Difference between revisions of "Fleishman-Hillard"
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[[Image:F-H.jpg|350px|right|thumb|Fleishman Hillard London Office above Covent Garden tube station]] | [[Image:F-H.jpg|350px|right|thumb|Fleishman Hillard London Office above Covent Garden tube station]] | ||
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− | Fleishman-Hillard | + | Fleishman-Hillard is one of the biggest PR companies in the world. Its parent company is the [[Omnicom]] group Inc, which is a huge conglomerate that describes itself as a "global leader in Marketing and Global Communications". It has absorbed the group of firms formerly trading under the name [[GPC International]] |
==Global operation== | ==Global operation== | ||
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*[[Strat@comm]] | *[[Strat@comm]] | ||
*[[VOX Global Mandate]] | *[[VOX Global Mandate]] | ||
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==UK operation== | ==UK operation== | ||
Fleishman-Hillard has 3 offices in the UK: London, [[Edinburgh|Fleishman-Hillard (Edinburgh)]] and Dublin. | Fleishman-Hillard has 3 offices in the UK: London, [[Edinburgh|Fleishman-Hillard (Edinburgh)]] and Dublin. | ||
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===People=== | ===People=== | ||
− | *[[Kevin Bell]], Executive Vice President and Senior Partner (UK and South Africa). Bell is described as one of the "great and the good” in the PR industry. He is a former advisor to [[Margaret Thatcher]] "Managing a team of 150-plus consultants in Fleishman-Hillard's London, Edinburgh and Johannesburg offices, Kevin specialises in advising senior executives of leading blue-chip companies, as well as senior politicians on their communications strategies."<ref>[http://www.fleishman-hillard.co.uk/index.php?pid=39 F-H website], accessed Feb 2009</ref> | + | *[[Kevin Bell]], Executive Vice President and Senior Partner (UK and South Africa). Bell is described as one of the "great and the good” in the PR industry. He is a former advisor to [[Margaret Thatcher]] "Managing a team of 150-plus consultants in Fleishman-Hillard's London, Edinburgh and Johannesburg offices, Kevin specialises in advising senior executives of leading blue-chip companies, as well as senior politicians on their communications strategies."<ref>[http://www.fleishman-hillard.co.uk/index.php?pid=39 F-H website], accessed Feb 2009</ref> He is the ex-Founding Director of [[Westminster Strategy]], established [[Lowe Bell Political]] (later [[Bell Pottinger Public Affairs]]) in 1994, and joined [[GPC]] International UK in 2000. He is a trustee of the [[Institute of Economic Affairs]] (IEA).<ref>Kevin Bell quits Bell Pottinger to join GPC, PR Week UK, 07 July 2000</ref> |
+ | *[[Nick Williams]], head of public affairs. Williams was an advisor to the [[Labour Party]] from 1993-97, and part of [[Tony Blair]]'s team during the 2001 and 2005 general elections. | ||
+ | *[[Simon Benson]], lobbyist. Benson was a special adviser to Home Secretary [[Jacqui Smith]] while she was chief whip from May 2006 to June 2007. Before that, Benson was a special adviser to the previous chief whip [[Hilary Armstrong]].<ref>Fleishman-Hillard nets ex-Home Secretary aide, PR Week UK, 22 August 2007</ref> | ||
+ | [[Sophie Pim]], lobbyist. Pim was [[David Cameron]]'s former operations manager, who is described as bringing “first hand experience of the inner workings of the Cameron team.”<ref>Sally Dawson, Cameron aide joins Fleishman-Hillard, Public Affairs News, February 2007</ref> | ||
*[[Paul Borge]] | *[[Paul Borge]] | ||
+ | In April 2005 Kevin Maguire wrote in the ''New Statesman'' of F-H distributing a glossy brochure to their clients sketching the likely changes that could be expected under a Labour government led by Gordon Brown. "Warning multinational bosses that the next Labour premier's philosophy is built on - wait for it - equity, the booklet predicts Brown will centralise power around himself," Maguire wrote.<ref>[http://www.newstatesman.com/200504180015]</ref> | ||
==Clients== | ==Clients== | ||
+ | ===UK lobbying clients=== | ||
+ | F-H lists its UK lobbying clients as:<ref>[appc.org.uk APPC register], to November 2008</ref> | ||
+ | [[Abbott UK]] | [[Alliance of Sector Skills Councils]] | [[Annington Homes]] | [[American Pharmaceutical Group]] | [[ASH Scotland]] | [[AT&T]] | [[British Insurance Brokers Association]] | [[Brookfield Real Estate Services]] | [[Cayman Islands Government]] | [[Coloplast]] | [[Crucell]] | [[DHL]] | [[Dollar Financial]] | [[Edinburgh Military Tattoo]] | [[Emerson]] | [[Genzyme]] | [[HBOS]] | [[InBev]] | [[InterGen]] | [[International Paper]] | [[Ixion]] | [[Marks & Spencer plc]] | [[Merck Schering Plough]] | [[National Air Traffic Services]] | [[News International]] | [[NHS Supply Chain]] | [[Omnicom]] | [[Oxford Nanopore]] | [[Provident Financial]] | [[Research In Motion]] | [[Rio Tinto Alcan]] | [[RPSGB]] | [[Scottish Development International]] | [[ScottishPower]] | [[Scottish Water]] | [[TalentScotland]] | [[TCS]] | [[United Utilities]] | [[UK Young Scientists & Engineers Fair]] | [[VAT Liaison]] | [[World Hepatitis Alliance]] | [[Wyeth]] | [[Equifax]] | [[Fellowes]] | [[Flybe]] | [[Royal Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland]] | ||
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*government of Turkey | *government of Turkey | ||
===Scotland=== | ===Scotland=== | ||
− | [[Nirex]] | + | *[[Nirex]] |
+ | Fleishman-Hillard has for several years handled the bulk of Nirex’s (Nuclear Industry Radioactive Waste Executive) monitoring service. One service the PR company provides is to attend Scottish parliament cross-party group meetings that may affect their clients. One of the PR company’s Scottish employees, Rachel Robertson, used to be on the Cross Party Group on the Civil Nuclear Industry. She attended these meetings listed as being from Nirex, and not as an employee from Fleishman-Hillard. Robertson has since been replaced by Ian Price who was also listed as being from Nirex. Coincidentally there was also an Ian Price listed as working at Fleishman-Hillard's Edinburgh office.<ref>[http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Civil_Nuclear_Industry_Scottish_CPG Sourcewatch]<ref> | ||
[[Pfizer]] | [[Pfizer]] | ||
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+ | ==US operation== | ||
+ | In May 2006, two senior Fleishman-Hillard executives Doug Dowie and John Stodder were found guilty in a fraud trial that had gripped the US PR industry for two years. The jury found Dowie guilty on 14 counts of 'wire fraud' and one count of conspiracy - in a scheme to overbill city tax-payers for PR services. Stodder, the agency's one-time SV-P of PA, was convicted on 11 counts of wire fraud and one on conspiracy. The two had been charged with conspiracy and wire fraud in an alleged 2003 scam to defraud the Department of Water and Power out of more than dollars 300,000.<ref>Randi Schmelzer, Former F-H Executives Found Guilty Of Fraud In US, PR Week, May 26, 2006, p2</ref> | ||
==Specific lobbying campaigns== | ==Specific lobbying campaigns== |
Revision as of 15:16, 17 February 2009
Fleishman-Hillard is one of the biggest PR companies in the world. Its parent company is the Omnicom group Inc, which is a huge conglomerate that describes itself as a "global leader in Marketing and Global Communications". It has absorbed the group of firms formerly trading under the name GPC International
Contents
Global operation
Headquartered in St. Louis, Fleishman-Hillard has over 80 offices throughout North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Middle East, South Africa, and Latin America. It operates through a variety of networks:
- Allyn & Company
- Fleishman-Hillard Government Relations
- GPC Public Affairs
- GMMB
- Mercury Public Affairs
- Strat@comm
- VOX Global Mandate
UK operation
Fleishman-Hillard has 3 offices in the UK: London, Fleishman-Hillard (Edinburgh) and Dublin.
People
- Kevin Bell, Executive Vice President and Senior Partner (UK and South Africa). Bell is described as one of the "great and the good” in the PR industry. He is a former advisor to Margaret Thatcher "Managing a team of 150-plus consultants in Fleishman-Hillard's London, Edinburgh and Johannesburg offices, Kevin specialises in advising senior executives of leading blue-chip companies, as well as senior politicians on their communications strategies."[1] He is the ex-Founding Director of Westminster Strategy, established Lowe Bell Political (later Bell Pottinger Public Affairs) in 1994, and joined GPC International UK in 2000. He is a trustee of the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA).[2]
- Nick Williams, head of public affairs. Williams was an advisor to the Labour Party from 1993-97, and part of Tony Blair's team during the 2001 and 2005 general elections.
- Simon Benson, lobbyist. Benson was a special adviser to Home Secretary Jacqui Smith while she was chief whip from May 2006 to June 2007. Before that, Benson was a special adviser to the previous chief whip Hilary Armstrong.[3]
Sophie Pim, lobbyist. Pim was David Cameron's former operations manager, who is described as bringing “first hand experience of the inner workings of the Cameron team.”[4]
In April 2005 Kevin Maguire wrote in the New Statesman of F-H distributing a glossy brochure to their clients sketching the likely changes that could be expected under a Labour government led by Gordon Brown. "Warning multinational bosses that the next Labour premier's philosophy is built on - wait for it - equity, the booklet predicts Brown will centralise power around himself," Maguire wrote.[5]
Clients
UK lobbying clients
F-H lists its UK lobbying clients as:[6] Abbott UK | Alliance of Sector Skills Councils | Annington Homes | American Pharmaceutical Group | ASH Scotland | AT&T | British Insurance Brokers Association | Brookfield Real Estate Services | Cayman Islands Government | Coloplast | Crucell | DHL | Dollar Financial | Edinburgh Military Tattoo | Emerson | Genzyme | HBOS | InBev | InterGen | International Paper | Ixion | Marks & Spencer plc | Merck Schering Plough | National Air Traffic Services | News International | NHS Supply Chain | Omnicom | Oxford Nanopore | Provident Financial | Research In Motion | Rio Tinto Alcan | RPSGB | Scottish Development International | ScottishPower | Scottish Water | TalentScotland | TCS | United Utilities | UK Young Scientists & Engineers Fair | VAT Liaison | World Hepatitis Alliance | Wyeth | Equifax | Fellowes | Flybe | Royal Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland
- government of Turkey
Scotland
Fleishman-Hillard has for several years handled the bulk of Nirex’s (Nuclear Industry Radioactive Waste Executive) monitoring service. One service the PR company provides is to attend Scottish parliament cross-party group meetings that may affect their clients. One of the PR company’s Scottish employees, Rachel Robertson, used to be on the Cross Party Group on the Civil Nuclear Industry. She attended these meetings listed as being from Nirex, and not as an employee from Fleishman-Hillard. Robertson has since been replaced by Ian Price who was also listed as being from Nirex. Coincidentally there was also an Ian Price listed as working at Fleishman-Hillard's Edinburgh office.Cite error: Closing </ref>
missing for <ref>
tag
Specific lobbying campaigns
Biotech
In 2003, it was reported that “Fleishman-Hillard has been getting more and more deeply involved in the biotechnology sector, helping the Biotechnology Industry Organisation and the Council of Biotechnology Information communicate the benefits of the technology to consumers and opinion leaders.” In April 2006, US biotechnology firm Genzyme appointed Fleishman-Hillard to boost its profile among British policymakers and lobby the UK Government to commit more funding to biotech.[7];[8]
Turkey
On 10 October 2007, the US House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs passed Resolution 106, which accuses the Turkish rulers in 1915 of genocide. There was an intensive on behalf of the Turkish government to sway the committee, described by Ali H. Aslan as follows:
- Both the Turkish and the US governments strongly opposed the resolution and were joined by DLA Piper, the Livingstone Group, public relations company Fleishman-Hillard and other companies that officially conducted lobbying activities on behalf of Turkey as well as by big corporations that have sizable commercial deals with Turkey such as Boeing and BP.[9]
ID cards
In June 2005, Kevin Bell from the UK arm of Fleishman-Hillard spoke at a one-day conference in London called ID Cards: Towards Procurement and Implementation. The title of his talk was "Achieving public acceptance".[10]
Contacts
UK
40 Long Acre, London WC2
http://www.fleishman-hillard.co.uk
Global website
http://www.fleishman.com
External Resources
- GPC International UK Staff and Clients 1.12.03 to 31.5.04
- Fleishman-Hillard UK Staff and Clients 31.11.04 to 31.5.05
- Fleishman-Hillard, PRCA Yearbook 2004
- Fleishman-Hillard UK Staff and Clients 1 June 2005 to 30 Nov 2005
- Fleishman-Hillard UK Staff and Clients 1 December 2007 to 29 February 2008