This page will contain wikis about yellow pages, as they become available.

Yellow Pages

In many countries, the Yellow Pages refers to a telephone directory for businesses organized by the category of product or service. As the name suggests, they are usually printed on yellow paper.

In general

Yellow Pages directories are usually published annually and distributed for free to all residences and businesses within a given coverage area. The majority of listings are in plain small black text. Yellow Pages publishers make their profits by selling special value-added features to businesses such as a larger font size for their listing, or an advertisement box next to the listings in a category. Since the mid-1990s, there has been a trend among Yellow Pages publishers to add four-color printing for some advertisements. Many publishers also offer the option to have advertisements appear with a white background to make them stand out more. Interestingly, most yellow pages are not printed on yellow paper; rather the yellow is printed onto the paper. When an advertisement is printed with a white background, its part of the page does not receive yellow ink - so the white is actually the natural color of the paper.

Many publishers now make their listings available on the World Wide Web, on "Yellow Pages" Web sites.

The information contained in the Yellow Pages is essentially a commodity, so publishers often engage in product differentiation tactics like bragging that their listings are more comprehensive or up-to-date. In 1999, a new tactic was pioneered by France Télécom's Pages Jaunes, which dispatched photographers to record nearly every possible view in front of nearly every address in certain French cities. Thus, French Yellow Pages users can see a photograph of a business along with its phone number and street address. In 2004, the search engine A9.com added a similar feature for many cities in the United States when it launched its Yellow Pages feature.

United States

At least until the anti-trust breakup of the Bell System in the late 20th century, the term "Yellow Pages" was a trademark for commercial directories and the commercial portions of the by-commercial-category sections of directories that also include by-name listings. Directories were published on behalf of the component Bell companies by the various publishing companies.

Then and since, phone companies or their agents sell the right to place advertisements within the same category, next to the basic listings. Since the Bell breakup, other companies publish directories that compete with those of local telephone companies for advertising business. Some of these publishers are pure advertising operations with no phone infrastructure. Others are telephone companies who provide local telephone service elsewhere.

For example, SBC Communications is the dominant local telephone service provider in California, but since Verizon acquired GTE, it now provides service in many pockets such as West Los Angeles. Los Angeles telephone users can select from telephone directories published by SBC, Verizon, and several independent advertising companies.

United Kingdom

With the encouragement of The Thomson Corporation, at the time an advertising sales agent for the nationalised General Post Office's telephone directory, a business telephone number directory named the Yellow Pages was first produced in 1966 by the GPO for the Brighton area, and was rolled out nationwide in 1973. The Thomson Corporation formed Thomson Yellow Pages in 1966 to publish and to distribute the directory to telephone subscribers for the GPO, and later for The Post Office.

Thomson Yellow Pages was sold by The Thomson Corporation in 1980, at the same time as Post Office Telecommunications became the (then) state-owned British Telecom (BT). The Yellow Pages directory continued to be distributed to all telephone subscribers by BT. At the same time, The Thomson Corporation formed Thomson Directories Ltd, and began to publish the Thomson Local directory, which would remain the Yellow Pages' main, and often sole, competitor in the UK for more than the next two decades, and would be the competitive driving force behind such changes to Yellow Pages as the adoption (in 1999) of colour printing and "knock-out-white" listings.

In 1984, the year that BT was privatized, the department producing the directory became a stand alone subsidiary of BT, named Yellow Pages. In the mid-1990s the Yellow Pages business was re-branded as Yell, although the directory itself continued to be known as the Yellow Pages.

Yell was bought by venture capitalists in 2001, and in 2003 was floated on the Stock Exchange. After the one year "no competition" clause expired BT too went into competition with the Yellow Pages, re-entering the market by adding similar content to their existing "The Phone Book", adding a classified section to the traditional alphabetical domestic and business listings.

References

  • Thomson Directories. TELEPHONE DIRECTORIES & DIRECTORY ENQUIRIES UK 2004. URL accessed on February 15, 2005.
  • Thomson Group: chronology. ketupa.net media profiles. URL accessed on February 15, 2005.
  • UK History: 1980-1989. Yell: UK Operations. URL accessed on February 15, 2005.
  • UK History: 1990-1999. Yell: UK Operations. URL accessed on February 15, 2005.

Australia

Australia's business directory was first published in its own volume in 1973 as the Yellow Pages. The directory was originally produced by the Postmaster General, and continued to be produced by the government, as the telephone system transferred to Telecom Australia and now Telstra. Today, the Yellow Pages is produced by Sensis, a wholly-owned advertising subsidiary of Telstra.

The Yellow Pages have for many years produced some of Australia's most popular television commercials, often highlighting the perils of not placing an advertisement in the directory on time. The most famous of these immortalised the phrase 'Not happy, Jan!' in the Australian vernacular.

France

In France Yellow Pages are referred to as Pages Jaunes. They are distributed free by Pagesjaunes.fr, a company affiliated with France Télécom. pagesjaunes.com, the .com version of Pages Jaunes, was the issue of a major court case at WIPO; the original registrant, an individual from Los Angeles, won against France Télécom.

This court decision defended by the Parisian Lawyer, Andre Bertrand, was path-setting for the whole European Yellow Pages industry, as it decided that the phrase "Yellow Pages" cannot be considered the property of a single company. Previously, many former state monopoly telecom companies outside the US had tried to ban competition by claiming the term "yellow pages", or the translation of "yellow pages" into the vernacular, as their exclusive trademark.

Vivendi Universal moved to enter the French Yellow Pages market in 2001 with scoot.fr, but the attempt was a killed by a reorganisation of the struggling company. Since the liberalization of .fr domains in May 2004, the domain yellowpages.fr has been registered by Phonebook of the World.com. Another French editor of Yellow Pages is Bottin. More competition is expected in November 2005 from the libralisation of "12", the former unique "4-1-1" number of Renseignements Telephoniques, french for Directory Inquiry.

Other countries

In (The Republic of) Ireland the equivalent directory is titled Golden Pages while in Northern Ireland it is "yellow pages"

In Belgium the equivalent directory is titled Pages d'Or (French) or Gouden Gids (Dutch), and is distributed free to each telephone subscriber.

In Canada the company Yellow Pages Group owns the trademarks Yellow Pages and Pages Jaunes. It produces and distributes directories in both English and French. Yellow Pages Group is the market leader in print and online commercial directories and one of the largest media companies in Canada, producing the official directories of Bell Canada, Telus and Aliant. Other ILECs such as MTS and SaskTel publish their own directories and use the Yellow Pages name under licence. Competitive local directories often include commercial directories on yellow paper, but cannot use the Yellow Pages brand.

In Czech Republic and Slovakia the equivalent directory is titled Zlaté stránky and is distributed free to each telephone subscriber.

In China, the modern yellow pages industry was started in the late 1990’s with the formation of two international joint ventures between US yellow pages publishers and China’s telecom operators, namely: a joint venture started in Shenzhen between RHDonnelley and China Unicom (later including Hong Kong’s PCCW and InfoSpace); and a joint venture between China Telecom Shanghai and what later came to be known as the yellow pages operations of Verizon Communications Corp.(NYSE:VZ).

Later, another mainly state-owned telecom operator, China Netcom began to produce, either directly or on a sub-contracted basis, yellow pages in selected cities around the country. By early 2005, there were a number of independent local and international yellow pages operators in numerous cities including Yilong Huangbaoshu, based in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province with operations in Hangzhou and Ningbo.

In Colombia, the standard yellow and White Pages are published and distributed every year free of charge by Publicar, a Colombian subsidiary company of Carvajal, which also publishes and distributes yellow and white pages in other Latin American countries.

In Denmark the equivalent directory is titled De Gule Sider is distributed free to each subscriber, by TDC Forlag.

In Finland the directory is called Keltaiset sivut.

In Germany a directory titled Die Gelben Seiten is distributed free to each subscriber, by the Deutsche Telekom, owner of T-Mobile

In Indonesia, the telecommunication company TELKOM with PT. Infomedia Nusantara (one of its subsidiaries), regularly publishes phone books. The phone book consisted of white pages and yellow pages. The phone book is updated regularly (typically every six months or a year) and is published in various editions (depending where the book is published).

In Mexico the commercial phone directory is called Sección Amarilla (Yellow Section), while the personal phone directory is called Sección Blanca (White Section). The Sección Amarilla is distributed yearly and free of charge by the homonimous company in association with Telmex; older issues are returned to the company, recycled, and used to print the latest issue.

In Netherlands the equivalent directory is titled Gouden Gids; within the district concerned it is distributed free to each telephone subscriber.

In Nigeria, the Nigerian Yellow Pages is produced as internet-based yellow pages in English language by the company Xybertek Systems. The company Xybertek Systems provides additional business information on all Nigerian companies.

In Norway the directory is called "Gule Sider" (i.e. Yellow Pages) which is a registered trademark belonging to Findexa, which is owned by Eniro. In December 2005 the Norwegian Supreme Court decided that Findexa holds an exclusive right to the trademark.

In Spain it's called Páginas Amarillas, distributed by Telefónica Publicidad e Información, S.A

In Sweden it's called Gula Sidorna, distributed by Eniro AB.

In Switzerland the company Swisscom Directories AG produces and distributes directories in several forms including internet-based yellow pages in four languages, including English. The company Swissguide AG provides additional business information on all Swiss companies.


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The company Swissguide AG provides additional business information on all Swiss companies. $20 million. In Switzerland the company Swisscom Directories AG produces and distributes directories in several forms including internet-based yellow pages in four languages, including English. In 2004, London, the Parliament, Effects of Sun in the Fog (Le Parlement, Effet de Brouillard) (1904), sold for over U.S. In Sweden it's called Gula Sidorna, distributed by Eniro AB. He died December 5, 1926 and is buried in the Giverny church cemetery. In Spain it's called Páginas Amarillas, distributed by Telefónica Publicidad e Información, S.A. Cataracts formed on his eyes for which he underwent two surgeries in 1923.

In December 2005 the Norwegian Supreme Court decided that Findexa holds an exclusive right to the trademark. His wife Alice died in 1911 and his son Jean died in 1914. Yellow Pages) which is a registered trademark belonging to Findexa, which is owned by Eniro. Landmarks were another subject for Monet in the Mediterranean. In Norway the directory is called "Gule Sider" (i.e. Between 1883 and 1908, Monet travelled to the Mediterranean and painted many beautiful landscapes and seascapes such as Bordighera. The company Xybertek Systems provides additional business information on all Nigerian companies. He also painted up and down the banks of the Seine.

In Nigeria, the Nigerian Yellow Pages is produced as internet-based yellow pages in English language by the company Xybertek Systems. Monet was exceptionally fond of painting controlled nature — his own garden, his water lilies, his pond, and his bridge. In Netherlands the equivalent directory is titled Gouden Gids; within the district concerned it is distributed free to each telephone subscriber. He also made a series of paintings of haystacks. The Sección Amarilla is distributed yearly and free of charge by the homonimous company in association with Telmex; older issues are returned to the company, recycled, and used to print the latest issue. Twenty views of the cathedral were exhibited at the Durand-Ruel gallery in 1895. In Mexico the commercial phone directory is called Sección Amarilla (Yellow Section), while the personal phone directory is called Sección Blanca (White Section). His first series is of Rouen Cathedral from different points of view and at different times of the day.

The phone book is updated regularly (typically every six months or a year) and is published in various editions (depending where the book is published). In the 1880s and 1890s, Monet began "series" painting — paintings of one subject in varying light and viewpoints. The phone book consisted of white pages and yellow pages. Monet and Hoschedé married in 1892. Infomedia Nusantara (one of its subsidiaries), regularly publishes phone books. In April 1883 they moved to a house in Giverny, Eure, in Haute-Normandie, where he planted a large garden which he painted for the rest of his life. In Indonesia, the telecommunication company TELKOM with PT. They lived in Poissy, which Monet hated.

In Germany a directory titled Die Gelben Seiten is distributed free to each subscriber, by the Deutsche Telekom, owner of T-Mobile. Alice Hoschedé decided to help Monet by bringing up his two children together with her own. In Finland the directory is called Keltaiset sivut. Madame Monet died of tuberculosis in 1879. In Denmark the equivalent directory is titled De Gule Sider is distributed free to each subscriber, by TDC Forlag. They had another son, Michel, on March 17, 1878. In Colombia, the standard yellow and White Pages are published and distributed every year free of charge by Publicar, a Colombian subsidiary company of Carvajal, which also publishes and distributes yellow and white pages in other Latin American countries. In 1870, Monet and Doncieux married and in 1873 moved into a house in Argenteuil near the Seine River.

By early 2005, there were a number of independent local and international yellow pages operators in numerous cities including Yilong Huangbaoshu, based in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province with operations in Hangzhou and Ningbo. From the painting's title, art critic Louis Leroy coined the term "impressionism". Later, another mainly state-owned telecom operator, China Netcom began to produce, either directly or on a sub-contracted basis, yellow pages in selected cities around the country. It hung in the first impressionist exhibition in 1874 and is now displayed in the Musée Marmottan-Monet, Paris. In China, the modern yellow pages industry was started in the late 1990’s with the formation of two international joint ventures between US yellow pages publishers and China’s telecom operators, namely: a joint venture started in Shenzhen between RHDonnelley and China Unicom (later including Hong Kong’s PCCW and InfoSpace); and a joint venture between China Telecom Shanghai and what later came to be known as the yellow pages operations of Verizon Communications Corp.(NYSE:VZ). Upon returning to France, in 1872 (or 1873) he painted Impression, Sunrise (Impression, soleil levant) depicting a Le Havre landscape. In Czech Republic and Slovakia the equivalent directory is titled Zlaté stránky and is distributed free to each telephone subscriber. Turner.

Competitive local directories often include commercial directories on yellow paper, but cannot use the Yellow Pages brand. W. Other ILECs such as MTS and SaskTel publish their own directories and use the Yellow Pages name under licence. M. Yellow Pages Group is the market leader in print and online commercial directories and one of the largest media companies in Canada, producing the official directories of Bell Canada, Telus and Aliant. There he studied the works of John Constable and J. It produces and distributes directories in both English and French. During the Franco-Prussian War (1870–1871), Monet took refuge in England to avoid the conflict.

In Canada the company Yellow Pages Group owns the trademarks Yellow Pages and Pages Jaunes. Shortly thereafter Doncieux became pregnant and bore their first child, Jean. In Belgium the equivalent directory is titled Pages d'Or (French) or Gouden Gids (Dutch), and is distributed free to each telephone subscriber. Monet's 1866 The Woman in the Green Dress (Camille, ou la femme à la robe verte), which brought him recognition, depicted Camille Doncieux. In (The Republic of) Ireland the equivalent directory is titled Golden Pages while in Northern Ireland it is "yellow pages". Together they shared new approaches to art, which later came to be known as impressionism, featuring open spaces and light painted with thick brushstrokes. More competition is expected in November 2005 from the libralisation of "12", the former unique "4-1-1" number of Renseignements Telephoniques, french for Directory Inquiry. Disillusioned with the traditional art taught at universities, instead in 1862 he joined the studio of Charles Gleyre in Paris, where he met Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Frederic Bazille, and Alfred Sisley.

Another French editor of Yellow Pages is Bottin. Monet served in the army in Algeria for two years of a seven-year commitment (1860–1862), but upon his contracting typhoid his aunt Madame Lecadre intervened to get him out of the army if he agreed to complete an art course at a university. Since the liberalization of .fr domains in May 2004, the domain yellowpages.fr has been registered by Phonebook of the World.com. Monet, having brought his paints and other tools with him, would instead go and sit by a window and paint what he saw. Vivendi Universal moved to enter the French Yellow Pages market in 2001 with scoot.fr, but the attempt was a killed by a reorganisation of the struggling company. When Monet travelled to Paris to visit The Louvre, he would see many painters imitating famous artists' work. Previously, many former state monopoly telecom companies outside the US had tried to ban competition by claiming the term "yellow pages", or the translation of "yellow pages" into the vernacular, as their exclusive trademark. Boudin taught Monet en plein air (outdoor) techniques for painting.

This court decision defended by the Parisian Lawyer, Andre Bertrand, was path-setting for the whole European Yellow Pages industry, as it decided that the phrase "Yellow Pages" cannot be considered the property of a single company. On the beaches of Normandy, he met fellow artist Eugène Boudin, who became his mentor and taught him to use oil paints. pagesjaunes.com, the .com version of Pages Jaunes, was the issue of a major court case at WIPO; the original registrant, an individual from Los Angeles, won against France Télécom. He first became known locally for his charcoal caricatures, which he would sell for ten to twenty francs. They are distributed free by Pagesjaunes.fr, a company affiliated with France Télécom. His father wanted him to go into the family grocery store business, but Claude Monet wanted to become an artist. In France Yellow Pages are referred to as Pages Jaunes. Monet was born in Paris, but his family moved to Le Havre in Normandy when he was five.

The most famous of these immortalised the phrase 'Not happy, Jan!' in the Australian vernacular. Claude Monet also known as Oscar-Claude Monet or Claude Oscar Monet (November 14, 1840 – December 5, 1926) was a French impressionist painter. The Yellow Pages have for many years produced some of Australia's most popular television commercials, often highlighting the perils of not placing an advertisement in the directory on time.
. Today, the Yellow Pages is produced by Sensis, a wholly-owned advertising subsidiary of Telstra. Biography of Claude MONET. The directory was originally produced by the Postmaster General, and continued to be produced by the government, as the telephone system transferred to Telecom Australia and now Telstra. All About Artists biography of Monet.

Australia's business directory was first published in its own volume in 1973 as the Yellow Pages. Biography at Foundation Claude Monet à Girerny. After the one year "no competition" clause expired BT too went into competition with the Yellow Pages, re-entering the market by adding similar content to their existing "The Phone Book", adding a classified section to the traditional alphabetical domestic and business listings. A Monet biography. Yell was bought by venture capitalists in 2001, and in 2003 was floated on the Stock Exchange. Claude Monet's Biography. In the mid-1990s the Yellow Pages business was re-branded as Yell, although the directory itself continued to be known as the Yellow Pages.

In 1984, the year that BT was privatized, the department producing the directory became a stand alone subsidiary of BT, named Yellow Pages. At the same time, The Thomson Corporation formed Thomson Directories Ltd, and began to publish the Thomson Local directory, which would remain the Yellow Pages' main, and often sole, competitor in the UK for more than the next two decades, and would be the competitive driving force behind such changes to Yellow Pages as the adoption (in 1999) of colour printing and "knock-out-white" listings. The Yellow Pages directory continued to be distributed to all telephone subscribers by BT. Thomson Yellow Pages was sold by The Thomson Corporation in 1980, at the same time as Post Office Telecommunications became the (then) state-owned British Telecom (BT).

The Thomson Corporation formed Thomson Yellow Pages in 1966 to publish and to distribute the directory to telephone subscribers for the GPO, and later for The Post Office. With the encouragement of The Thomson Corporation, at the time an advertising sales agent for the nationalised General Post Office's telephone directory, a business telephone number directory named the Yellow Pages was first produced in 1966 by the GPO for the Brighton area, and was rolled out nationwide in 1973. Los Angeles telephone users can select from telephone directories published by SBC, Verizon, and several independent advertising companies. For example, SBC Communications is the dominant local telephone service provider in California, but since Verizon acquired GTE, it now provides service in many pockets such as West Los Angeles.

Others are telephone companies who provide local telephone service elsewhere. Some of these publishers are pure advertising operations with no phone infrastructure. Since the Bell breakup, other companies publish directories that compete with those of local telephone companies for advertising business. Then and since, phone companies or their agents sell the right to place advertisements within the same category, next to the basic listings.

Directories were published on behalf of the component Bell companies by the various publishing companies. At least until the anti-trust breakup of the Bell System in the late 20th century, the term "Yellow Pages" was a trademark for commercial directories and the commercial portions of the by-commercial-category sections of directories that also include by-name listings. In 2004, the search engine A9.com added a similar feature for many cities in the United States when it launched its Yellow Pages feature. Thus, French Yellow Pages users can see a photograph of a business along with its phone number and street address.

In 1999, a new tactic was pioneered by France Télécom's Pages Jaunes, which dispatched photographers to record nearly every possible view in front of nearly every address in certain French cities. The information contained in the Yellow Pages is essentially a commodity, so publishers often engage in product differentiation tactics like bragging that their listings are more comprehensive or up-to-date. Many publishers now make their listings available on the World Wide Web, on "Yellow Pages" Web sites. When an advertisement is printed with a white background, its part of the page does not receive yellow ink - so the white is actually the natural color of the paper.

Interestingly, most yellow pages are not printed on yellow paper; rather the yellow is printed onto the paper. Many publishers also offer the option to have advertisements appear with a white background to make them stand out more. Since the mid-1990s, there has been a trend among Yellow Pages publishers to add four-color printing for some advertisements. Yellow Pages publishers make their profits by selling special value-added features to businesses such as a larger font size for their listing, or an advertisement box next to the listings in a category.

The majority of listings are in plain small black text. Yellow Pages directories are usually published annually and distributed for free to all residences and businesses within a given coverage area. . As the name suggests, they are usually printed on yellow paper.

In many countries, the Yellow Pages refers to a telephone directory for businesses organized by the category of product or service. URL accessed on February 15, 2005.. Yell: UK Operations. UK History: 1990-1999.

URL accessed on February 15, 2005.. Yell: UK Operations. UK History: 1980-1989. URL accessed on February 15, 2005..

ketupa.net media profiles. Thomson Group: chronology. URL accessed on February 15, 2005.. TELEPHONE DIRECTORIES & DIRECTORY ENQUIRIES UK 2004.

Thomson Directories.