Zagat May Have Lost the Foodie Web War, but Could Win With Apps
While the debate goes on around paid versus free access to content, Zagat sees an upside in the emergence of Apps for smartphones as a sustainable and growing revenue source.
While the debate goes on around paid versus free access to content, Zagat sees an upside in the emergence of Apps for smartphones as a sustainable and growing revenue source.
Huffington Post | Sherry Shen | Posted 05.25.2011
These days successful celebrity marriages are rare gems. But throw in a thriving multimillion-dollar company and add a hefty dose of public scrutiny a...
Andy Plesser | Posted 05.25.2011
Over 30 years ago, Nina and Tim Zagat, two Yale Law School-trained Wall Street lawyers, figured that while critics have important things to say about&...
New York Times | MILT FREUDENHEIM | Posted 05.25.2011
Nina Zagat, the queen of eat-and-tell restaurant guides, is invading a new and even trickier reviewing niche: doctors. The ubiquitous Zagat guides ar...
New York Times | Michael J. de la Merced | Posted 05.25.2011
Zagat Survey, publisher of the popular user-generated reviews of restaurants, hotels and other leisure businesses, has ended its effort to sell itself...
Wall Street Journal | Andrew Edwards | Posted 05.25.2011
Zagat Survey LLC, the influential pocket-sized burgundy guide that uses costumer reviews to rate everything from Chinese food restaurants to day spas,...
Andy Plesser | Posted 05.25.2011