British Triathlon appoints The Playbook for membership campaign

British Triathlon has partnered with The Playbook to continue the momentum from the 2016 Rio Olympics and get more people involved in the sport.

The Blaybook British Triathlon

British Triathlon

British Triathlon was one of the most successful teams of the Games notching up seven medals, including the gold and silver haul from the Brownlee brothers.

The Playbook has been briefed to build on this success by delivering a new strategic recruitment campaign, which will include content development, a digital influencer programme and partner activations.

Its campaign will launch before Christmas, with a focus on recruiting both new triathletes and converting those who already have a relationship with the sport.

The membership campaign will kick off with a piece of video content, featuring a range of triathletes, from elite Olympians to age group participants and amateur tri and para athletes.

Jo Simpson, commercial director for British Traithlon, said: “As soon as we started talking with The Playbook it was clear that it understood our objectives. It approached the brief with a strong focus on insight and creativity resulting in a campaign that we’re really excited to get started on.”

Eddie May, MD of The Playbook, added: “We were all very excited to see such a strong showing from British Triathlon’s elite athletes out in Rio and now there is a clear opportunity to engage the wider triathlon family to make sure that momentum is not lost.

“We always want to inspire positive behaviour change and get people active. Working alongside British Triathlon we have a great opportunity to do that with this sport.”

Meet The Independent

Gorkana has a few final places available for an exclusive breakfast briefing with The Independent this Thursday (December 1), with editor Christian Broughton and Zach Leonard, managing director of digital at the title’s owner ESI Media.

Independent2016 has been a big year for The Independent. Celebrating its 30th anniversary this year, ESI Media committed it to a digital-only future in March and increased investment in the business in the UK and internationally.

The title now employs more than 100 journalists across the world and has shown that serious political and international reporting can survive and thrive in the digital age.

Broughton and Leonard will talk at the briefing about the title’s priorities now that it’s digital-only, its new brands and products – including The Independent’s Daily Edition app – how its content has been received by a growing audience and what PRs can do to get involved.

The breakfast briefing will take place at Milton Court, London, EC2Y 9SS, on Thursday December 1 at 8:30am, with an 8am arrival time.

There are still a few spaces available – please email [email protected] if you would like to attend.

  • Events are exclusive to customers of the Gorkana Media Database or those who also subscribe to all three of our services: Media Database, Media Monitoring and PR Measurement services.

Virgin Holidays hires One Green Bean

Virgin Holidays has appointed One Green Bean as its first retained PR agency with a brief to support its new ‘Seize the Holiday’ brand positioning.

Virgin Holidays

One Green Bean’s PR campaigns will be closely integrated with Virgin Holiday’s ATL, customer marketing and social strategy.

Matt Buchanan, the agency’s MD, and Kat Thomas, global executive creative director, will lead the account, reporting to Kelly Grindle, Virgin Holidays’ PR lead.

The account was won following a “highly competitive” pitch process.

Sarah Coggins, vice president of PR and social media for Virgin Atlantic, said: “We were impressed by One Green Bean’s fresh perspective, outstanding creativity and brand building credentials. It demonstrated a very modern communications approach to meet our business challenges.

“Virgin Holidays has just launched a new brand purpose and positioning, so it’s timely to retain One Green Bean to drive our earned comms as we help everyone take on the world.”

Buchanan added: “Our founding client almost 10 years ago was Virgin Atlantic, so we’re thrilled to have the opportunity to build a relationship with the team at Virgin Holidays. Our vision is grounded in helping brands deliver brilliant content-led PR and everyone we’ve met during the pitch process has embraced this, we can’t wait to get started.”

Brightwells appoints Prova

Auctioneer Brightwells, which specialises in vehicles and classic motoring, has hired communications consultancy Prova.

prova 1

Aimee Postle

Midlands-based Prova will deliver an integrated communications programme, intended to increase brand awareness and build long-term customer relationships, over the next 12 months.

Richard Binnersley, managing director at Brightwells, said: “We are pleased to announce our partnership with Prova. We chose the consultancy because of its in-depth knowledge of classic motoring and the wider motorsport and auction sectors. We’re thoroughly looking forward to working with the team through a number of upcoming projects.”

Aimee Postle, director at Prova, added: “Working with Brightwells is a real privilege for Prova, to work with one of the true leaders of the classic car auction stage, and we are delighted to add such a prestigious name to our extensive client portfolio. The team is passionate, hard-working and dedicated to delivering results in the marketplace, which very much reflects the can-do ethos at Prova.”

Prova specialises in transport, technology and environmental PR, and has worked with automotive brands including Honda, The AA, Euro Car Parts, BMW Group Financial Services and TRL (Transport Research Laboratory).

Anthony Joshua-backed gym hires TLA

BXR, a members-only fitness facility backed by IBF Heavyweight Champion Anthony Joshua, has chosen The Lifestyle Agency to launch its flagship site on Chiltern Street in London.

TLA

TLA will launch BXR’s flagship site on Chiltern Street in London

The agency has been briefed to target lifestyle, health and fitness, interior design and trade media, positioning its offering of the highest level of professional boxing training.

Charlie Pearson, MD of The Lifestyle Agency, will lead the account and report to BXR co-founders Neil Sanyal and Olia Sardarova.

Sardarova said: We chose The Lifestyle Agency for the hands-on approach that comes from working with such a close-knit and efficient team. The team are young, dynamic and forward thinking which entirely compliments our brand ethos. We felt we were in safe hands and could see ourselves working really well with the agency on all conceptual and creative levels.”

AstraZeneca’s Kelly Teasdale joins Burson-Marsteller

Kelly Teasdale has joined Burson-Marsteller’s healthcare team as senior director, following two years as global brand comms director at pharmaceutical firm AstraZeneca.


BM

Kelly Teasdale

At AstraZeneca, Teasdale developed global comms strategies for oncology and cardiovascular-focused products, supported global corporate brand comms and led patient advocacy and patient-centric strategy.

Before AstraZeneca, Teasdale was global MD and partner at health and well-being agency TogoRun, where she worked for clients including L’Oreal.

She has also held roles at Chandler Chicco Companies Europe and Weber Shandwick.

In her new role at Burson-Marsteller, which she starts today, Teasdale will work on a range of global comms accounts, focusing on leading brands and pipeline assets.

Kate Hawker, MD and UK and EMEA healthcare lead at Burson-Marsteller, said: “Kelly is an outstanding global healthcare communications lead and her experience will really help us to develop our capability in key growth areas for us, such as patient centricity and advocacy.”

Teasdale added: “I have always been impressed by the calibre of the Burson-Marsteller team and their commitment to evidence based communications and creative thinking has tempted me back into agency life. I am delighted to be joining the expanding healthcare team in London to devise and deliver industry leading campaigns on behalf of our clients.”

Most read people news on Gorkana News

Your bite-sized update of the latest people news and moves featured on Gorkana News:


Katherine Fennell 3Communications and Network Consulting (CNC) hires Katherine Fennell as a consultant.

Fennell, who will report to managing partner Tom Buchanan, arrives at CNC from Edison, where she supported globally-listed mid to small cap companies seeking to raise their capital market profile.


Jim Moorhead 3Jim Moorhead, the former managing director of Burson-Marsteller’s US public affairs and crisis practice, joins the International Advisory Council (IAC) at international comms firm, APCO Worldwide.


Hugh Baillie 3Hugh Baillie, UK CEO of FullSix and former CEO of ad firm Ogilvy & Mather, is to join Weber Shandwick as head of strategic engagement disciplines across EMEA.

Most recently CEO of FullSix, Baillie has extensive advertising agency experience, spanning Grey, Saatchi & Saatchi and BBH, as well as Ogilvy & Mather.


Susan Milne-Bennett 3Susan Milne-Bennett, a former MD of Ogilvy PR and Hill+Knowlton in New Zealand, has joined Tangerine in the UK as deputy MD of its B2B team, with a brief to support ambitious growth plans.


David Banks 3The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) has appointed David Banks as public affairs manager in its communications team.

Banks will manage the FRC’s political engagement and promote understanding of its role in corporate governance, audit regulation and corporate reporting. He will report to Peter Timberlake, head of communications at the FRC.


60 Seconds with Bart Nash, LPP

Bart Nash, is head of communications and public affairs at the Local Pensions Partnership (LPP). The Local Pensions Partnership launched in April 2016 after the merger of the London Pension Fund Authority and Lancashire County Pensions Fund. 

Bart Nash 1

Bart Nash

What is the communications challenge at the Local Pensions Partnership?
We’re a fairly new organisation formed by the merger of two Local Government pension funds. This has meant creating a profile from scratch, moving the narratives away from our parent funds and building a new communications function and way of working. It’s been a long year, but a satisfying one!

What’s unique about comms in the UK pensions industry?
There’s a lot boiling away under the surface that you don’t realise until you work in it.  When people think pensions – and I was the same – they think of retirement. However, some of the largest infrastructure investors in the world are pension funds. One of the pillars behind the formation of the LPP was to create a fund that was of sufficient size to replicate that.

In 10 to 15 years’ time I can’t see why UK pension funds won’t be on the same level as those in Holland, Canada or Australia.

What, in 2016, have you been most proud of?
Probably our media profile. We launched in April with none and our last analysis saw a 49% share of industry voice including regular national press and 80% key message cut through.

What are your ambitions for LPP in 2017?
Continue to build our internal communications function, which includes building a new intranet, maintaining our current media profile and launching an industry thought-leadership campaign.

What aspect of communications interests you the most?
The inter-dependencies of strands/disciplines and managing those in order to create the best impact. It’s a natural feeling to silo and immerse oneself in a specific area, particularly in large corporates. For example, media, internal and public affairs teams can quite often get caught in the trap of giving lip service to each other’s areas in weekly, catch-up meetings, but don’t involve each other in the planning stages.

A strong story will interest all audiences, and if it can be reinforced across numerous mediums and channels, it’s much more effective.

The effectiveness of a well-structured and maintained ‘Comms Grid’ is often overlooked!

Opinion: Reputation and risk – how the two worlds work together

Headland recently launched a new reputation risk proposition. Simon Burton, partner at Headland, will lead the new proposition with Hans-Kristian Bryn, a former partner for strategic risk at professional services firm Deloitte. They explain how collaboration leads to an effective risk strategy.

Simon Burton and H-K 1

Simon Burton and Hans-Kristian Bryn

Over a third of corporate value is down to brand and reputation, and 87% of executives say reputation is their most important strategic risk.

Yet despite its importance, in many corporates it is not clear who has responsibility for managing reputational risk.

On the one hand, corporate affairs directors (CADs) are responsible for managing corporate reputation. They have expertise in managing stakeholder relations that give rise to reputational risk, and which are vital to mitigating it.

On the other hand, CFOs, finance directors and chief risk officers (CROs) have the best understanding of the commercial and financial impact of a reputational issue. They are also involved in the disclosure of principal risks to investors and stakeholders.

Combining the different skill sets of these two functions is the best way to deliver effective reputation risk management, but achieving genuine collaboration rarely comes naturally in practice, precisely because of the different skills and cultures present in the two disciplines.

That is not to say that the corporate affairs and risk functions don’t already interact. They do. The question is whether they genuinely collaborate to both protect and enhance company value in an area which, by their own admission, is business critical?

Too often reputational issues are addressed only in the breach, rather than being factored into decision-making at the outset. Nowhere is the challenge more pressing than around big investment decisions like launching new products, changing sourcing strategies or initiating M&A activity.

The good news is that the expertise will, to a greater or lesser extent, already exist in most companies. The issue is that the required skills and capabilities are typically spread across different functional silos. To be effective in evaluating and quantifying reputational risks, firms need to be able to capitalise on the capabilities of both the corporate affairs and risk teams. Collaboration between these functions should be part of business as usual.

In many companies, such a day-to-day partnership approach does not come easily. However, the case for updating the existing approach towards reputational risk management is strong.

Corporate affairs and risk functions working in tandem can deliver an enhanced ‘service’ and a new source of competitive advantage for companies. A singular and aligned approach will put both functions more directly at the heart of the decision-making and strategic planning processes, and in closer interaction with the core of the business. That’s the opportunity ahead.

  • Headland Consultancy and H-K Bryn offer reputational risk analysis and conduct collaborative workshops to facilitate effective working between corporate affairs and risk functions. The new approach brings together reputation management expertise with analysing and modelling the commercial impact of reputation risk.
  • To find out more, please contact Simon Burton ([email protected]) or H-K Bryn ([email protected])

John Doe to begin work with Roundhouse

John Doe has been hired to handle the PR for the Roundhouse’s Charity Gala in March 2017.

during The Roundhouse Gala held at the Roundhouse on March 19, 2015 in London, England.

The Roundhouse Gala 2017 will be held on 16 March 2017

On its shared 50th anniversary as an arts centre and 10th anniversary as a charity institution, the gala aims to raise funds for the venue to support young creatives.

The Roundhouse gives young people the chance to engage with the arts through music, media and performance projects.

Sally Wood chairs the gala committee. In the past the Gala has been attended by music celebrities including Ronnie Wood, Sam Smith, Jamie Cullum, Sharleen Spiteri and Boy George.

Sasha Handover, events and ambassador manager for Roundhouse, said: “The Gala is always a special calendar date for us, this year even more so as we celebrate two mile-stone anniversaries.

“The John Doe team understood our goals and have the enthusiasm to create great content and drive the press around the Gala. We’re really looking forward to this partnership.”

James Wilkins, creative director of John Doe, added: “The Roundhouse is an iconic music institution, it’s part of the fabric of London. The JD team love the venue, as does everyone, so the chance to work with them was a dream opportunity.”