Difference between revisions of "BIG Partnership"

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*[[Scottish Enterprise]] [http://www.scottish-enterprise.com]
 
*[[Scottish Enterprise]] [http://www.scottish-enterprise.com]
 
*[[Scottish Executive]] [http://www.scotland.gov.uk/]
 
*[[Scottish Executive]] [http://www.scotland.gov.uk/]
**Spent £1.3m on information campaigns in 18 months to Feb 2006. The money was spent on just 4 firms.
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**Spent £1.3m on information campaigns in 18 months to Feb 2006. The money was spent on just 4 firms including [[Consolidated Communications]](£600,808 which was the greatest recipient of spending. £193,845 was paid to The Big Partnership for PR services. Sources: ''Aberdeen Press and Journal'', 17th Feb 2006 and ''The Scotsman'' 18 Feb 2006.
**[[Consolidated Communications]] took the lion's share of spending (£600,808)
 
**£193,845 was paid to The Big Partnership. (Aberdeen Press and Journal, 17th Feb 2006),(Scotsman 18 Feb 2006).
 
 
*[[learndirect scotland]] [http://www.learndirectscotland.com]
 
*[[learndirect scotland]] [http://www.learndirectscotland.com]
  

Revision as of 17:27, 8 March 2006

Background

The Big Partnership [1] is one of the UK's largest PR firms. According to the 'PR Week' league table it ranks 2nd in Scotland and top 5 for the UK outside London. Current turnover is around £2.5m

Associates

Catchline Communications [2] is a sister company of The Big Partnership

Function

This firm provides a range of PR services including international consumer campaigns, crisis and reputation management, speech writing and media training to its clients.

People

Formed in 2000 by Alex Barr, Graham Isdale and Neil Gibson. The North of Scotland operation is headed by company director Zoe Corsi. 40 employees are based in its Glasgow H.Q. In Scotland there are also offices in Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Inverness.

Clients

Big Partnership's clients include:

External Links

  • ^ Rob Edwards,Sunday Herald, 25th July 2005 (article not available online)
  • ^ Emma Seith 'Work killed my wife'; New research shows workplace-related cancers kill four times as many people as official figures show. Why is safety so lax?, Emma Seith, The Herald, 27 December 2005