Difference between revisions of "Fishburn Hedges"

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Fishburn Hedges is owned by [[Abbott Mead Vickers BBDO]], the UK's largest advertising agency, which is in turn ultimately owned by the global communications group [[Omnicom]].
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Fishburn Hedges is a corporate communications company (PR firm) owned by [[Abbott Mead Vickers BBDO]], the UK's largest advertising agency, which is, in turn, ultimately owned by the global communications group [[Omnicom]].
  
 
==Company Overview==
 
==Company Overview==
  
[[Fishburn Hedges]] was established in 1991 as a corporate communications company. They specialise in public relations, advising companies on how best to communicate ideas and products to their target audience. <ref> "About Us", Fishburn Hedges, http://www.fishburn-hedges.co.uk/aboutus/</ref>
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[[Fishburn Hedges]] was established in 1991 as a corporate communications company that specialises in public relations, advising companies on how best to communicate ideas and products to their target audience. <ref> "About Us", Fishburn Hedges, http://www.fishburn-hedges.co.uk/aboutus/</ref>
FH say that they draw ideas from all over the place:
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FH representatives say that they draw ideas from all over the place:
  
 
:Typically our client teams will mix career PR practitioners with consultants who have professional experience in that client’s field.  Our consultants include former bankers, advertising planners, authors, civil servants, trade unionists, stock brokers, charity fund raisers and, of course, journalists.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20060111190701/http://www.fishburn-hedges.co.uk/Content/home/people.cfm  People] retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.</ref>
 
:Typically our client teams will mix career PR practitioners with consultants who have professional experience in that client’s field.  Our consultants include former bankers, advertising planners, authors, civil servants, trade unionists, stock brokers, charity fund raisers and, of course, journalists.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20060111190701/http://www.fishburn-hedges.co.uk/Content/home/people.cfm  People] retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.</ref>
  
The journalists are of course the greatest influence and one can see here the a similar prototype of the merger between journalism and PR promoted by [[Editorial Intelligence]].
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The journalists are, of course, the greatest influence as one can see here in a similar prototype of the merger between journalism and PR promoted by [[Editorial Intelligence]].
  
The company's list of clients is a who’s who of controversial clients. FH handle [[Shell]]'s 'Global reputation management programme', the [[Bank of America]]'s 'Media relations strategic counsel and public affairs internal communications', and [[Barclay’s Bank|Barclay's]] 'Personal finance media relations programme and business banking media relations programme', [[BT|BT’s]] public relations programme with BT Retail, [[Serco]] and [[IBM]].<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20060111190701/http://www.fishburn-hedges.co.uk/Content/clients/private.cfm Private clients] retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.</ref>
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The company's list of clients are some of the UK's and US's heavyweights. FH handles [[Shell]]'s 'Global reputation management programme'; the [[Bank of America]]'s 'Media relations strategic counsel and public affairs internal communications'; [[Barclay’s Bank|Barclay's]] 'Personal finance media relations programme and business banking media relations programme'; [[BT|BT’s]] public relations programme with BT Retail; [[Serco]]; and [[IBM]].<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20060111190701/http://www.fishburn-hedges.co.uk/Content/clients/private.cfm Private clients] retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.</ref>
  
 
And what do they get for their money? According to FH’s own website: ‘all PRs should take note that purple type on their CV, a thorough knowledge of East Enders and frequent pretence of sincerity goes a long way’.<ref>Fishburn Hedges [http://web.archive.org/web/20060111190701/http://www.fishburnhedges.co.uk/content/home/news.cfm We owe you a long lunch...] Financial Adviser 128 words, 26 August 2004, English (c) 2004 Financial Adviser, retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.</ref>
 
And what do they get for their money? According to FH’s own website: ‘all PRs should take note that purple type on their CV, a thorough knowledge of East Enders and frequent pretence of sincerity goes a long way’.<ref>Fishburn Hedges [http://web.archive.org/web/20060111190701/http://www.fishburnhedges.co.uk/content/home/news.cfm We owe you a long lunch...] Financial Adviser 128 words, 26 August 2004, English (c) 2004 Financial Adviser, retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.</ref>
  
 
==PR Campaigns==
 
==PR Campaigns==
[[Transport for London]] paid FH a massive £100,000 a month for 'advice' on [[Ken Livingstone]]'s congestion charge.  more than £2.4m over two years (2001-3) from the account, but the agency, spot the (‘pretence of sincerity’?), says it is offering value for money.<ref> Julia Day [http://www.guardian.co.uk/congestion/story/0,12768,871332,00.html PR firm defends massive payment for London traffic advice] Tuesday April 10, 2001 MediaGuardian.co.uk</ref>
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[[Transport for London]] paid FH a massive £100,000 a month for 'advice' on [[Ken Livingstone]]'s congestion charge.  The total fee averaged more than £2.4m over two years (2001-03). FH agency, spot the (‘pretence of sincerity’?), says it is offering value for money.<ref> Julia Day [http://www.guardian.co.uk/congestion/story/0,12768,871332,00.html PR firm defends massive payment for London traffic advice] Tuesday April 10, 2001 MediaGuardian.co.uk</ref>
  
But what do they do for the money? Here is what they say on their website:  
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The FH website points to the following services it provides to clients:  
  
 
*government relations and regulatory affairs to campaigning
 
*government relations and regulatory affairs to campaigning
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[[Forum for the Future]] is a paradigmatic example of a front group and not actually an independent non-government organisation. In the circular world of PR the Forum is itself a client of FH, which in turn runs the forum's website for it.<ref>[http://www.forumforthefuture.org.uk/TetraPakWastedopportunities_pdf_media_public.aspx]</ref> (note [[Tetrapak]] run by one of the world’s wealthiest men make all those disposable cartons of milk you see lying in the streets).  The Forum's ”business partners" are largely drawn from the UK’s FTSE 250 and include major multi-nationals such as [[Unilever]], [[BP]], [[GlaxoSmithKline]], [[ICI]] and [[Vodafone]].   
 
[[Forum for the Future]] is a paradigmatic example of a front group and not actually an independent non-government organisation. In the circular world of PR the Forum is itself a client of FH, which in turn runs the forum's website for it.<ref>[http://www.forumforthefuture.org.uk/TetraPakWastedopportunities_pdf_media_public.aspx]</ref> (note [[Tetrapak]] run by one of the world’s wealthiest men make all those disposable cartons of milk you see lying in the streets).  The Forum's ”business partners" are largely drawn from the UK’s FTSE 250 and include major multi-nationals such as [[Unilever]], [[BP]], [[GlaxoSmithKline]], [[ICI]] and [[Vodafone]].   
  
FH also run a Front Group called the [[Pre-school Learning Alliance]]:
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FH also operates a Front Group called the [[Pre-school Learning Alliance]]:
  
 
:"As part of our work with the Pre-school Learning Alliance, we combined a major conference on early years education and childcare, addressed by the Education Secretary, with the presentation by pre-school children of a cake to the PM at Number Ten as it was his birthday."
 
:"As part of our work with the Pre-school Learning Alliance, we combined a major conference on early years education and childcare, addressed by the Education Secretary, with the presentation by pre-school children of a cake to the PM at Number Ten as it was his birthday."
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MediaGuardian.co.uk</ref>
 
MediaGuardian.co.uk</ref>
  
Fishburn Hedges also take a keen policing interest in activists campaigns if they prompt TV and radio programmes.  When a customer (Steve Pardoe) exposed on his website that [[BT Cellnet]] "had been making unauthorised debits from thousands of people's bank and credit card accounts, then cynically fobbing off their victims,"<ref>[http://www.pardoes.com/cellnet/precis.htm Steve Pardoe's Cellnet Précis Page], accessed 10 December 2007.</ref> the campaign grew to attract mainstream media attention and so Fishburn helped out with some of that "reactive crisis and issue management to planned corporate positioning."<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20060111190701/http://www.fishburnhedges.co.uk/Content/what_we_do/BinDat/Public_Affairs_Brochure.pdf Public Affairs Brochure] retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007. </ref>, including:
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Fishburn Hedges also takes a keen policing interest in activists campaigns if they prompt TV and radio programmes.  When a customer (Steve Pardoe) exposed on his website that [[BT Cellnet]] "had been making unauthorised debits from thousands of people's bank and credit card accounts, then cynically fobbing off their victims,"<ref>[http://www.pardoes.com/cellnet/precis.htm Steve Pardoe's Cellnet Précis Page], accessed 10 December 2007.</ref> the campaign grew to attract mainstream media attention and so Fishburn helped out with some of that "reactive crisis and issue management to planned corporate positioning."<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20060111190701/http://www.fishburnhedges.co.uk/Content/what_we_do/BinDat/Public_Affairs_Brochure.pdf Public Affairs Brochure] retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007. </ref>, including:
 
   
 
   
 
:BT Cellnet and their PR firm, Fishburn Hedges, visited this site on 16. February, the day before transmission, and later in the week. Fishburn Hedges' visit was presumably to gauge the extent and detail of media exposure of Cellnet's fraud. <ref>[http://www.pardoes.com/cellnet/media.htm  Steve Pardoe's Cellnet Media Page], accessed, 10 December 2007.</ref>
 
:BT Cellnet and their PR firm, Fishburn Hedges, visited this site on 16. February, the day before transmission, and later in the week. Fishburn Hedges' visit was presumably to gauge the extent and detail of media exposure of Cellnet's fraud. <ref>[http://www.pardoes.com/cellnet/media.htm  Steve Pardoe's Cellnet Media Page], accessed, 10 December 2007.</ref>

Revision as of 17:07, 3 March 2008

Fishburn Hedges is a corporate communications company (PR firm) owned by Abbott Mead Vickers BBDO, the UK's largest advertising agency, which is, in turn, ultimately owned by the global communications group Omnicom.

Company Overview

Fishburn Hedges was established in 1991 as a corporate communications company that specialises in public relations, advising companies on how best to communicate ideas and products to their target audience. [1] FH representatives say that they draw ideas from all over the place:

Typically our client teams will mix career PR practitioners with consultants who have professional experience in that client’s field. Our consultants include former bankers, advertising planners, authors, civil servants, trade unionists, stock brokers, charity fund raisers and, of course, journalists.[2]

The journalists are, of course, the greatest influence as one can see here in a similar prototype of the merger between journalism and PR promoted by Editorial Intelligence.

The company's list of clients are some of the UK's and US's heavyweights. FH handles Shell's 'Global reputation management programme'; the Bank of America's 'Media relations strategic counsel and public affairs internal communications'; Barclay's 'Personal finance media relations programme and business banking media relations programme'; BT’s public relations programme with BT Retail; Serco; and IBM.[3]

And what do they get for their money? According to FH’s own website: ‘all PRs should take note that purple type on their CV, a thorough knowledge of East Enders and frequent pretence of sincerity goes a long way’.[4]

PR Campaigns

Transport for London paid FH a massive £100,000 a month for 'advice' on Ken Livingstone's congestion charge. The total fee averaged more than £2.4m over two years (2001-03). FH agency, spot the (‘pretence of sincerity’?), says it is offering value for money.[5]

The FH website points to the following services it provides to clients:

  • government relations and regulatory affairs to campaigning
  • reactive crisis and issue management to planned corporate positioning
  • corporate ethics to corporate community involvement[6]

Lets translate that a bit:

  • use the subterranean skills of the lobbyist to schmooze politicians.
  • try to convince us we want what their clients want and reframe the clients, perhaps by changing its name to something more innocent sounding.
  • start a 'grass roots' organisation or perhaps a seemings independent founation or institute which has the ostensible function of 'education' or environmental advocacy.

This is what FH themselves say they have done for their clients:

  • We have helped clients to win competition cases. For William Hill, we helped to persuade the competition authorities and the Trade & Industry Secretary to block the proposed merger of Ladbrokes with Coral. We worked with J Sainsbury during the “Rip off Britain” furore to ensure that it came out of the Competition Commission inquiry into the major supermarkets with a clean bill of health.
  • We have helped to reposition Powergen with government not only as a respected industry voice but also as leading the way on the environmental and social agenda
  • Our work for Unilever, one of the world’s largest food companies, has included communicating its approach to sustainable development to government, opinion formers, NGOs and the media. By working towards best practice, Unilever has added strength to its voice on all the major UK/EU policy issues facing food, farming and fisheries. The programme has included: working with Forum for the Future, the NGO led by Jonathon Porritt, which has advised on the development of Unilever’s Sustainable Agriculture Project.[7]

Forum for the Future is a paradigmatic example of a front group and not actually an independent non-government organisation. In the circular world of PR the Forum is itself a client of FH, which in turn runs the forum's website for it.[8] (note Tetrapak run by one of the world’s wealthiest men make all those disposable cartons of milk you see lying in the streets). The Forum's ”business partners" are largely drawn from the UK’s FTSE 250 and include major multi-nationals such as Unilever, BP, GlaxoSmithKline, ICI and Vodafone.

FH also operates a Front Group called the Pre-school Learning Alliance:

"As part of our work with the Pre-school Learning Alliance, we combined a major conference on early years education and childcare, addressed by the Education Secretary, with the presentation by pre-school children of a cake to the PM at Number Ten as it was his birthday."

The VP of the Pre-school Learning Alliance (another front group) is Graham McMillan — Director of Fishburn Hedges. The whole project is largely an effort to offset the government's plans to offer free access to that which the Learning Alliance's 'partners' want to sell.[9]

Fishburn Hedges also takes a keen policing interest in activists campaigns if they prompt TV and radio programmes. When a customer (Steve Pardoe) exposed on his website that BT Cellnet "had been making unauthorised debits from thousands of people's bank and credit card accounts, then cynically fobbing off their victims,"[10] the campaign grew to attract mainstream media attention and so Fishburn helped out with some of that "reactive crisis and issue management to planned corporate positioning."[11], including:

BT Cellnet and their PR firm, Fishburn Hedges, visited this site on 16. February, the day before transmission, and later in the week. Fishburn Hedges' visit was presumably to gauge the extent and detail of media exposure of Cellnet's fraud. [12]

Their game was to obscure awareness not to stop the fraud. Rather humorously the 'Corporate use of codes of ethics: 2004 survey' was put together by Fishburn Hedges and their survey shows "that responsibility for how corporate codes of ethics operate is increasingly being taken by directors and boards in Britain's biggest companies." How true, or is that just PR?[13]

Staff

Staff listed on the company website are: [14]

Clients

Fishburn Hedges' clients include: [15]

In 2008, Fishburn Hedges is reported to be a member of GFC/Net[16]

External Resources

Notes

  1. "About Us", Fishburn Hedges, http://www.fishburn-hedges.co.uk/aboutus/
  2. People retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.
  3. Private clients retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.
  4. Fishburn Hedges We owe you a long lunch... Financial Adviser 128 words, 26 August 2004, English (c) 2004 Financial Adviser, retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.
  5. Julia Day PR firm defends massive payment for London traffic advice Tuesday April 10, 2001 MediaGuardian.co.uk
  6. Public Affairs Brochure retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.
  7. Public Affairs Brochure retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.
  8. [1]
  9. BBC education chief falls on his sword Owen Gibson Wednesday January 29, 2003 MediaGuardian.co.uk
  10. Steve Pardoe's Cellnet Précis Page, accessed 10 December 2007.
  11. Public Affairs Brochure retrieved from the Internet archive of 11 January 2006 on 31 July 2007.
  12. Steve Pardoe's Cellnet Media Page, accessed, 10 December 2007.
  13. [2]
  14. "People", Fishburn Hedges, http://www.fishburn-hedges.com/aboutus/people/
  15. "Client List, Fishburn Hedges, http://www.fishburn-hedges.co.uk/ourclients/corporate_and_professional_services/; "Client List", Fishburn Hedges, http://www.fishburn-hedges.co.uk/ourclients/public_sector__social_affairs_and_not-for-profit_organisations/
  16. GFC/Net Members Accessed 13th February 2008