“SmartMoney Names Diller as Publisher NEW YORK ... - dBusinessNews.com” plus 3 more |
- SmartMoney Names Diller as Publisher NEW YORK ... - dBusinessNews.com
- Robots are a man's best friend - Wrcbtv.com
- Mint morsels: Site adds cash/check transactions ... - Washington Post Blog
- About Real Money - Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
| SmartMoney Names Diller as Publisher NEW YORK ... - dBusinessNews.com Posted: 04 May 2010 08:46 AM PDT New York - | NEW YORK -- SmartMoney, the personal finance magazine from The Wall Street Journal, has named Ed Diller as publisher. In this role, he will oversee all print advertising sales for the publication, working directly with the integrated Wall Street Journal sales team. "Ed is regarded as a high-energy, creative thinker who brings effective ideas to the table," said Andy Seibert, president of SmartMoney. "The Journal's integrated sales force is uniquely positioned to serve clients in a dynamic way across multiple platforms, and we look forward to Ed's leadership and ability to help grow SmartMoney." "The recent acquisition of SmartMoney creates another opportunity for our integrated sales force to help advertisers reach an affluent, targeted audience across our stable of high-quality brands and products," said Michael Rooney, chief revenue officer, The Wall Street Journal. "Ed is already a valued member of our team, and this is a great opportunity for both him and SmartMoney." Mr. Diller currently serves as multi-media sales director for The Wall Street Journal in San Francisco. He joined Dow Jones in 2003 as an account executive and previously served in advertising sales roles with CBS MarketWatch, prior to the Dow Jones acquisition, Lycos and AOL. Mr. Mr. Diller will relocate to New York to begin his new role on July 1. About SmartMoney SmartMoney (www.smartmoney.com), the personal financial magazine from The Wall Street Journal, was launched in 1992 to service the need for personal finance information among a group of affluent and sophisticated Americans. The SmartMoney editorial team has won three National Magazine Awards. SmartMoney.com was launched in 1997 to reflect the magazine's strong background of personal finance, as well as to provide users with innovative interactive tools and worksheets. SmartMoney.com has become the most comprehensive resource on the Web for private investors, providing top-quality financial reporting, commentary and analysis, and decision-making tools. The site features a portfolio management system; a subscription-based product, SmartMoney Select; and its signature product, the Map of the Market, which allows users to visualize the wide-ranging market in a single view. The site was awarded the 2001 National Magazine Award for "Best Interactive Design" from the American Society of Magazine Editors and has been praised by Forbes, Fortune, PC Magazine and The Web Marketing Association. SmartMoney.com Licensing is a leading supplier of the Web's best interactive tools for financial planning, market analysis and data visualization. SmartMoney recognizes the challenge interactive marketers face today of building high quality, competitive Web sites. Custom Solutions from SmartMoney is a full-service custom publishing and communications group. It was launched in 1999 by SmartMoney as a joint custom-publishing venture of Hearst Communications and Dow Jones & Co., Inc. Taking a consultative approach with clients, Custom Solutions reaches more than 15 million consumers each quarter through custom newsletters and magazines, personalized and segmented communications, and engaging online educational content. Custom Solutions' industry-leading print-on-demand 1:1 communications systems produce millions of communications on-demand each year. Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| Robots are a man's best friend - Wrcbtv.com Posted: 04 May 2010 12:42 PM PDT On the job tech gets toughIf your devices take a beating, it's time to consider new, heavy-duty cell phones, computers and cameras. More>> Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. | |
| Mint morsels: Site adds cash/check transactions ... - Washington Post Blog Posted: 04 May 2010 09:58 AM PDT Intuit's Mint.com personal-finance Web site has had a reasonably busy spring. Last month, it added support for entering cash and check transactions; a week later, it announced that it could download data from 16,000 financial institutions supported, or "nearly all U.S. banks"; and this morning, it shipped a new application for smartphones running Google's Android software.
Because I've been using Mint as my primary personal-finance tool since last summer, following a positive review I wrote, these developments are all of considerable interest to me. Letting users enter cash and check transactions beforehand was on many people's must-have lists: The lack of that feature would have made Mint borderline unusable two summers ago, when my wife and I were writing non-trivial checks to cover work done on our house. Nowadays, we rarely write checks, and so I've only had one opportunity to see whether Mint would match my manually entered check transaction with the figure on the bank's statement later on. It did not, unfortunately. I haven't given the cash-transactions feature a meaningful test, mainly because most of my cash transactions are too small to bother noting. As for the new, free Android application -- available in the Android Market as "Mint.com Personal Finance" -- I can report that it crashed in multiple log-in attempts on a device running the old 1.5 release of Android. On the new HTC Droid Incredible I reviewed in yesterday's paper, the program provided quick access to recent transactions, trends and alerts, but not the site's "Ways to Save" suggestions for more cost-effective financial accounts. You can lock access to this application with a separate numeric passcode, but it doesn't require that. Mint also lets you deactivate the program remotely from the main Mint.com site; when I tested that, it took about seven minutes for the Android app to kick me back to its log-in screen, from which I could still reactivate the software by entering my user name and password. After almost a year with Mint, I'm pretty happy with the site overall. But I also wish its would remedy a few oversights: * Mint offers bill reminders for only accounts it can log into, which means it knows about my credit-card and mortgage payments but not those for utility services. The site should recognize that I pay Verizon, Washington Gas, Dominion Power, etc. about the same time each month and remind me accordingly -- or let me add my own reminders. * Ways to Save -- the reason Mint is free, as the site collects commissions on accounts opened through those suggestions -- seems to overlook efficiencies possible by moving cash around existing accounts. In my case, it didn't notice that a credit union money-market fund's interest rate had dropped to the point where I'd be better off dumping that money into a savings account at another institution. * Next year, I don't want to see Intuit's TurboTax Web application just advertise Mint; it needs to be able to extract tax-relevant data from Mint. (The Mountain View, Calif-.based company, which formerly offered a competing Web application called Quicken Online, bought Mint last year.) * The site could also stand to offer simpler, faster export options -- and, at some point, it should deliver on its stated long-term goal of providing offline access through Intuit's Quicken software. Have you used or tried Mint? Post your own review in the comments and let me know what you'd like to see on its to-do list. By Rob Pegoraro | May 3, 2010; 12:56 PM ET I haven't tried this yet, but may soon, as my copy of MS Money sunsets next Feb. As I understand it, Mint aggregates your accounts into one web interface. But *it does not serve as the bill payer*, is that right? You still pay bills out of your Bank web interface? Posted by: JkR- | May 3, 2010 1:56 PM | Report abuse The view of the site when you print seems intentionally broken. I just wanted a quick summary of all my balances by account and it stretched what should have been a page to 12 pages. Posted by: hesaid | May 3, 2010 2:04 PM | Report abuse I tried Mint and it is all but useless. Cannot distinguish between travel expenses and groceries. And worst all, recommends more credit cards as a way to save money. In all, an ounce of common sense beats Mint. Posted by: beastlet | May 4, 2010 1:04 AM | Report abuse I tried Mint for a while but it requires too much attention with respect to correcting their suggested categories for transactions. And it can't seem to consistently connect to my brokerage account or TD bank. Quicken is a lot easier. Posted by: fedssocr | May 4, 2010 9:46 AM | Report abuse I've been using Mint for about 18 months now and I think it's great for a free tool. I log in pretty regularly from my computer or iPhone to check transactions and adjust the categories if necessary. My wife and I both use so it's helpful to have two sets of eyes on it. Glad to hear they added the manual transaction addition - seemed like that would have been one of the first features implemented, but oh well they have it now. Overall I'd say Mint is one of the most impressive free services out there. Posted by: jtest | May 4, 2010 9:53 AM | Report abuse I love Mint and I am SO excited for the Android app! It works just fine on my Nexus One, but I believe a lot of people on 1.5 have had problems. I noticed they shipped an update the very next day after releasing it, so maybe that will fix a few of the bugs. I still have a broker that they don't support and I would like them to have more access to international banks, but other than that, the site is great. Posted by: magnuson | May 4, 2010 11:48 AM | Report abuse Mint is really bad. It can't connect to most of my accounts even though they say they do. I can log into company web site fine, but mint won't connect. They are missing many financial institutions. Posted by: mdembski1 | May 4, 2010 1:12 PM | Report abuse I've been on Mint for a couple of years. It hooks up to my accounts fine, although I do get goofy results on my 401(k)investment performance, which for me is no big deal. I wish they would add Bill Pay with eBills. I am with Wells Fargo and only stay with them (don't get me started) because I like the functionality of their Bill Pay application. Posted by: Ktrainer | May 4, 2010 3:56 PM | Report abuse Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. | |
| About Real Money - Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel Posted: 04 May 2010 08:39 AM PDT Journalists routinely come back to the office, lean over their neighbor's cubicle and begin a conversation about the news with, "You won't believe what this guy did....," or "She had an idea I'd never thought about before." These stories we tell each other inside the office are often too informal to be included in what we write. But they're so good, they have to be shared. My mission in writing this blog is to give you information that's so good, it has to be shared.
You've got the job of managing your money. No one in school taught you how. But you and I, we can teach each other, how to handle it, how to save for retirement, how to make money last, how to educate the kids, how to make a budget work. The conversations I have with my readers are fun. Money's important, but discussing it does not have to be boring. I like the interaction. I welcome the questions. And your ideas. What I can contribute is my years of fascination with this subject. I have lots of experience trying to make the issues clear and the ideas relevant. I have access to timely information that you may not. And there are plenty of experts I can call for help. Because when it comes to finance, you need plenty of voices. There is very little objective advice. There is no product testing to help us evaluate our options. It's ridiculous. It's also not rocket science. I firmly believe everyone can "get" personal finance, if they devote a little time. My goal would be that you never again make some of the most important decisions of your life -- getting a mortgage, buying insurance, figuring out how much money to live on -- with little knowledge and no help. The way I see it, we're all better off, if we talk about money.
Harriet Johnson Brackey, the personal finance columnist for the Sun Sentinel, is an award-winning business reporter. Her columns for 2008 were named "The Best in the Business," a national award chosen by her colleagues at the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. Brackey has worked at Business Week magazine and at USA TODAY, where she was a founder and part of the original staff of the Money section at the country's first national newspaper. After nearly 11 years there - spent covering the 1980s bull market, the insider trading scandals, the 1987 crash - Brackey left Washington, D.C., and came to The Miami Herald. She spent the next decade writing a column about personal finance that chronicled the stock market's Internet boom and bust, as well as the popular Money Makeover features. Brackey also appears regularly as a commentator on The Nightly Business Report, which is broadcast nationally on more than 250 PBS television stations. She joined the Sun Sentinel in August 2005. Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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