Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Accountancy Age

 
Wikipedia: Accountancy Age

Accountancy Age is a trade magazine for accountants and financial staff in the United Kingdom. It is published weekly both on paper and electronically.

Contents

History

Accountancy Age was first published on 5 December 1969, by Michael Heseltine's company Haymarket Publishing.[1] Haymarket later sold Accountancy Age and Computing magazine to become the mainstay journals of VNU Business Publications Ltd, which formed in 1980.[2] The parent company, Dutch media group VNU, was acquired by a group of private equity firms in 2006, and renamed as The Nielsen Company. They then sold the business publications division to venture capital group 3i, which in February 2007 sold the UK company to its current owner, Incisive Media.[3]

Awards

For several years the magazine has organised and hosted a series of annual awards for accountancy firms, individuals, teams, initiatives and software packages.[4]

The magazine has itself won various awards including the 2008 Award for "Editorial Team of the Year" from the Association of Online Publishers.[5] Liam Saunders' weekly cartoon "Colin"[6] won the Workworld Media Award for "Cartoonist of the Year" in 2003.[7]

Readership

The magazine's target audience is British qualified accountants, to whom it is sent on request without charge. It claims 65,000 readers in this group,[8] up a little from the 62,000 stated in the first issue.[1] The AOP's editorial award case study refers to "senior figures at big four firms and in government swearing by the team’s newswires, live blogs, and multimedia industry coverage",[5] and the magazine claims that it is considered the "independent voice of the profession".[8]

Products

Accountancy Age also offers professional services including web-based tools for software selection and financial analysis.[9]

References

External links



Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Accountancy Age" Read more