International Journal of Advertising and Marketing to Children: Volume 2 Issue 2

Subject:

Table of contents

Webkids

Jantien Belt

In the Netherlands school is the second most important place, after television, for passing on addresses of children's websites. Websites should include not only an educational…

Editing Content for Children on the Net

Alice Morrison

The author shows the importance of defining exactly what a child is and poses a number of questions including ‘Who are they?’ in relation to Internet audiences.

Premium for Kids

Julian Hosting

How do you motivate children to buy your product? How do you reward them and develop brand loyalty without compromising your brand values? How does all this fit within your…

Building a ‘Kid Contract’ with Chinese Children: Truths and Trends

Terry O'Hanlon

The author's observations in this article fall broadly into two sections: Chinese kids truths — a review of the current factors most influential in shaping Chinese kids' view of…

Licences — A Thought!

Rob Stevenson

It has often surprised and intrigued this author during his career why certain children's licences seem to work better than others but to a casual observer they all seem the same…

Using Values‐Based Research to Build a Unified Brand in a Diverse Marketplace

Elizabeth Kehler

This author looks at unlocking the underpinning emotional drivers of choice among youth, developing a unified brand positioning targeted to diverse priorities and building brand…

The Regulation of Children's Advertising in the US

Catharine M. Curran, Jef I. Richards

Over the past 30 years the United States has grappled with the regulation of children's advertising in various media. The same debate that occurred in the 1970's in the US over…

ISSN:

1464-6676

Renamed to:

Young Consumers

Online date, start – end:

1999 – 2001

Copyright Holder:

Emerald Publishing Limited