BIG Partnership

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Background

The Big Partnership [[1])

Associates

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

Function

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

People

Formed in 2000 by Alex Barr, Graham Isdale and Neil Gibson. The North of Scotland operation is headed by company director Zoe Corsi. Over 80 employees are are based in Big Partnership's Glasgow H.Q. In Scotland there are also offices in Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Inverness.

Clients

Big Partnership's clients include:

ScottishPower featured at 6th place in the Scottish Environment Protection Agency's (SEPA) 'roll of shame' for 'failing pollution assessments' and having 'one of the worst pollution records in Scotland'. Source: Sunday Herald, 24 July 2005)

The Scottish Executive spent £1.3m on information campaigns in 18 months to Feb 2006. The money was spent on just 4 firms including Consolidated Communications who received £600,808 (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.

The Big Partnership has been employed by the Scottish Executive to promote the Carnegie Philanthropy Awards [[15]]. The objective of the awards was described by George Reid, Presiding Officer at the Scottish Parliament as follows:

“Enterprise and compassion are fundamental Scottish values. Our new parliamentary campus has been created as a place of conversation with the wider world. The Carnegie Medal programme and awards will stimulate debate on how wealth creation can contribute to international peace, poverty reduction and sustainable development.” source [[16]].

Previous winners include big business names such as Bill Gates of Microsoft, Lord Sainsbury of Sainsbury's supermarkets and Media Tycoon Bill Turner.

This would suggest that aim of the awards is to develop closer relationships with big business and stimulate wealth creation in Scotland. A measure of this may be to examine the sustainability achievements and integrity of previous winners.


In 2004, Helen Clark died from Cancer which her husband 'Henry believes developed as a result of her job at the National Semiconductor plant in Greenock'. 'Helen Clark spent six years working in production at National Semiconductor, operating a machine baking compounds on to silicon wafers using arsine gas, which contains arsenic.' (The Herald, 27 December 2005).

The BIG partnership has represented media interests of Clydeport since August 2000. This includes unveiling the master plan of the £500million Glasgow Harbour project.

External Links & References

  • ^ Sunday Herald,Rob Edwards, Environment Editor, NEWS; Pg. 5, 1184 words, Exposed: Scotland's filthiest companies; Polluters in 'roll of shame' July 24, 2005. [[21]]
  • ^ The Herald, 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, , 27 December 2005 (article not available online)
  • ^The Scotsman, Hamish Macdonell,'Executive spends GBP 1.3m on contracts for four PR companies', Thursday 16 February 2006 (not available online)