an 'A-side' and 'B-side' split by a contents page, with the main article on the 'A-side' to follow the format of the XXL magazine inspiration.
This document analyzes the front cover, contents page, and a double page spread from Q magazine.
The front cover uses bright colors, bold text, and a photo of Arctic Monkeys to attract readers. The contents page advertises articles through photos and lists content categories. A double page spread features an image of Cheryl Cole looking fierce next to a bold quote to entice reading her article. Consistent colors, layouts, and typography make the magazine appealing and help readers navigate the content.
The document describes conventions used in magazine double page spreads featuring celebrity interviews. These include displaying the artist's name prominently, using the title of the article which often references a quote from the interview, and including pull quotes from the article. Images are typically large taking up one full page to clearly show the artist. Color schemes aim to reflect the artist's personality and style. Additional elements are subheadings summarizing sections, page numbers for navigation, and icons or text indicating it is a cover story.
Q magazine stands out from other music magazines through its distinctive style and focus on rock and indie music. It uses a limited color palette and bold, thick fonts. The logo prominently features bright red. Articles address the reader directly to encourage connection. Photos depict older artists to appeal to the magazine's older target audience. Q focuses on bands that have been around for a long time and showcases their rock music. It releases issues monthly to increase demand and allows raising prices to boost profits.
The document outlines mind maps and plans for two music magazines titled "Riddim" and "Bass" that include details on mastheads, color schemes, target audiences, and frequencies. It also includes mood boards and analyses of magazine covers and genres to help develop the brand identities and house styles of the two magazines.
The document describes plans for two hip-hop magazines called "President" and "State". Key details include:
- The magazines will have A4 size, monthly release schedules, and prices of £3 each, 50p cheaper than the inspiration magazine "Vibe".
- "President" will use a blue and white color scheme while "State" will use red and black.
- Target audiences will be ages 16-35. Articles will feature hip-hop artists and include images and quotes.
- Draft magazine covers and spreads are presented to showcase the planned layouts, along with analyses of inspiration from "Vibe" magazine and the repetition of successful elements.
Front cover analysis essay and labelled analysisLizRose2012
This document analyzes and compares the front covers of two music magazines: NME and Q Magazine. Both covers use similar color schemes of red, black, and white. They also follow the Guttenberg Design Principle by placing key elements like the magazine title and artist image in areas where the eye is naturally drawn. However, there are some differences - NME uses more vibrant colors and imagery to appeal to a younger audience, while Q Magazine has a cleaner, more mature design. Overall, the covers have similar layouts but target different genres and age groups through subtle stylistic choices.
The document analyzes various elements of an issue of NME magazine. It summarizes that the magazine targets a male audience aged 13-25 from working class backgrounds. Elements like the bright red masthead and cover featuring rapper Dizzee Rascal signal this target demographic. The analysis also notes the magazine maintains consistency through its color scheme, fonts, and inclusion of the masthead on most pages to clearly establish its brand identity in each section.
The document summarizes the key details about the intended audience and purpose of a proposed hip-hop music magazine. The primary audience would be mostly males aged 16-24 who are interested in hip-hop music, graffiti, and dance. The magazine aims to fill a gap in the market for a hip-hop focused publication. It would have a similar audience to the magazine Vibe but be more mainstream.
Zack Simpson is presenting a proposal for a new R&B music magazine called Riddim. Some key points from the document include:
- The magazine will be published monthly to provide more up-to-date music information than competitors.
- The target audience is ages 15-30, since hip hop/R&B appeals most to this demographic who will recognize featured artists.
- The magazine's branding will use bold colors like grey and yellow to stand out visually from other publications.
- Content will include interviews, reviews, photos and news related to R&B artists, with consistent graphic layouts designed in Photoshop and InDesign.
The document outlines plans for two hip-hop magazines called "President" and "STATE". Key details include:
- The magazines will have a monthly release schedule and target an audience aged 16-35.
- "President" will use a blue and white color scheme while "STATE" will use red and black. Both magazines will be priced at £3.
- Front covers will feature prominent images of famous hip-hop artists and cover lines to attract readers.
- Inside pages will have large headlines and quotes from artists to tell their stories. A consistent masthead and layout will build brand recognition.
This document outlines the production plan for two hip-hop magazines titled "President" and "State". Key details include:
- Weeks of August include interviewing an artist, photo shoots, designing layouts, and inserting content.
- The finished magazine is sent for production the last week of August.
- Distribution and advertising begins the final week, including a product launch on September 1st.
- Social media is also used to advertise the magazine during this launch period.
The production plan provides a timeline for the various stages of creating, designing, filling with content, distributing, and launching the two magazines across August and into early September.
This document outlines the production plan for two hip-hop magazines called "President" and "State". Key details include:
- Weeks of August include interviewing an artist, photo shoots, designing layouts, inserting articles.
- Magazine sent for production by August 26th.
- Following weeks include distribution of magazines to stores/websites, setting up social media to advertise.
- Launch date for the magazines is September 1st.
This document analyzes the contents page and double page spread (DPS) of a music magazine.
The contents page uses bold page numbers and headings to help readers quickly find topics of interest. It also lists band indexes to showcase which bands are featured. The DPS focuses on an interview with the band Kasabian, using a large central image of the band along with a bold title spanning two pages. Design elements like drop caps, pull quotes, and standfirst text are intended to draw readers into the article. Color schemes and language aim to present information in an engaging yet serious manner for the target audience.
The document outlines plans for two hip hop magazines called "President" and "STATE". Key details include:
- The magazines will have a monthly release schedule and target an audience of 16-35 year olds.
- "President" will use a blue and white color scheme while "STATE" will use red and black. Both will be priced at £3.
- The front covers will feature images of famous hip hop artists and quotes to attract readers.
- Inside pages will have large headlines and photos along with interviews and articles.
- Hand drawn drafts of sample front and inside pages were created to plan out the magazine designs.
The document provides details about Chloe Haynes' media studies coursework for a music magazine. It includes step-by-step descriptions of creating the front cover and contents page, with images showing the progress. It also includes research on established music magazines, conventions of music magazines, target audiences and publishers.
The document summarizes how the media product challenges conventions of existing rock magazines. Key conventions included are:
1. The masthead on the front cover stands out using bright colors that fit the house style.
2. Images typically feature all-male rock bands, but the main image shows a female rock star challenging this convention.
3. Regular features like interviews, artist profiles, and concert listings are included on the contents page following conventions.
4. The double page interview spread includes pull quotes, a large central image, and column-formatted text, drawing inspiration from conventions of other magazines.
The documents provide information about the development of two magazine concepts - GE Magazine and TRAP Magazine.
For GE Magazine, the masthead uses gold, black and white colors and the font "LEMON/MILK". It will be released weekly and target an audience of ages 13-25.
For TRAP Magazine, the masthead uses red, black and white colors. It will focus on hip hop music and be released monthly due to its higher price. The target audience is ages 16+ of both genders.
This document provides details about Ollie Long's plans for two rap/hip-hop magazines called "ANTI" and "Major". It includes information about the target audience, which will be mainly males aged 15-45 from socioeconomic classes C1, C2, and D. Ollie also discusses the magazine layout, colors, mastheads, and includes mood boards and draft designs. The production plan outlines tasks like choosing content, conducting interviews, and incorporating photographs over a two week period.
The document analyzes the front cover and contents page of a Billboard magazine issue from September 2010. On the front cover, the main image features Selena Gomez to portray her as more mature. The main cover line hints at her discussing personal topics in an interview. Smaller side stories aim to entice readers. The contents page displays the issue's charts, sections, and featured artists through images and page numbers to guide readers. Standard formatting and colors create a consistent house style across pages.
This magazine cover targets a rock and indie music audience aged 16-29. The large red title stands out against the black background. The main image shows a band that could be featured in the main article. Additional images and text provide information on bands and articles inside the issue, including a free poster. While there is some empty space, key elements like the price and issue date are included.
Phoebe Regnault is submitting a magazine flat plan for Image Magazine. The main article will feature an interview with artist Imani about her new album and include photos of Imani. The plan includes 12 pages of articles on artists like Nicki Minaj, Drake, Beyoncé and Jay Z along with 1 contents page, 3 ad pages, 3 review pages, 1 competition page, and 1 page previewing next week's issue. The magazine will have an 'A-side' and 'B-side' split by a contents page, with the main article on the 'A-side' to follow the format of the XXL magazine inspiration.
This document analyzes the front cover, contents page, and a double page spread from Q magazine.
The front cover uses bright colors, bold text, and a photo of Arctic Monkeys to attract readers. The contents page advertises articles through photos and lists content categories. A double page spread features an image of Cheryl Cole looking fierce next to a bold quote to entice reading her article. Consistent colors, layouts, and typography make the magazine appealing and help readers navigate the content.
The document describes conventions used in magazine double page spreads featuring celebrity interviews. These include displaying the artist's name prominently, using the title of the article which often references a quote from the interview, and including pull quotes from the article. Images are typically large taking up one full page to clearly show the artist. Color schemes aim to reflect the artist's personality and style. Additional elements are subheadings summarizing sections, page numbers for navigation, and icons or text indicating it is a cover story.
Q magazine stands out from other music magazines through its distinctive style and focus on rock and indie music. It uses a limited color palette and bold, thick fonts. The logo prominently features bright red. Articles address the reader directly to encourage connection. Photos depict older artists to appeal to the magazine's older target audience. Q focuses on bands that have been around for a long time and showcases their rock music. It releases issues monthly to increase demand and allows raising prices to boost profits.
The document outlines mind maps and plans for two music magazines titled "Riddim" and "Bass" that include details on mastheads, color schemes, target audiences, and frequencies. It also includes mood boards and analyses of magazine covers and genres to help develop the brand identities and house styles of the two magazines.
The document describes plans for two hip-hop magazines called "President" and "State". Key details include:
- The magazines will have A4 size, monthly release schedules, and prices of £3 each, 50p cheaper than the inspiration magazine "Vibe".
- "President" will use a blue and white color scheme while "State" will use red and black.
- Target audiences will be ages 16-35. Articles will feature hip-hop artists and include images and quotes.
- Draft magazine covers and spreads are presented to showcase the planned layouts, along with analyses of inspiration from "Vibe" magazine and the repetition of successful elements.
Front cover analysis essay and labelled analysisLizRose2012
This document analyzes and compares the front covers of two music magazines: NME and Q Magazine. Both covers use similar color schemes of red, black, and white. They also follow the Guttenberg Design Principle by placing key elements like the magazine title and artist image in areas where the eye is naturally drawn. However, there are some differences - NME uses more vibrant colors and imagery to appeal to a younger audience, while Q Magazine has a cleaner, more mature design. Overall, the covers have similar layouts but target different genres and age groups through subtle stylistic choices.
The document analyzes various elements of an issue of NME magazine. It summarizes that the magazine targets a male audience aged 13-25 from working class backgrounds. Elements like the bright red masthead and cover featuring rapper Dizzee Rascal signal this target demographic. The analysis also notes the magazine maintains consistency through its color scheme, fonts, and inclusion of the masthead on most pages to clearly establish its brand identity in each section.
The document summarizes the key details about the intended audience and purpose of a proposed hip-hop music magazine. The primary audience would be mostly males aged 16-24 who are interested in hip-hop music, graffiti, and dance. The magazine aims to fill a gap in the market for a hip-hop focused publication. It would have a similar audience to the magazine Vibe but be more mainstream.
Zack Simpson is presenting a proposal for a new R&B music magazine called Riddim. Some key points from the document include:
- The magazine will be published monthly to provide more up-to-date music information than competitors.
- The target audience is ages 15-30, since hip hop/R&B appeals most to this demographic who will recognize featured artists.
- The magazine's branding will use bold colors like grey and yellow to stand out visually from other publications.
- Content will include interviews, reviews, photos and news related to R&B artists, with consistent graphic layouts designed in Photoshop and InDesign.
The document outlines plans for two hip-hop magazines called "President" and "STATE". Key details include:
- The magazines will have a monthly release schedule and target an audience aged 16-35.
- "President" will use a blue and white color scheme while "STATE" will use red and black. Both magazines will be priced at £3.
- Front covers will feature prominent images of famous hip-hop artists and cover lines to attract readers.
- Inside pages will have large headlines and quotes from artists to tell their stories. A consistent masthead and layout will build brand recognition.
This document outlines the production plan for two hip-hop magazines titled "President" and "State". Key details include:
- Weeks of August include interviewing an artist, photo shoots, designing layouts, and inserting content.
- The finished magazine is sent for production the last week of August.
- Distribution and advertising begins the final week, including a product launch on September 1st.
- Social media is also used to advertise the magazine during this launch period.
The production plan provides a timeline for the various stages of creating, designing, filling with content, distributing, and launching the two magazines across August and into early September.
This document outlines the production plan for two hip-hop magazines called "President" and "State". Key details include:
- Weeks of August include interviewing an artist, photo shoots, designing layouts, inserting articles.
- Magazine sent for production by August 26th.
- Following weeks include distribution of magazines to stores/websites, setting up social media to advertise.
- Launch date for the magazines is September 1st.
This document provides information about the publisher Bauer and their magazine Q. Bauer is a large publishing company that was started 138 years ago and now has over 300 digital products. They have 11,000 employees worldwide and offices in Europe and Australia.
The document then provides details about the magazine Q. It was first published in 1986 and is a monthly music magazine based in the UK. It is currently published by Bauer who bought it from EMAP in 2008. The magazine focuses on rock and pop music genres.
The rest of the document breaks down information about the magazine's target audience, content, production process, and more through analyses of its covers, contents pages, and website. It provides demographic information about its mainly male readers
Tony Mutombo created a music magazine for his AS Level Media Studies coursework. He chose to focus his magazine on the hip hop genre. He produced the front cover, double page spread, and contents page using Adobe Photoshop. He also created a blog to document his research and planning process. Now that the project is complete, he is evaluating the effectiveness of his work and reflecting on how his media skills and understanding have developed.
Here are a few suggestions to improve the interview draft:
- Ask more open-ended questions to get more detailed answers from the artist. For example, instead of just asking if they have a favorite song, ask them to describe their favorite song to perform and why it connects with audiences.
- Follow up on interesting details from their answers with additional questions. For example, when they mentioned enjoying meeting fans from different countries, you could ask what are some memorable fan interactions they've had or cultural differences they've noticed.
- Vary the types of questions between more lighthearted ones (like about a good luck item) and ones that provide artistic insight or background on their career/upcoming projects.
- Consider asking about
The production plan outlines the process for launching TUNE magazine over 12 weeks, including hiring staff, conducting interviews, designing pages, sending the magazine for printing, distribution, and social media promotion, with the goal of the first issue being released on July 3rd. Key aspects are securing an artist for the cover interview and photoshoot, integrating articles and advertisements, and quality control through editing and proofreading.
The document describes a music magazine the author created focused on the pop genre targeting young female audiences. Key details include:
- The magazine uses bright colors and images of popular young artists to attract young readers and allow them to indulge in information about their favorite musicians.
- Both male and female artists are featured to serve as role models or "crushes" for the target audience and intensify their desire to purchase the magazine.
- In creating the magazine, the author took inspiration from existing popular magazines like "We Love Pop" in its design conventions and layout.
This document provides details on the planning and design of two music magazines called Mixer and Xtra. It includes sections on mood boards, target audiences, layouts, and summaries of ideas for each magazine. The key differences between the magazines are that Mixer will focus on R&B and hip hop artists who have been in the industry longer, while Xtra will feature newer artists and offer a chance to win Beats headphones to appeal to younger readers. Both magazines will take inspiration from the layout and style of XXL magazine but with some customized elements.
Billy Simmonds is pitching two rap music magazines called $tackz and RapCity. $tackz will focus on rappers who have a lot of money, while RapCity will portray itself as the city where all rappers are based. Both magazines will target ages 16-25 and use red, black, and white colors. Key conventions that will be repeated across both magazines include overlapping the main image with the masthead logo, close-up front cover photos, and inclusion of barcodes with issue details. Test photography has been conducted to choose appropriate front cover images. The target audience for both magazines is defined using theories by Katz, Maslow, and Hartley.
This document provides details about planning a print-based music magazine called "Dope". Key points include:
- The magazine will focus on hip hop and rap artists, targeting 16-34 year olds, especially those of African American ethnicity.
- Inspiration is drawn from the existing magazine XXL, with a similar bold masthead design, layout focusing on artist photography, and color scheme of black, yellow and white.
- Draft designs include a hand-drawn front cover with the masthead "Dope" and artist image, and double page spreads showing interview formats with large drop capitals and photographs.
- Production details like a monthly frequency and £3.50 price point are considered based
The document discusses plans for two hip-hop magazines called Tune and RW. It includes details on the magazines' mastheads, colour schemes, target audiences, layouts, and designs. For inspiration, it examines the popular magazine XXL. The document explores font styles, mood boards, draft covers, and double page spreads. It aims to establish brand identity and appeal to 15-35 year olds interested in hip-hop music and culture.
The document discusses how the media product targets its audience through its use of conventions and representations. Specifically, it represents the social group of 15-25 year old metal fans by featuring a popular metal band and using fonts, language, and a color scheme commonly seen in metal magazines. It aims to attract this audience by addressing their interests in metal music and using exciting language and photos throughout the magazine that potential readers would find appealing.
This contents page features a central image of a rapper posing with bling and tattoos. The contents are divided into two main sections, Fashion and Features, with subsections in bold capitals. The color scheme is black, red, and white. The page uses gold for the heading "ICONS" to symbolize importance and wealth. The layout and images are meant to attract the target audience of teenagers interested in hip hop and R&B.
The document summarizes research conducted on magazine covers and double page spreads from music magazines. Key findings include:
1. Covers looked professional and were aimed at a mature audience through color schemes and layout designs.
2. Important information was highlighted through blocks of vibrant color and different colored text.
3. White backgrounds were used on the covers analyzed to make elements stand out.
4. Red was an effective color that stood out on white backgrounds across the three covers.
5. The magazine name appeared prominently at the top of each cover.
The research will inform the design of the author's own magazine cover by implementing lessons on layout, color scheme, and visual hierarchy.
The document provides details on two magazine pitches by the author - magazines titled "JKZ" and "HA".
For the JKZ magazine, the target audience is 15-25 year olds and will focus on pop, R&B and hip hop music. It will have articles, reviews and song lyrics. The style will use red, black, grey and dark green colors.
The HA magazine targets 11-17 year old girls and will include images, games and toys. It will have 62 pages including fold-out posters. The style uses light blue to seem superior in the market.
Both magazines aim to attract their audiences with entertaining content on the covers and inside. The author created layouts
The document is an evaluation of a media product, HD magazine, created by the student. The magazine aims to represent hip hop culture. The front cover features a young black male artist to represent the genre. Text and images are used throughout in a way that develops conventions from real hip hop magazines like positioning, fonts and colors. The target audience is those interested in hip hop music aged late teens to early 30s. The student learned about using Photoshop and improved positioning of elements from their preliminary work.
The document provides production details for a coursework assignment to design the front page, contents page, and a double-page spread for a new music magazine. It outlines the tasks, which are to design the front cover featuring an image and text, a contents page layout, and a double-page article spread. It also lists the assessment criteria of research and planning, production, and evaluation. Additional pages provide definitions of magazine design elements and conventions, as well as research results from an audience survey to help inform the design of the magazine.
This document provides details on the planning and design of two weekly hip hop magazines. It discusses color schemes, target audiences, types of images to be used, and branding strategies. The color scheme for the first magazine is red and white, while the second magazine's color scheme is green, white, and black. Both magazines will target 15-35 year olds and feature a variety of big name hip hop artists to appeal to different readers each week. Close up and angled photos will be used throughout to showcase the artists. The logos and mastheads will be bold, bright colors to stand out on shelves.
Free sheet newspapers make money through high advertisement costs. They are found freely distributed around busy areas like train stations in cities. Examples include Metro, London Evening Standard, and City A.M.
Red top tabloids have red mastheads and cover soft news and gossip about celebrities at an affordable price. Examples are The Sun.
Broadsheets are more serious newspapers that focus on in-depth hard news from around the world at a higher price point. Examples include The Guardian.
This document provides details for planning and producing a print advertisement poster for a drum and bass music festival. Key points:
- The target audience is young adults aged 16-25 from socioeconomic classes C1-E, as this type of music wouldn't appeal to older people.
- The poster will use contrasting colors like black and green to make it stand out. Headlining artists will be in a different color to draw attention.
- A production schedule is outlined over 3 weeks for designing layouts, announcing artists, and printing posters.
- A budget outlines staff salaries and equipment costs like computers and cameras needed to produce the poster.
- Launch dates are set for the poster on March
This advertising campaign promotes the Rampage Festival on March 2-3, 2017. The campaign aims to create awareness of the upcoming festival and genre of drum and bass music. It seeks to increase brand recognition through consistent branding colors. The target audience is 16-25 year olds, mainly male, who enjoy drum and bass music. Advertisements include posters, social media, videos on YouTube of past festivals to generate excitement and inform potential attendees. Legal and ethical considerations include accuracy, privacy and copyright when promoting the festival.
The document provides details on the design process for a social media app called "Recordr". It includes hand drawn drafts with purple and white colors. Photoshop drafts are shown for the login/sign up page, home page, and profile page with navigation options. Page content will include recent music, new songs, artists and ads. The website will need terms of use, privacy policy, and WASP license to protect intellectual property and restrict certain access. In conclusion, pages were designed for a new social media website.
This document outlines the design of a proposed social media app called "Recordr" for finding and sharing music. Key details include:
- The target audience is young adults aged 16-35 who are interested in music.
- The app would allow users to search for new music, create playlists, see what's newly added, and listen offline by paying a fee. Users could also upload their own music.
- A simple color scheme of purple, black, and white was selected to make the app stand out from competitors like Spotify and SoundCloud.
- Mockups were created in Photoshop showing login/signup pages, a home screen with navigation, and a profile screen.
Snapchat was created by Evan Spiegal, Bobby Murphy and Reggie Brown while they were students at Stanford University. It allows users to send photos, videos and messages to friends that disappear after a set time period. Its largest user base is ages 18-24. Snapchat generates revenue through sponsored filters and ads. While it allows for quick communication, some experts are concerned about how addictive Snapchat can be for teens. [/SUMMARY]
This document provides details for planning and producing a print advertisement poster for a drum and bass music festival. Key points:
- The target audience is young adults aged 16-25 from socioeconomic classes C1-E, as this type of music wouldn't appeal to older people.
- The poster will use contrasting colors like black and green to make it stand out. It will feature the headlining artists in a different color to draw attention.
- Production plans outline weekly tasks like designing layouts, sending posters to print, and releasing announcements over multiple weeks leading up to the festival launch.
- A budget outlines staff salaries and equipment costs needed like computers and cameras to produce the poster.
This advertising campaign promotes the Rampage Festival on March 2-3, 2017. The campaign aims to create awareness of the upcoming festival and genre of drum and bass music. It seeks to increase brand recognition through consistent branding colors. The target audience is 16-25 year olds, mainly male, who enjoy drum and bass music. The campaign message is that Rampage is "The Biggest drum and bass party in the world." Advertisements include posters, social media, videos on YouTube of past festivals, and announcing the lineup a month before to generate excitement.
The document provides details about a student's festival poster project. It includes feedback received on an initial poster design, how images were manipulated for the poster, legal and ethical considerations, software used, and a comparison of the student's poster to their inspiration poster. The student was able to produce an original festival poster applying what they learned.
The document provides details about planning and designing a poster for a drum and bass music festival called Uproar Festival. It discusses the target audience as young adults aged 16-25 from socioeconomic classes C1-E. It also outlines the production schedule, with tasks including deciding on headlining artists, designing layouts, sending designs to print, and distributing posters on certain dates to promote the festival. Budget details and potential risks involving copyrighted images and software tools are also summarized.
The document provides details on the production process for a festival poster. It includes hand drawn drafts and mood boards to inspire the design. Graphic layouts were created to better visualize the poster. Images were manipulated by changing colors and cropping to suit the house style and avoid copyright issues. Production plans outline the schedule for designing content, printing posters, and releasing announcements over multiple weeks. A budget outlines estimated staff salaries and equipment costs. A risk assessment notes the need to manipulate online images to prevent copyright infringement.
The document describes plans for a new music streaming app called "Recordr". Key features include allowing users to find new songs, create playlists, and access music on their phones. The app will have a simple design and be free to use. Revenue will come from optional paid subscriptions for offline listening. Production plans, job roles, and budgets are outlined to launch the app by May 1st. Legal issues like copyright and privacy policies are also addressed.
This document provides details for planning and designing a poster and marketing campaign for a drum and bass music festival. It includes sections on the target audience, proposed name and slogans, mood boards for inspiration, draft poster layouts, scheduling of artist announcements, a production plan, budget, launch dates, locations for advertising, plans for an audiovisual trailer, and considerations around legal and ethical issues. The overall goal is to effectively promote the festival and build excitement leading up to the launch date in April.
This advertising campaign promotes the Rampage Festival on March 2-3, 2017. The campaign aims to create awareness of the upcoming festival and genre of drum and bass music. It targets 16-25 year olds, particularly males, who enjoy this type of music. The campaign uses consistent branding with yellow and black colors across posters, websites and social media. Videos on YouTube showcase past festivals to generate excitement and attract new attendees. The slogan "The Biggest drum and bass party in the world" promotes the festival as the largest in its genre. Legal and ethical considerations include accuracy, privacy and copyright when promoting the festival online and in print-based materials.
The document describes graphic layouts and designs the author has created for a social media app called "Recordr". It includes hand drawn drafts with purple and white colors to convey luxury. Photoshop drafts are shown for the login/sign up page, home page with navigation options, and profile page with notifications. Page content will include recent music, new artists, and ads linked to content. Terms of service and privacy policy pages will protect users and their data. The conclusion states pages were designed for a new social media website.
The document describes plans for a new music streaming app called "Recordr". Key features include allowing users to find new songs, create playlists, and access music on their phones. The app will have a simple design and be free to use. Revenue will come from optional paid subscriptions for offline listening. Production plans outline tasks for designers, editors and writers over 4 weeks to develop the app for launch on May 1st. Legal and ethical policies on copyright, privacy and data protection are also discussed.
This document outlines the design of a proposed social media app called "Recordr" for finding and sharing music. Key details include:
- The target audience is young adults aged 16-35 who are interested in music.
- The app would allow users to search for new music, create playlists, see what's newly added, and listen offline by paying a fee. Users could also upload their own music.
- A simple color scheme of purple, black, and white was selected to make the app stand out from competitors like Spotify and SoundCloud.
- Mockups were created in Photoshop showing login/home pages with navigation bars and a profile section, keeping a clean and easy-to
Snapchat was created by Evan Spiegal, Bobby Murphy and Reggie Brown while they were students at Stanford University. It allows users to send photos, videos and messages to friends that disappear after being viewed. Over 100 million active users spend 30 minutes per day on average on Snapchat, with the largest demographic being ages 18-24. Snapchat generates revenue through sponsored filters and interactive advertisement videos.
The document outlines the production plan for a new music magazine over several weeks. It includes meeting new employees, searching for an artist to interview, conducting the interview, designing layouts, editing photos, inserting articles, finding advertisers, and distributing the magazine. It also provides budgets for staff costs, equipment, printing, marketing, estimated sales revenue from ads, subscriptions and magazine sales, and calculates an overall loss for the first year of production. The target audience is identified as younger males aged 16-30 interested in learning more about music, particularly hip hop artists.
Free sheet newspapers make money through high advertisement costs. They are found freely distributed around busy areas like train stations in cities. Examples include Metro, London Evening Standard, and City A.M.
Red top tabloids have red mastheads and cover soft news and gossip about celebrities at an affordable price. Examples are The Sun.
Broadsheets are more serious newspapers that focus on in-depth hard news from around the world at a higher price point. Examples include The Guardian.
This presentation was provided by Rebecca Benner, Ph.D., of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
Level 3 NCEA - NZ: A Nation In the Making 1872 - 1900 SML.pptHenry Hollis
The History of NZ 1870-1900.
Making of a Nation.
From the NZ Wars to Liberals,
Richard Seddon, George Grey,
Social Laboratory, New Zealand,
Confiscations, Kotahitanga, Kingitanga, Parliament, Suffrage, Repudiation, Economic Change, Agriculture, Gold Mining, Timber, Flax, Sheep, Dairying,
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
Temple of Asclepius in Thrace. Excavation resultsKrassimira Luka
The temple and the sanctuary around were dedicated to Asklepios Zmidrenus. This name has been known since 1875 when an inscription dedicated to him was discovered in Rome. The inscription is dated in 227 AD and was left by soldiers originating from the city of Philippopolis (modern Plovdiv).
2. My Magazines
President
STATE
Target
Audience
Color
SchemesPrice
Masthead
Names
Brand identity
Images
Frequency
1. Vertex
2. H-H (Hip-Hop)
3. Mondo
4. Future
5. Fated
6. Unborn
7. President
8. State
The colour scheme of the
first magazine will be blue
and white. This is because
the two colours will contrast
really well. This is like the
‘Vibe’ magazine with red
and white. However the
second magazine will be red
and black.
The price of the
magazine will be
3.00 pound as this is
50p cheaper then my
magazine of
inspiration so it will
sell.
The target audience of the magazine will
be between the ages of 16-35, this is
due to the fact that the genre is hip hop.
I have based my idea from ‘Vibe’
magazine. As I want to be able to sell as
many magazines as possible.
My magazine will be release monthly as this is when
‘vibe’ is released. This is because people will be
used to this routine.
On my front cover I will include a image of a famous hip-hop
artist as this will attracted the reader using ‘star appeal’
(Richard Dyer). Also I will have other pictures of artists too as
this will attract the reader. I will also be having a a medium
close up for the front cover.
The masthead will be going across the top of
the page on every issue. As this will be
recognized by the reader every time. Also the
use of two contrasting colours to make it stand
out.
5. Deconstruct a front cover
Masthead- The masthead is
bold but very simple.
However this is significant
as you know that it is ‘Q’
magazine very quickly on
the shopping shelves. The
colours work well together
as they contrast with each
other. As it is called ‘Q’ this
connotes that it is aimed at
older people.
Header- This informs the reader
what types of articles are within
the issue of magazine. In this
particular magazine I is ‘ The most
exciting people in music now’.
This is used to draw the reader in,
as they would like to read more
about it. The use of the
superlative ‘most’ conveys these
artists are the people to be listing
to so this also draws the reader
in.
Cover lines- The cover lines
are used to attracted the
reader to read more of the
magazine. They are quotes
from what people have said
which are normally interesting
and outrageous so the reader
in drawn in by it.
Main Image- This main
image is of Jay-Z who is a
well known star across the
world. This is called ‘star
appeal’. As lots f people
know who Jay-Z is they are
more likely to by this
magazine especially if they
have a interview with him.Barcode- The barcode is
there so they can sell the
magazine
Strapline- The strapline for ‘Q’ magazine is
‘Discover Great Music’ which implies that you
can find out about ‘great’ music in this
magazine so this means more people will buy
it.
6. Main Image- The main image
is of Jay-Z who is also
featured on the front cover as
he is well known and this is
called ‘star appeal’. There are
two colours used in this
image. Red connotes ‘Q’
magazine as the company but
also the red could connote
danger as he is a rapper and
they are meant to be ‘hard’.
The second colour is a light
colour which could convey
Jay-Z’s “good” side. Further
more Jay-Z is wearing
sunglasses and chains as he is
conveying himself as a rapper.
Headline- This head
line is always the
main heading on the
front cover so this
means that it is the
main story in the
magazine. This
headline is
particularly
interesting so this
will make the reader
want to read more
about it. Jay-Z’s
name is underneath
in the colour red
and bold as this is a
contrast to the
white background.
Quote from interview- This is a
quote from Jay-Z which is
inspirational which will make the
reader want to fond out more on
Jay-Z’s interview and his character.
Page Number- This page number is unique
as it is three digits for example 038 rather
then the two digit page numbers in other
magazines. Also the ‘Q’ logo is next to it as
well as this indicates the company
throughout the magazine.
Deconstruction
of DPS
7. Genre
Q magazine provides Rock ‘n’ Roll and pop music magazines.
The image on the right shoes the Foo Fighters on the front cover
who are a rock and roll band.
The image on the left connotes Ed Sheeran who is a pop music
artist.
According to Spotify hip-hop was is the most listen to music
genre in the world with 20 billion tracks.
In the UK pop music over took rock music as the most popular
music genre.
http://www.bauermedia.co.uk/brands/q
8. Name: Harry Dyerson
Candidate Number:
Contents Editorial
Conte
nt
Main
Image
Masthead Headline
Article
Headline
Article
Headline
Article
Article
Main DPS
Reviews Headline
Article
Arti
cle
Headline
Article
Article
Headline
Article
Reviews
12. Target Audience Spending Power
My target audience will be for BC1, this is because this is quite high up
on the socio-economic needs table. Also I think that this people will
have that spare money to spend on a magazine unlike people in E who
need to budget their money so they don’t spend it on things they don’t
need. This mean so will have a bigger spending power.
15. Chosen Fonts
Bad Stories by
imagex
yborg Rooster à € by
Iconian Fonts
I have chosen this font as it is very
similar to my magazine of
inspiration. This is good as I am not
re-inventing the wheel. As most
magazines have bold fonts.
I have chosen this font as it is
similar to ‘Vibe’ but not as
similar as the other font.
However this font is more
squashed together.
16. House Style - PRESIDENT
The color scheme to my first magazine is light blue and a light grey. As these two colours contrast
each other. The colour blue connotes loyalty highlighting that my magazine will contain accurate
information. The colour blue is easy to see and connotes my magazine will have pure and trustful
information. The light grey denotes a neutral colour, the connotations behind the colour grey is that
it is quite cool and contemporary.
Furthermore, I will have social media logos on my page to keep up with the brand identity and it is
an example of cross-media convergence, ‘digital natives’ (Prensky 2001) will like being “courted
across multiple media platforms” (Jenkins 2006).
17. House Style - STATE
The colours I am using for the ‘STATE’ magazine is red and light grey as these contrast well with each
other. The colour red connotes passion therefore the editor of the magazine will be passionate
about the information they produce will be passionate and full of energy. Furthermore the colour
red connotes power which means that the whole magazine working force will be powerful in
making the magazine and working together. The second colour light grey connotes cool which
means that the magazine will be cool and trendy on the magazine market.
Furthermore, I will have social media logos on my page to keep up with the brand identity and it is
an example of cross-media convergence, ‘digital natives’ (Prensky 2001) will like being “courted
across multiple media platforms” (Jenkins 2006).
22. Week beginning: August 8th 2017
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Meet all the new
employees in the main
office and tell them
the plans for the
magazine and what
each of them are
meant to do.
Search for a artist to
interview for the first
addition of the
magazine.
Get the writer to think of good
questions to ask the artist at
the interview.
Get the reporter to go
and interview the artist
with the questions
which the writer has
written.
Type up the
answers that the
artist has given
the reporter.
Do a photo-shoot of the
artist for the front cover
and DPS for the
magazine.
Get the designer to
design the layout of
the front cover and
DPS.
Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by:
Monday 12th August
2017
Sunday 19th August
2017
Thursday 21st August 2017 Saturday 24th August
2017
Sunday 25th
August 2017
Tuesday 26th August
2017
Tuesday 26th August
2017
PRODUCTION PLAN
23. Week beginning: August 15th 2017
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Get reporter to
investigate more
stories about new up
coming hip hop artists.
Edit the photos that
were taken of the
artist to make the
artist look more
appealing.
Insert interview into the DPS of
the magazine.
Look for business who
would want to
advertise their
company in the
magazine
Start inserting
other articles
into the
magazine.
Weekend off Weekend off
Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by:
Friday 19 th August Saturday 20th August Wesnesday 17th August Thursday 25th August Friday 26th
August
PRODUCTION PLAN
24. Week beginning: August 22nd 2017
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Finish of designing the
magazine
Find more short stories
about artist
Find more short stories about
artist
Find more short stories
about artist
Send finished
magazine of for
production
Weekend off Weekend off
Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by:
Friday 26th August Friday 26th August Friday 26th August Friday 26th August
PRODUCTION PLAN
25. Week beginning: August 29th 2017
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Once magazines arrive
find places where the
magazine can be
distributed to
Distribute magazines
to stores and online
websites you have
found which gave
permission to
advertise your product
on
Set up social media account
and advertise the magazine on
there
Set up social media
account and advertise
the magazine on there
Product launch Weekend off Weekend off
Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by: Complete by:
Tuesday 30th August Friday 1st September Friday 1st September Friday 1st September
PRODUCTION PLAN
LAUNCH DATE – SATURDAY 2nd SEPTEMBER
26. Staff and cost (LOSS)
As you can see from the table on the
left it conveys the staff jobs and how
much they will be paid. The salary is a
fair amount due to the nature of the job
and the higher the hill level the higher
the salary will be. For example an
publisher and editor is a much more
higher skilled job then a photographer
for the magazine.
Staff Position Salary
Publisher 37,500
Editor 32.500
Journalists 32,500
Writers 37,500
Photographers 30,750
Marketing 32,500
Finance 37,750
Design 37,500
HR 32,500
Total 311,000
https://www.totaljobs.com/salary-checker/salary-calculator
27. Equipment and cost (LOSS)
Equipment cost
Office space £212,480
Apple MacBook (x25) £29,975
Adobe C5.6 master collection £9,179
Desks (x25) £937.25
Chairs(x25) £1,249.75
Printer £79.99
Cameras (x3) £687
Pens £9.58
Paper £9.16
Total 254,606.73
The table above illustrates the type of equipment that we will be using and how much the equipment will cost to
buy. Obviously the most expensive bit of equipment will be the office space leading right down to the paper which
will be used for most things around the office.
28. Marketing the magazine (loss)
I will market the magazine on all platforms possible which includes apps, also I will be marketing my
magazine on billboards and other magazine advertisement which is a form of below the line
marketing.
One major platform would be Facebook. This is because Facebook has millions perhaps billions of
users who use it and it is without a doubt that someone would come across the advertisement on it.
Another major platform is Instagram. I will try and advertise on it because millions of people are on
it and there is always and advertisement or two when scrolling down to look at other peoples
stories. Snapchat is also another major platform, however not everyone looks at the news side on it
therefore we do not want to waste money on advertisement on a platform that no one even looks
at. These are all forms of above the line marketing which is good as the possible amount of people
that will e able to see the magazine is so much more higher hen any other type of marketing. To
advertise my magazine on Facebook it will cost £28.72 a month £344.64 a year.
29. Printing Quotes and Costs (loss)
I will be printing about 15,000 copies and it will all add up to £3907.63.
http://print24.com/uk/product/magazines/
30. Advertising revenue – this is how you are
going to make money!!
In my magazine 17 full pages of advertisement which comes to 5,005
pounds a page so in total it will come to 85,085. Also 15 half pages of
advertisement which are 2,752 and the total comes to 41,280.
All together
comes to
126,365
https://www.slideshare.net/charlie17morris/q-media-pack-27920971
31. Subscription sales (profit)
Subscription for 12 months for the cost of 8 months.
8x3.00= £24.00
If I sold 8,000 subscriptions I would make £192,000
I did this by doing 8,000 x £24.00
32. How many magazines will I sell – budget
summary
If I sold 12,000 magazines in a year at the cost of £3.00 I would make
£36,000.
33. Budget Summary OVERIEW
Profit and loss break down
Profit
1. Money from selling magazine -
£36,000
2. Advertising revenue - £126,315
3. Subscription sales – £192,000
TOTAL: £354,315
Loss
1. Equipment cost- £254,606.73
2. Staff cost- £311,000
3. Printing- £3907.63
4. Advertising the magazine-
£344.64
TOTAL: £569,859
Profit minus loss = -£215,544
It is okay to have a lost in the first year of my magazine as the business is just getting started. This means the business
would have to pay for start up costs such as equipment. However in the second year I wouldn’t have to spend money on
costs such as equipment. This means that the profit will increase up to a profit, not a lost. If my magazine sells in the
shops.
34. Ethical & Legal Issues.
The Code- It is the cornerstone of the system of voluntary self-regulation to which
they have made a binding contractual commitment. It balances both the rights of the
individual and the public's right to know. This connects to my magazine because I
would need to be careful in what I think the public needs to know about the article.
Accuracy- This is when the media company has to make sure that what they are
publishing is accurate towards the IPSO guidelines. However if the company is
inaccuracy when this must be corrected or they have to write an apology. However
the publisher could be sewed by the person they have accused if they have no
evidence of what they say. This connects to my magazine as my journalists have to be
accurate in what they connote about the person they are interviewing.
Privacy- This is when the editor has to be careful about what they are writing about
someone and they don’t expose any sensitive information. The code says that
‘Everyone is entitled to respect for his or her private and family life, home, health and
including digital communications’ so this means that if an editor mentions any of this
they can take action against them. For example my magazine cannot expose any of
this private information when writing about an artists without their permission.
However if the editor has consent from the person they are allowed to mention these
topics.
Harassment- This is when the editor or journalists cannot engage in any form of
intimidation or harassment. This includes not persist in asking questions, telephoning
and if they are on someone's property and they are asked to leave they have to leave.
For example my magazine journalist cannot force someone into doing an interview
with them otherwise they could be persecuted.
https://www.ipso.co.uk/editors-code-of-practice/
35. ASA Codes
Guidance on media placement restrictions – This guideline says ‘Protecting children and young people is one of the
core purposes of the CAP Code. It is a general responsibility of all marketers to ensure that they are appropriately
protected from marketing that includes sensitive content – for instance, violent, sexual or frightening imagery –
and from being targeted with marketing for unsuitable products.’ This relates to my magazine because I will not be
able to publish anything graphic or inappropriate in my magazine to protect the people who are reading it.
ASA code 21 ‘Tobacco, Rolling Papers and Filters’ – says that tobacco product are not allowed to be advertised to
the public. This connotes to my magazine because as it is a ‘Hip-Hop’ magazine some of the artists smoke cannabis
so this can not be portrayed in the magazine as this would be advertising it to the public. Also in the UK cannabis is
an illegal substances. Furthermore young people who listen to this artists may idolise them and want to be like
them, by smoking cannabis too.
ASA code 18 ‘Alcohol’ – says ‘Marketing communications must not claim or imply that alcohol can enhance
confidence or popularity.’ this relates to my magazine because some Hip-Hop artists advertise some alcoholic
drinks. If people see the artist that they listen to drink a certain type of drink, so they would want to be drinking
this type of drink too. This then could lead to people drinking more because they think that if they drink a certain
drink they will gain the status of that artist.
https://www.asa.org.uk/uploads/assets/uploaded/e75b867d-
3872-4370-aec955b80a83f45e.pdf
36. Copyright
Copyright- is when there is a legal right which lasts for a certain amount of years so you can’t print,
publish, perform, film, or record literary, artistic or musical material that already exists.
This is on the bottom of the ‘Q’ magazine website, this means that everything this website belongs
to Bauer Media. If anyone uses the information or pictures on any of the Bauer Media websites
they will be persecuted for copyright. As all the stuff the any of the Bauer Media websites belong
to Bauer Media and you have to ask permission of them to be able to use their photos or
information.
The copyright act was changed in 1988 as the Design and Patents act. This is when people have
their own right to write and put their own photos in a print. Also the person who toke the photo
are able to protect them so no one else are able to use them unless they pay them or ask
permission.
This connects to my magazine because if I want to use other photographers pictures for my
magazine I would have to ask for there permission or buy the image of them for money to be able
to use it. This also happens vicar versa as if people want to use my images they would have to do
the same. Furthermore if people or I use other peoples images and they are copyrighted and I
don’t ask to use them I can get fined heavily by them. To show other people that my images and
magazine is copyrighted I will have the copyright symbol at the bottom.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/copyright-acts-and-related-laws
37. Regulatory Issues Watermark
Content that usually has copyright can be referred to as Intellectual Property
(IP) and this is protected by the law. IP can be divided into two categories;
Industrial Property and Copyright. As well as IP on printed work (hard copies),
you can get a digital watermark which protects any copyrighted content from
any magazine online and in any digital format. For example ‘Q’ magazine have
digital copies for the people have subscribed for them and by having the data
protected someone cannot still that data. It is important to have this because
it means people will have to pay you to use your information/ ideas and the
company can also decline the use of their products if they wanted to. The
best way to protect your IP is to acquire a patent. However, this can take
several years to get and costs over $7000 in fees but it allows you to not have
your own work stolen by another person.
For example ‘Q’ magazine can put their logo on a image so when someone
else comes and wants to use it they have to go to ‘Q’ magazine and ask them
if they can use and the magazine company could ask them to pay them to use
it.
38. Regulatory Issues
Data Protection Act (1998)- Is an act of the United
Kingdom (UK) Parliament defining the ways in which
information about living people may be legally used
and handled. The main intent is to protect individuals
against misuse or abuse of information about them.
For example ‘Q’ magazine has to the very careful about
what they put into their magazines about a person they
are talking about, if they are not they could be sued by
the person and fined.
http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/UK-Data-Protection-Act-1998-DPA-1998
39. Complaint procedure
To make a complaint on ‘Q’ magazine you have to scroll down to the bottom of the
page and it will say ‘Complaint Policy’ under the heading ‘The Small Print’. Then it will
take you to another page where it tells you how to make a complaint. To make a
complaint you have to send an email to complaints@bauermedia.co.uk or you can do
it by post to Bauer Consumer Media Limited, Endeavour House, 189 Shaftesbury
Avenue, WC2H 8JG and addressed to The General Counsel. When you are writing your
complaint you have to include a link to the complaint and a written explanation of your
complaint and any other documents that helps with your complaint.
http://www.bauermediacomplaints.co.uk
40. Complaint procedure (Continued)
Some people may complain about this ‘Q’ front cover as Lady Gaga is
being made to pose seductively and being topless. This may cause
other women to be annoyed as the image of the women is being used
as an objected to attracted males to buy this issues of the magazine.
This is also used to attract a younger audience to buy their magazines.
Another example of this is the front cover with Cheryl Cole on it.
41. Witness Statement
This is my witness statement, it includes what I did well in the pitch and what I could include
to make my pitch better. One of the things I could have done better was to include the target
audience for my magazines. This means I now have to go away and add my target audience
to my pitch presentation.