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Pg. 27Rankings of top IR andFinancial Relations firmsPg. 35Rankings of topProfessional Services firmsCommunications & new media August 2010 I Vol. 24 No. 8SPECIAL REPORT: FINANCE REFORMHOW NEW WASHINGTON REGULATIONS WILL IMPACTINVESTOR RELATIONS AND FINANCIAL PR PG. 12A NEW ERA FOR IRO INVESTOR RELATIONS 2010:EXPECTATIONS PG. 10 BACK TO BASICS? PG. 20PROFILES OF FINANCIAL PR ANDINVESTOR RELATIONS FIRMS PG. 22August 2010 | www.odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong>SPECIAL SECTION: PG. 28PROFESSIONAL SERVICES PR


Vol. 24, No. 8Aug. 2010CONTENTSEDITORIALWashington’s financial reforms usher 6in some much needed oversight.BLAME FLIES AS LOOSE ASFACTS IN SHERROD HOAX 8Media have blamed everyone butthemselves for the false story.FOX WINS TOP ‘CUSTOMERSATISFACTION’ RATING 9A national poll of customer satisfactionratings finds Fox.<strong>com</strong> rates higherthan any other news organization.NEW SHIFTS INMANAGEMENT ALTER IROs 10Changes in corporate hiringpractices have impacted recent industryand influencer expectations.UNDERSTANDINGFINANCIAL REFORMS 12How recent financial reformssigned into law will affect financial<strong>com</strong>munications and investor relations.14SOCIAL MEDIA AND IR:WHO NEEDS IT?Social media could someday liveup to its hype in the IR world, butso far it hasn’t.UTILITY PR: ACCEPT NOSUBSTITUTES 16Why clients should never acceptbeing locked in to rigid, expensivecontracts with PR services firms.EDELMAN, MCCORMICKSPEAK AT PRSA MEETING 18Highlights from the July 16 PRSAboard meeting in Atlanta.STUDY GAUGES ADVOCACYGROUP SOCIAL MEDIA USE 19A Burson Marsteller study findsadvocacy groups have recently flocked tosocial media sites.19AZ SEEKS TO OFFSETIMMIGRATION BACKLASHA tourism task force hasre<strong>com</strong>mended PR help to explain AZ’snew immigration law.20FINANCIAL PR PROS SEEBRIGHT FUTUREAfter a grim few years, PR pros inthe financial sector are looking forward toan economy on the upswing.DAN EDELMAN CELEBRATES21 90TH BIRTHDAYThe PR mogul brought in anotheryear, surrounded by friends and family.PROFILES OF FINANCIAL PR &22 INVESTOR RELATIONS FIRMSRANKINGS OF TOP FINANCIAL27 PR & IR FIRMSRECESSION TOOK TOLL ON28 PROFESSIONAL SERVICESRecent financial woes put aside thenotion that PR’s professional services sectorwas impervious to an economic downturn.USING SOCIAL MEDIA TO29 BUILD COMMUNITIESSuggestions when using socialmedia to build an audience around yourclient’s content.PROF. SERVICES REBOUND30WITH NEW TOOLSHow a revolution in <strong>com</strong>municationshas unleashed a vast new arsenal of tools.PROFILES OF PROFESSIONAL32 SERVICES FIRMSRANKINGS OF TOP35 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES FIRMS41COLUMNS363738394042WASHINGTON REPORTPROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENTFraser SeitelFINANCIAL MANAGEMENTRichard GoldsteinGUEST COLUMNWes PedersenGUEST COLUMNVirgil ScudderGUEST COLUMNKevin FoleyPR BUYER’S GUIDEFleishman-Hillard...BACK COVERGrayling.....................................43Log-On.......................................25KEF Media...................................3MacKenzie Partners, Inc...........111220ADVERTISERSNAPS.....................INSIDE COVERNasdaq OMX............................15NIRI............................................13Omega World Travel.................31Ruder Finn.................................17Cover Photo by Jon Gingerichwww.odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong>Daily, up-to-the minute PR newsEDITORIAL CALENDAR 2010January: Crisis Comms. / Buyer’s GuideFebruary: Environmental & P.A.March: Food & BeverageApril: Broadcast & Social MediaMay: PR Firm RankingsJune: Global & MulticulturalJuly: Travel & TourismAugust: Financial/I.R.September: Beauty & FashionOctober: Healthcare & MedicalNovember: High-TechDecember: Entertainment & SportsSard Verbinnen & Co..................7Sloane & Co.................................9TV Access..................................29Walek & Associates...................5O’Dwyer’s is published monthly for $60.00 a year ($7.00 for a single issue) by the J.R. O’Dwyer Co., Inc., 271 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10016. (212) 679-2471; fax: (212) 683-2750. Periodical postage paid at NewYork, N.Y., and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to O’Dwyer’s, 271 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10016. O’Dwyer’s PR Report ISSN: 1931-8316. Published monthly.


EDITORIALFinancial reforms usher in much-needed oversightIt’s been a long time <strong>com</strong>ing. After months of wrangling, the July 21 signage of the WallStreet Reform and Consumer Protection Act offers the most <strong>com</strong>prehensive set of changesto our U.S. financial institution since the Great Depression.It’s a victory for consumers and small businesses, and a defeat for special interests, as wellas banks and mortgage firms — institutions that for too long have won big on the footloosefinancial schemes, predatory lending chicanery and brazen bailouts of a casino economy.The Act offers several broad changes, each of which offers a glimmer of hope that futurefinancial follies won’t be a case of history repeated.First and foremost, it vastly increases transparency in the marketplace. Derivatives can nolonger be traded under a shroud of secrecy. The longtime clandestine institutions of hedgefunds would be forced to disclose more information about their operations, and would be regulatedunder the auspices of the SEC. Executive <strong>com</strong>pensation must be disclosed, with independent<strong>com</strong>pany <strong>com</strong>pensation boards.The Act also establishes a new, single consumerprotection agency, the ConsumerFinancial Protection Bureau, to strengtheninvestor protection and ensure productslike mortgages, car loans and creditcards don’t <strong>com</strong>e with predatory fees,unfair rate hikes or discriminatorylending practices.Lenders must assess a borrower’sability to repay before handingout a mortgage. New lawswould prohibit lenders from steeringborrowers blindly into expensive,high-risk loans they knowcan’t be repaid.Financial terms will have to bewritten in a language we can understand.Consumers who suspect predatory practices will have access to a national, toll-free hotline.The new law also increases regulation of credit rating agencies. Free annual credit reportswill be available to consumers who were refused a loan because of their credit standing.It also ends the possibility of future bank bailouts. Companies that can’t hack it will simplybe forced to liquidate. Companies also can’t simply merge and acquire ad infinitum until theirdownfall threatens to topple the entire economy.Finally, the Act gives the government better tools to handle a crisis. Regulatory agencies willbe consolidated, and new ones will be created to evaluate risks in the marketplace, <strong>com</strong>pletewith periodic public reports. The Treasury will now have the authority to extend lines of creditin a crisis, and can place non-bank financial firms like insurance <strong>com</strong>panies into positions ofreceivership.As expected, the new rules have already <strong>com</strong>e with a lot of industry grousing. Granted, theAct isn’t perfect, but neither were the laws governing our financial leaders when they steeredus into this mess to begin with. If you ask me, I say the Act doesn’t go far enough: for one, itstill doesn’t require banks to clean up the mortgage mess they created three years ago. But it’sa good start.Naturally, investor relations and financial <strong>com</strong>municators have been worried about whataffects the new regulatory clampdown will have on PR budgets. The fact is, these new regulationswill also be a boon for the industry. Why? For one, financial institutions will need <strong>com</strong>petentcounsel to educate them on these new rules and the increased potential for litigation. Ourfinancial sector is going to have lot of new responsibilities. They’ll need experts: crisis <strong>com</strong>municators,mergers, acquisitions and restructuring pros, asset experts, corporate responsibilityleaders and a score of others just to guide them through the tangled legalese.Second, the very idea of transparency is predicated on a notion of increased <strong>com</strong>munication.Banks and lending institutions will have no choice but to air their financial laundry in the courtof public opinion, and in doing so will need solid strategic <strong>com</strong>munications to help them withearnings announcements, disclosures, IPOs and public affairs work, not to mention countlesshours of reputation management and media training support. The U.S. financial <strong>com</strong>munity isquickly realizing that a good PR plan isn’t something they can choose not to have. — Jon GingerichEDITOR-IN-CHIEFJack O’Dwyerjack@odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong>ASSOCIATE PUBLISHERKevin McCauleykevin@odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong>EDITORJon Gingerichjon@odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong>SENIOR EDITORGreg Hazleygreg@odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong>CONTRIBUTING EDITORSFraser SeitelRichard GoldsteinChristine O’DwyerADVERTISING SALESJohn O’DwyerAdvertising Sales Managerjohn@odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong>Jack FogartyNational Advertising Representativejfogarty@odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong>O’Dwyer’s is published monthly for $60.00a year ($7.00 for a single issue) by theJ.R. O’Dwyer Co., Inc.,271 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10016.(212) 679-2471Fax (212) 683-2750.© Copyright 2010J.R. O’Dwyer Co., Inc.OTHER PUBLICATIONS &SERVICES:www.odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong> breaking news,<strong>com</strong>mentary, useful databases and more.Jack O’Dwyer’s Newsletter An eightpageweekly with general PR news, mediaappointments and placement opportunities.O’Dwyer’s Directory of PR Firms haslistings of more than 1,850 PR firms throughoutthe U.S. and abroad.O’Dwyer’s PR Buyer’s Guide lists 1,000+products and services for the PR industry in 54categories.jobs.odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong> O’Dwyer’s onlinejob center has help wanted ads and hostsresume postings.6 AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


Fox takes historic ‘customer satisfaction’ ratingBy Jon GingerichAstudy of national customer satisfactionscores has foundFOXNews.<strong>com</strong> has achieved thehighest-rated score for a news and informationsite in the 10-year history of the ratingssystem, according to the AmericanCustomer Satisfaction Index in Ann Arbor,MI.ACSI released its findings in July, statingFOXNews.<strong>com</strong> was the highest-ratednews website they had ever studied interms of customer satisfaction. ACSI polls70,000 consumers annually on productsrelated to more than 250 national <strong>com</strong>paniesand 45 industries, from manufacturedgoods to retail outlets and banking.ACSI scores all <strong>com</strong>panies and productswith a universal 0-100 scale. ACSI’s surveysask consumers how satisfied they arewith the product, and then measures perceivedoverall quality, <strong>com</strong>plaints and loyalty.The study also measures the causesand consequences of customer satisfactionand the perceived relationships <strong>com</strong>panieshave with their customers.2010 marked the first time ACSI measuredFox.<strong>com</strong>, and it debuted strong, outperformingall other ranked news sites(ABCNews.<strong>com</strong>, MSNBC.<strong>com</strong>,CNN.<strong>com</strong>, USAToday.<strong>com</strong>, andNYtimes.<strong>com</strong>) by a large margin.The ACSI study also found mostFOXNews.<strong>com</strong> viewers are older, have lessformal education, and view far fewer newswebsites than viewers of <strong>com</strong>petitor siteslike NYtimes.<strong>com</strong> (an average of two sitesversus and average of ten, respectively).“They have a very loyal customer base,”said Larry Freed, CEO of ForeSee Results,which sponsored the ACSI study. “Saywhat you will about Fox users’ tendency towatch fewer news stations and look atfewer websites. From a Fox perspective,it’s a good thing.”Fox’s dominance in customer satisfaction<strong>com</strong>es despite (or perhaps because of)a well-known political bias and high publiccriticism. Freed claimed the Fox data is anexcellent primer to understand how conceptslike ‘customer satisfaction’ ride thefine line between what you get and whatyou expect.“Traditionally, we’ve seen the otherplayers in the news industry have a hardtime differentiating themselves. Theyhaven’t transitioned their brand and personalityfrom the TV show or the newspaperinto the Website. Fox has brought thesame personality they have with broadcast,and I think that’s key,” he said. “You can’tbe all things to all people.” News briefsSEC FINDS GOLDMAN GUILTYGoldman Sachs has been fined $550 millionafter a months-long civil fraud lawsuit by theSecurities and Exchange Commission. TheSEC found the global investment and securitiesfirm intentionally misled investors in thecourse of selling subprime mortgage portfoliosas the house market was tanking.It is the largest SEC penalty paid by a WallStreet firm.The SEC ruled that Goldman deliberatelyomitted facts related to a financial securityproduct involving subprime mortgages sold toprivate investors. The suit claims Goldmanalso failed to disclose that a hedgefund, Paulson & Co., helped select mortgagesincluded in the package, against which itplanned to bet. Paulson allegedly made a $1billion profit from investments linked to thedeal, while purchasers of the materials lost.Goldman’s SEC fine includes a $300 millionpayment to the U.S. government and $250million to investors involved in the deal.AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM 9


REPORTNew shifts in management alter IRO expectationsIn the leadership world, there are two markets: financial andhuman capital. The latter has set the stage as the singlemost critical success factor in modern industry.By Smooch ReynoldsNo matter what industry we’retalking about, the professionalswho are hired, especially at theleadership level, are now what setcourse direction, provide managementand colleagues with guidance and wisdom,and ultimately help shape the successof the organization. In the investorrelations field, the IRO is pivotal in thisregard.The corporate ‘athlete’Investor relations has shifted periodicallyin the past few decades in terms ofPR services briefsMBA FINANCES GLOVERThe Mortgage Bankers Assn. hastapped Democratic firm Glover Park Groupfor assistance on shaping of the financialreform overhaul.The MBA called the bill that was votedout of conference on June 25, legislationthat “could have been much worse” butstill in need of improvement during theregulatory process. The Senate passedthe financial overhaul bill last month.The MBA, according to chairman RobertStory, stands in favor of “financial regulatorymodernization” as long as if does notnegatively impact borrowers and bankers.Its 2,200-member <strong>com</strong>panies, including<strong>com</strong>mercial banks, thrifts, insurers andbrokers, are eager to work with regulatorsover the next year to ensure a balance isstruck between promoting a robust financialsystem, protecting consumers andavoiding a negative impact on credit availability.Joel Johnson, Managing Director ofGPG’s Government Relations Practice, isleading the account. He is joined by VPJason Rosenberg, who joined the firm lastmonth from Sen. Jon Tester’s office.Rosenberg served as Tester’s liaison tothe Banking, Housing and Urban AffairsCommittee, working on issues such as theEmergency Economic Stabilization Actand the Troubled Asset Relief Program(TARP). He also worked on financial issuesat Dittus Communications.its focus and the role it serves within a<strong>com</strong>pany. Today, however, with thecapital markets being interlocked globallyand the regulatory climate foreverplaying a domineering role vis-à-viscorporate financial reporting, managementteams are seeking different qualitiesin the IRO executive. In fact, thesingle most important trend that is beingvalidated every day in corporate hiringis the demand for the corporate athlete.What does that mean, exactly?The <strong>com</strong>mon denominator acrossmost leadership teams is the fact thatexecutives are seeking to recruit talentwho represent specific functionalexpertise (in this case the IRO) and whocan contribute intellectually across theenterprise. So, professionals who have afirm understanding of other functionalareas and have a point of view that willadd value to advancing the organizationare <strong>com</strong>petitively ahead of their counterpartswho are still mired solely in themechanics of their roles. CEOs areexpecting (and rewarding) points ofview about process improvements andefficiencies, other corporate staff functions,key revenue drivers and innovationsthat may ultimately lead to <strong>com</strong>petitiveadvantages. Never before hasintellectual breadth and ease in contributingcontent that will position youas an influencer, been more important tocareer survival and advancement. And,it is particularly critical to the IRO.This trend has been gaining importanceand significance for approximatelytwo years, and I believe, will continuefor many years hence. In addition,most corporations are now seeking IROtalent with traditional finance experience,almost exclusively, to fill the senior-mostIRO position. Why? Two reasons:one, the capital markets are fullyintegrated on a global basis and CFOsand CEOs want their investor relationsleaders to understand the capital marketsand global economy intimately.The second reason has to do with careerlongevity and talent retention. When anIRO with a finance background isrecruited, not only can they performbetter in the role into which they arerecruited, but five to seven years in thefuture, there arecareer progressionopportunities intobroader corporateroles that can beoffered to thoseexecutives. Thisallows the <strong>com</strong>panyto deploy successfultalent fromthe IRO positioninto other keyfinance roles suchSmooch Reynoldsas possibly serving as a CFO of an operatinggroup, heading strategic planning,or corporate development, etc.Throughout the years that I was arecruiter, I witnessed many situations inwhich the IRO was unable to successfullyfulfill management’s desire to bethe corporate athlete due to lack ofbreadth of wisdom, knowledge andexperience in broader functional areas.As a result, these professionals werenot allowed the privilege of being invitedinto the inner sanctum of management’sdecision making.While these professionals reveled inthe idea of solely being the functionalexpert, what they did not recognize wasthe fact that management’s need forinsights about the financial marketscoupled with the business acumen toassess situations across the enterprisewill always outweigh one’s ability to beconversant solely in one functionalarea.Expectations have changed. The pasttwo years of economic turmoil andsoaring unemployment has forced leadershipteams to recognize that theyneed and want more from their midandsenior-level professionals. The costof acquiring and retaining talent is significant,and with the impending talentshortage in the next three to five years,management will have a laser sharpfocus on “the athlete.”Rapidly fading away are the dayswhen being an excellent investor relationsprofessional was enough.Smooch Reynolds is Senior VicePresident of Communications of theIrvine Company. She is a member of theNational Investor RelationsInstitute’s (NIRI) Senior RoundtableForum, and previously owned her ownexecutive search firm, The Repovich-Reynolds Group. She is author of “BeHunted: 12 Secrets to Getting on theHeadhunter’s Radar Screen.” 10 AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


FEATUREUnderstanding financial reform’s impact on PRThe Wall Street and Consumer Protection Act justsigned into law contains a sweeping set of rulesand standards of unprecedented scope since theGreat Depression. Yet the law does more thanattempt to protect the economy from systemic risk.It will confront all business — not just financial institutions— with a set of <strong>com</strong>munications challengesunparalleled since Sarbanes-Oxley.The 2,319-page financial reformact is <strong>com</strong>plex and still unfocused;regulators now will facethe task of translating broad mandatesinto specific rules. One clear premise,however, permeates the law: thatincreased government-mandated transparencyand public disclosure regardingthe financial sector is essential to preventfuture abuses. In short, the lawsaddles management with multiple new<strong>com</strong>munications responsibilities andfresh sources of reputation damage.To help prepare for this new era, wehave briefly outlined key provisionswith the greatest PR impact, and thenreviewed what <strong>com</strong>munications executivesmight consider doing now torespond.Key PR provisionsBureau of Consumer FinancialProtection. This new agency is a centerpieceof the reform act, giving thefederal government broad power towrite and enforce new rules pertainingto both banks and non-banks.Especially targeted will be “unfair” or“abusive” practices, terms that theAmerican Bankers Association says are“far from clear.” The bureau will alsostep up enforcement against discriminatorylending practices and establish asingle national toll-free consumer <strong>com</strong>plainthotline.Executive Compensation. Shareholderswill have the right to a so-called “Say onPay” vote as part of the proxy statement —the ability to publicly register disapproval(non-binding on management)regarding executive <strong>com</strong>pensation. Partof newly required public <strong>com</strong>pany disclosureis a requirement that <strong>com</strong>paniesprovide data <strong>com</strong>paring their executiveBy Scott Tangney<strong>com</strong>pensation with stock performanceover the past five years.Financial Stability OversightCouncil. The new agency will includesophisticated economists, lawyers andothers charged with identifying the nextbig problem in the financial system.The council will have powers to collectand analyze data and responsibility to<strong>com</strong>municate its findings in periodicpublic reports as well as in annual testimonyto Congress.Mortgage Reform. The law establishesstiff penalties for lenders that failto meet the rather vague standard that“institutions insure that borrowers canrepay the loans they are sold.”Federal Insurance Office. Theinsurance industry will be regulated forthe first time by a separate federalagency charged with ensuring access to“affordable” insurance products amonglow- and moderate-in<strong>com</strong>e persons.This body will also monitor the industryfor systemic risk, similar to the oversightcouncil.Hedge Fund Regulation. Hedgefunds and private equity advisors willbe subject to much stricter regulatoryand disclosure requirements. For thefirst time, they will be required to registerwith the SEC and to disclose informationabout their trades and portfolios.The law will also subject more advisorsto state — as opposed to federal —supervision.PR implications and responseGiven these and other new realities,where should public relations executivesfocus their energies in the nearterm? Here is a short list to consider.PR Planning for Litigation. Nearlyall observers agree that the reform act— particularly the creation of the consumerprotection bureau — will significantlyincrease exposure to litigation.Banks and others should be engagingin pre-emptive planning now so that itsfirst response toany litigation is notthe damaging,deer-in-the-headlights“no <strong>com</strong>ment.”Litigationis always a form ofcrisis. Has the<strong>com</strong>pany preparedclear and succinctpublic messagesabout its lendingpractices? Does it Scott Tangneyhave publicspokespersonstrained to deliver and defend those messages?Does it understand new mediaand how to manage its impact? Areinternal legal and PR teams prepared tocollaborate rather than feud? Does thefirm have trusted litigation public relationsspecialists at its call?It is important to remember that anylawsuit engages a <strong>com</strong>pany simultaneouslyin the court of law and publicopinion. And, as British Petroleumreminds us, public opinion can “convict”a <strong>com</strong>pany long before the facts ofthe case are presented in a formal courtof inquiry.Engaging with Local Communities.Retail banks and insurers will soon findnew regulatory agencies closely scrutinizingtheir sales practices for evidenceof discrimination, redlining and otherinequities. Not only do <strong>com</strong>panies needto carefully monitor <strong>com</strong>pliance here,but they will be advised to build greatertrust within the low- and moderatein<strong>com</strong>e<strong>com</strong>munities they serve.Citigroup, tarnished during the economiccrisis, is a good model on this front.The bank has championed neighborhoodrevitalization, local sponsorships,employee volunteerism, microfinancelending, college scholarships, financialeducation and a re<strong>com</strong>mitment to mortgagerefinancing.Justifying Fair ExecutiveCompensation. The new law obliges allpublic <strong>com</strong>panies to take the offensiveon this issue. First, we encourageboards to explore provisions in the lawthat invite <strong>com</strong>pensation <strong>com</strong>mittees toengage independent consultants regard-Continued on next page12 AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


ing salary and bonus plans. If pursued,this decision and the subsequent re<strong>com</strong>mendationsshould be aggressively promotedwith investors and the media.Second, public relations and investorrelations staff will have new responsibilitiesto interpret mandated disclosureslike the <strong>com</strong>pensation v. stock price datacited earlier. Finally, PR executivesmust recognize that investors armedwith “Say on Pay” powers will serveincreasingly as de facto evaluation <strong>com</strong>mitteesfor top executives, and that thestructure of <strong>com</strong>pensation plans willneed to be explained and justified longbefore proxy time.Educating Employees. During theshakedown period ahead, when a lack ofprecedent increases the risk of inadvertentnon-<strong>com</strong>pliance, education foragents, advisors, reps and other salespeopleis especially crucial. Public relationsmust play a central role here,working with internal <strong>com</strong>pliance andlegal departments to <strong>com</strong>municate andespecially reinforce new operating proceduresin persuasive, non-technical language.Committing to Media Relationships.The data collection and disclosure activitiesrequired by the law represent a treasuretrove for financial journalists, bloggersand others. As such, it represents afresh source of potentially damagingnews. It will be increasingly importantfor management to cultivate open andtrusting lines of <strong>com</strong>munication withnew and traditional media covering theirindustries.Crisis Preparedness. The newly createdfederal oversight council will havean essentially confrontational relationshipwith financial firm management,given that its primary role is to identify<strong>com</strong>panies or activities within those<strong>com</strong>panies that pose systemic risk to theeconomy. It has the power, in theory, toforce banks to divest practices. In short,this agency by itself poses a new potentialreputation challenge for most financialfirms; crisis preparedness shouldmove forward accordingly.It is undeniable that financial institutions,and in some cases all public <strong>com</strong>panies,face a new regulatory regimethat demands increased transparency,increased disclosure and increasedattention to <strong>com</strong>pliance. Each of theseissues places public relations professionalsfront and center as the organizationaldevelops new policies and culturalattributes to respond.Scott Tangney is Executive VicePresident of Financial and ProfessionalServices for Makovsky + Company inNew York. People in PRNYSE TAPS GE CAPITAL EXECRobert Rendine, who heads global corporateaffairs at GE Capital Global Banking, hasbeen tapped as Senior VP of CorporateCommunications for NYSE Euronext, startingin September.Rendine will oversee media relations, executive<strong>com</strong>munications and broadcasting,reporting to Executive VP/ChiefAdministrative Officer Andrew Brandman.Ray Pellecchia, VP of Corporate Comms. at theNYSE prior to the $11 billion 2007 mergerwith Paris-based Euronext, continues in thattitle.Rendine was Senior VP/Corporate Comms.at the American Stock Exchange before movingto GE in 2003. He is currently stationed inLondon.In addition to operating the Euronext, NewYork Stock Exchange and NYSE Arcaexchanges, the <strong>com</strong>pany also runs the NYSERegulation non-profit that oversees securitiesfirms and <strong>com</strong>panies listed on the NYSEexchanges.Prior to the ASE, Rendine was VP/<strong>com</strong>ms.at GTech Holdings.He formerly served as Chief-of-Staff andPolitical Director to Rep. Claudine Schneider(R-R.I.).AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM 13


FEATURESocial media and IR: who needs it?All we read about in the press these days is social media:tweeting, Facebooking, foursquaring, linking in, ad infinitum.By Andy EdsonPR and IR practitioners — bothinside the corporate ranks and in theconsulting world — constantly tellus we must tweet, send out sound bytes,hypnotize and mesmerize our growingnetworks of friends, camp followers andcountless others.And, to no surprise, we — the PR andIR profession — tell clients and <strong>com</strong>paniesthey need to embrace all social mediachannels as if it’s the second <strong>com</strong>ing of theMessiah.We tell our life’s secrets, remove allveils of privacy, and insist this is thefuture.I hope not.Consider a June National InvestorRelations Institute (NIRI) annual gatheringin San Diego where social media’sfuture and use was widely debated. It’sforemost on many minds. After all, agrowing number of consultants havepreached the gospel, are teaching courses,webinars and the like, and have found thesocial media channel converts into foundnew business.Likely, they are the only ones at thispoint to have monetized this new <strong>com</strong>munication.There aren’t too many others.Maybe, just maybe, the time will <strong>com</strong>ewhen social media will drive the IR enginePR Services NewsGUATEMALA LINES UP PRINGUAT, the tourism board for the nation ofGuatemala, has hired New York agencyLatitude as PR and marketing agency of recordto promote tourism to the Central Americancountry.Latitude will work with INGUAT in brandinga North American travel image for Guatemalathat emphasizes the country’s heritage andattractions. The agency has developed a <strong>com</strong>municationsplan that includes PR, trade marketing,special events and promotional initiatives.The campaign will focus primarily onpromoting cultural initiatives based onGuatemala’s rich Mayan history and traditionsas well as the country’s colonial heritage.as we know it. However, that time is notnow.It’s still scary and too problematic for IRpractitioners. After all, are you going toask your CEO to write a blog, answer theresponses that he/she will undoubtedly getand produce fresh content all of the time?Get real. Who will run the <strong>com</strong>pany,meet earnings expectations asked by WallStreet or exceed them? Twitter?To reach new constituencies or classesof shareholders — assuming you are at orrepresent a publicly-held corporation —you do have to think “outside the box” andwhether it means the better use of searchengine optimization tools to widen thereach of your <strong>com</strong>munications, adding ahyperlink to previous disclosure, sprucingup the FAQ’s on your Website, etc., this isde rigueur.It’s still an uphill battle, however, withthe <strong>com</strong>pany’s legal team, never mindmanagement, to fully utilize the everomnipresent social media channels.Nonetheless, changes are afoot.Then and nowIt wasn’t that far off when <strong>com</strong>paniesdispatched messengers simultaneously toDow Jones and Reuters (now Thomson-Reuters) — Bloomberg was a very distantthird back then — to deliver an earningsrelease.At the appointed moment, they wouldcall the <strong>com</strong>pany to announce they hadarrived at their media point and a countdownwould <strong>com</strong>mence. When thecadence hit one, the messengers couldhand over the release simultaneously.That delivery mode became antiquatedwhen the pre-eminent newswires like PRNewswire and BusinessWire and even anupstart Marketwire, got their groove.But with Reg FD (Fair Disclosure) andthe 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act still verymuch with us, although Sarbox has itscritics eager to kill it — IR folks haveactually gotten used to it and may notwant further change. Change causesangst.Still, the newest drama evolving is theallowing of corporate Websites to placetheir news and timely information on<strong>com</strong>pany sites without coughing up thebig dollars the private newswires demandand get.Consider a one-paragraph news releasethat announces an addition to a <strong>com</strong>pany’sWebsite without all of the folderol, boilerplateand requisite disclosure (aka SafeHarbor) statement.Often times, thelength of the SafeHarbor languagealone exceeds thenews in the release,let alone the wordcount. And, withthe newswire transmissions,you payfor word count andcircuit selection forstarters. Thischange is <strong>com</strong>ing alot sooner thansocial media.Andy EdsonWhile we are at it, let’s be betterspellers: don’t rely on “spell checker”and proofers. There’s nothing better thanthe naked eye or several pairs of eyes toread and correct a document or newsrelease or website too.Let’s also stop using terms like “carboncopy.” After all, how many of us haveever used carbon paper, whiteout — notthe ski vintage, a telex or mimeo machineor possibly even a facsimile machine?It’s a declining, almost generational, universe.The Smithsonian in Washington,D.C. likely has or will have a display ofthese <strong>com</strong>munications tools of the past.Finally, as much as we read about thedemise of the written word and printmedia such as newspapers, there willcontinue to be a vital and viable role forthem as influencers, even if more newspapersfade into oblivion or try to <strong>com</strong>petewith AOL’s Patch.<strong>com</strong> or similarpioneers in suburban Providence, RI andstarted by a PR practitioner.Who knows, they may be on the cuspof succeeding and realizing the ability tomonetize before many social media channelsdo.At the same time, we shouldn’t rule outthe cause and effect of what the FinancialTimes and The Wall Street Journal (theNew York Times too, in short order ) aredoing to get and keep readers by cuttingoff free access.They’ve realized this is the end of theirwelfare state and that they’ve a responsibilityto their subscribers, shareholdersand employees — all important constituents.Andrew Edson is President of AndrewEdson & Associates, a financial PR andIR shop. 14AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


FEATURE‘Utility PR’: accept no substituteBy Kevin WolfImagine that your electric <strong>com</strong>pany toldyou that to get power you have to sign upfor a year and <strong>com</strong>mit to paying a prefixedamount each month. And that theseterms would stick regardless whether youcanceled service or used less electricity.Would you sign up?If you had a choice of utilities, the answerwould be a very loud and unequivocal,“No.”From energy <strong>com</strong>panies to tele<strong>com</strong>municationsvendors, it’s every serviceprovider’s goal to lock customers into arecurring payment model, whereby the consumeris billed a set amount each month forservices. Because there is startlingly limited<strong>com</strong>petition for products like electricity andcable TV, consumers are mostly stuck withPR news briefsSARD DEFENDS TAKEOVERSard Verbinnen & Company is helping publiclytraded convenience store operatorCasey’s General Stores mount a PR defenseas the target of a $1.9 billion hostile takeoverbid by Couche-Tard, the top conveniencestore operator in Canada.Casey’s said that C-T’s $36-per-share offerhas been tendered by only 19% of shareholders.“The low number of shares tenderedreflects what Casey’s has heard from manyshareholders — that this hostile, highly conditionaloffer is inadequate,” the <strong>com</strong>panysaid.C-T, which is working with Joele Frank,Wilkinson Brimmer Katcher for PR, is undeterred.It has extended its takeover offer untilAug. 6.Sard Managing Directors Paul Caminiti andAndrew Cole, along with Principal BrookeGordon, Senior Associate Jared Levy andAssociate Emily Deissler, are working theCasey’s account out of New York.Joele Frank Partner Matthew Sherman andDirector Eric Brielmann are on the C-T teamat that firm.Casey’s, based in Ankeny, Iowa, operatesabout 1,500 locations in the Midwest instates like Nebraska and Minnesota. It wentpublic in 1983, but started with a singleleased location in 1959. The <strong>com</strong>pany topped$1 billion sales in 1996.C-T had revenues of nearly $16 billion lastyear and claims 5,800 locations in Canadaand the U.S.this model.Fortunately, there’s plenty of <strong>com</strong>petitionin the PR industry. So, why do clients allowthemselves to get locked in to rigid, expensivecontracts with PR services firms?Burned by long-term contracts and oversizedpacts, clients are starting to insist thatPR firms provide greater flexibility in gettingpaid.During the past decade, the softwareindustry began a slow, steady march torefining the way it sold and delivered products.The movement, known as cloud <strong>com</strong>puting,on-demand or software-as-a-service,is popular for many reasons. But themost obvious is that it switches the balanceof power away from the vendor to the customer.In the new paradigm, customers paymonth-to-month for software and can cancelagreements with vendors at any time, inmost case without financial penalty.Thankfully, the same business model isfinally beginning to show up in the PRservices industry. Forever burned by longtermcontracts and oversized retained servicesagreements that often don’t delivervalue <strong>com</strong>mensurate with cost, clients arestarting to insist that PR services firms providegreater flexibility in the way theybe<strong>com</strong>e engaged.Increasingly known as “utility PR,”clients simply crank up or down the PRdial as they need more/less service. In thisnew model, clients are not saddled withlong-term guaranteed contracts and it’s upto the client to decide, day to day, exactlyhow much PR service — and cost — theywant to absorb.There are a number of benefits to thismodel for the client as well as the PR firm.The primary advantage to clients is theability to align costs with results. If a clientis preparing to launch a product, it’s likelygoing to need more time/service from thePR firm. On the other hand, when thelaunch is finished, needs diminish for thetime being. In the utility model, theywould reduce PR spend accordingly withoutsacrificing results.A second benefit to the client is accountability.Knowing that the PR firm has toearn the client’s business each and everymonth, the client can logically expectgreater and more consistent effort on thepart of the PR firm. Any client who hasever felt like his/her PR firm is slacking offcan appreciate this point. When the PRfirm knows its neck is constantly on theline, rest assured it will be more accountable.Another important result of the utilitymodel is that clients can enjoy the benefitsof PR firm <strong>com</strong>petition. No one likes toswitch PR firms, but it happens all the time.Too often the switch is painful for theclient, which must absorb whatever cost isassociated with canceling the old firm’scontract.This problem goes away in the utility PRmodel. Here, clients are free to move fromone firm to the other, without added cost.This means clients can more easily andcost-effectively engage with a PR firm andPR people that are right for them at anygiven time.PR firm benefitsThere are a number of benefits to the PRfirm in the utility model as well. PR firmsdon’t have to over-hire or increase overhead(office space, <strong>com</strong>puters, etc.) to supportclients. Instead, they can outsourcework to PR contractors, thus retaining theflexibility to ramp up or down as client situationsrequire.PR firms can also use the utility model totheir advantage by employing it as a tool toincentivize account staff. If a PR personknows his or her progress is being monitoredon a month-to-month basis, and thatpositive results likely means the client willstick around, the PR firm can offer toincrease the wages of account staff whodeliver most.Finally, PR firms win in the utility modelbecause they have freedom to take on agreater amount of business. Becauseclients are not locked into a set fee everymonth, it’s understood that the level ofactivity is going to fluctuate. As such, PRfirms don‘t need to allocate a large sum ofaccount staff hours to a client on an ongoingbasis. Instead, firms can spread theirPR people more leniently across multiple,and many more, clients.The utility model should not be confusedwith “pay by the project” PR. In fact, projectwork is a bad PR model in generalbecause, as most PR professionals know,PR is a process, not an event. It’s the kindof thing that needs to be done every day, fora long period of time, to truly be effective.Rather, utility PR is all about increasingPR firm and client flexibility by allowingboth parties the freedom to balance costand resources on a regular basis. Thismodel is the future of outsourced PR. AndI encourage clients to insist that their firmget on board with this movement rightaway.Kevin Wolf is Founder and President ofSilicon Valley firm Tool Guy PR. He previouslymanaged accounts at Fleishman-Hillard in San Francisco and ran corporate<strong>com</strong>munications for Actuate Corporation. 16AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


FEATUREEdelman, McCormick speak at PRSA Atlanta meetingBy Jack O’DwyerRichard Edelman, head of the world’slargest independent PR firm, attendedthe PR Society board meetingJuly 16 in Atlanta in a move to get the societyto support removal of APR as a requirementfor national board service.Chair Gary McCormick thus far has saidthe board is neutral on the subject. He wantsthe Committee for a Democratic PRSA tofollow the usual process of submitting abylaw amendment that would be consideredby the Assembly Oct. 16 inWashington, D.C.The Assembly itself was about threequartersAPR, and the Society has seen itshealth suffer while mainlining the APR credential.It’s also been expensive. Large numbersof corporate, agency, non-profit and educatorshave simply taken a hike from theSociety, leaving it in the hands of thosemostly in their own firms or small jobs andwho have little time and less clout to affectwhat’s going on at PRSA headquarters.Edelman raps leadershipEdelman, on his blog July 14, announcedhe would attend the board meeting in aneffort to end the “unrepresentative” leadershipof the Society.Only 3,870 of the current 20,657 members(18.7%) are APR but all the nationalleaders are, he noted. Only 904 membershave be<strong>com</strong>e APR in the past six years, healso said.The 2009 Assembly, by a vote of 142-111, defeated a proposal to allow non-APRson the board. Such candidates wererequired to have 20 years in PR posts withever higher degrees of responsibility.Edelman faulted the APR exam itself,noting it is a 3.5-hour multiple-choice testthat does not involve “a writing test or anexamination of counseling skills.”Far better, he said, is the exam of theInstitute of Management Consultants thatdemands three years of experience (noneare required for the APR test); details fromfive clients on engagements; a writtenresponse to a case study; written and oralexams, and an exam on ethics.Society played bigger role in pastEdelman said the Society played a farbigger role in the industry in past decades.“Now, more than ever, the PR industryneeds a voice on important issues,” theEdelman blog said. “We must establish abright orange line between PR (paid advocates)and journalism, since anyone canpublish anything online at a time when themedia industry is under siege from economicstresses.”McCormick disappoints someChair Gary McCormick, who addressed155 at the Georgia chapter lunch, disappointedsome members who said his 40-minute description of what he does atHGTV was far too long, too <strong>com</strong>mercialand not too relevant to what PR people do.McCormick used videoclips to illustrateHGTV’s “partnerships” with Stainmaster,Whole Foods, Cookie, Parents and Starmagazines, Cost Plus World Market andBed, Bath & Beyond.Chapter members asked for his view ondropping APR as a requirement for nationaloffice but he refused to give it. He said,“It’s not my place to decide” and that thematter was up to the Assembly.Asked why there is no list of Assemblydelegates on the Society’s website,McCormick said such information must beobtained from each chapter, section or districtand that it is “their decision … nationaldoes not determine their governance.”This non-answer was given to freelancerNancy Spraker, who had been hired byO’Dwyer’s to pose questions toMcCormick.National should <strong>com</strong>pile a list of all thedelegates who were elected as of Jan. 1 anddisplay their contact points prominently onthe national website. Anything but this is adereliction of national’s duty as a centralplace for information about the 21,000members.Many chapters don’t list their Assemblydelegates so it is impossible to create such alist by going to the chapters.Against audiocastingIn reply to other questions, McCormicksaid he was against audiocasting the 2010Assembly; is against providing transcriptsof past or future Assemblies; does notbelieve in offering a <strong>PDF</strong> of the membershiplist to members, and does not believethe Society should have a midtown auxiliaryoffice that could serve as a library andmeeting place for members.Asked why he has only visited six of the110 chapters thus far and only one of the20 biggest, he said he only goes to chaptersthat request a visit by him.As for obeying or not obeying Robert’sRules, he said such rules are “onlyadvice.”Asked where is IRS Form 990, whichwas initially due May 15, he said the formwill be filed when it has been prepared.PRSA Chair Gary McCormick in Atlanta.Photo: Nancy SprakerThe 2008 990 was not filed until October2009 and was not provided to theAssembly that met Nov. 7. A copy of the990 was sent by PRSA to the O’DwyerCo. and received on Nov. 6.Asked about the financial report for thesecond quarter, he said he is not yet ready.The Society reported a 10% decline in revenuesin the first quarter after a 14%decline in 2009.Murray did not speakAlso present at the lunch was SocietyCOO Bill Murray, who did not speak.He had received a raise of $50,064 (19%)in 2008 to $312,779 and also received$30,500 in retirement pay and non-taxableexpense benefits of $16,587 (total of$359,866). Neither he nor the board willdivulge the terms of his new two-year contractthat started in January 2010.Some members thought that with controversysurrounding so many Society policiesand practices, he should have made somemention of them and invited questions.Members were surprised that Murray hasa speech impediment that would precludehim from taking part in any TV or radioappearance. This is due to spasmodic dysphonia,physicians told O’Dwyer’s, a conditionthat causes involuntary contractions inthe throat that inhibit free-flowing speech.Murray almost never appears in publicand his problems with speaking apparentlyare the cause of this. In three and a halfyears, he has never addressed the NewYork chapter. 18AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


Study gauges social media use among advocacy groupsBy Greg HazleyPolitical advocacy groups haveflocked to social media en masseto mobilize and engage stakeholders,but only one in five are using suchtechnology for fundraising, according toa study by Burson-Marsteller.B-M studied S.M. use among 34groups like AARP, National RifleAssociation and the National TaxpayersUnion — 15 left-leaning, 14 right-leaningand five considered neutral — findingthat only one had no social media presenceand 91 percent have adopted thethree main tools in the space — Twitter,Facebook and YouTube.Twitter is the most popular socialmedia tool, followed by Facebook andYouTube, B-M found, althoughFacebook “fans” far outnumbered Twitterand YouTube followers. The NRA (260Kfans), Freedom Works (253K), HumanRights Campaign (417K) and MoveOn(92K) had the largest followings onFacebook.In analyzing social media use, B-Mfound that Facebook is being heavilyused to rally base supporters and build<strong>com</strong>munities, while Twitter’s use isgeared toward disseminating messagesand positions on issues to both supportersas well as “influencers” like journalists.A solid majority of groups useFacebook (56%) and Twitter (61%) toencourage direct outreach to Congress,providing links or email forms.Dallas Lawrence, Managing Directorof Digital Public Affairs for B-M said thefindings reinforce the fact that “intoday’s social media age, any issue advocacyor public affairs campaign thatrelies solely on traditional media andpaid advertising simply will not succeed.”But only 21 percent on Twitter and 19percent on Facebook were using socialmedia to raise money for causes, theresearch found. Right-leaning groupswere significantly more engaged infundraising through S.M. with 29%using Facebook and Twitter for that purpose,<strong>com</strong>pared with only 14% of leftleaninggroups on Twitter and only eightpercent raising funds on Facebook.The relative dearth of fundraising willlikely change as tactics and technologychange. New software like BlueSwarmallows Facebook users to donate fundsand cultivate their own friends and followersfor donations through Outlook orFacebook, for example. Arizona seeks to offset immigration backlashBy Greg HazleyAtask force of tourism officials inArizona has re<strong>com</strong>mended a PRfirm be hired to explain thestate’s strict new immigration law thathas led to a raft of bad press and canceledtravel to the Grand Canyon State.A set of re<strong>com</strong>mendations wereissued by the task force on Wednesdayand released by the office of Gov. JanBrewer, who signed the controversialbill into law in April.“Despite threats by some to Arizonansbecause of misinformation about immigrationlaw enforcement, I am confidentthat Arizona’s reputation and brandremains strong and that the truth is prevailing,”Brewer said June 30.Among the re<strong>com</strong>mendations are animmediate contract with a PR firm “tohelp manage existing dialogue and clarifythe facts regarding [the new law] tokey target audiences,” according to asummary. “This could include editorialsand interviews in key markets throughoutthe U.S. such as Los Angeles, SanFrancisco, Denver, Chicago, New Yorkand Washington, D.C., as well asMexico and other select internationalmarkets,” the task force said.About $280K has been allocated forthe re<strong>com</strong>mendations.The task force, which includes thestate’s Dept. of Commerce, ArizonaMexico Commission, Office ofTourism, Arizona Hotel & LodgingAssociation, Arizona Tourism Allianceand business leaders, also re<strong>com</strong>mendedan immediate fact sheet be printed fordigital and print distribution to clarifythe new law. Outreach to corporations,associations and grassroots programsare also among the task force’s plans tooffset the barrage of negative coverage.Tourism is a crucial pillar of thestate’s economy representing 37 millionThe American PetroleumInstitute has kicked off a 10-state campaign against newtaxes on the oil and gas industry,pitching any hikes as a potential blowto the country’s economic recovery.Edelman and its Blue advertisingunit are working with API on thecampaign, said Linda Rozett, VP of<strong>com</strong>munications for the trade group.“While the focus of our industry ison helping BP stop the spill and cleanup the oil, we cannot ignore the factthat imposing significant new taxeson the oil and natural gas industrywill have severe economic consequencesand job impacts,” said JackGerard, president and CEO of theAPI.visitors and an $18 billion impact in2008.The new law, which requires individualsto carry immigration documentsand gives law enforcement significantlywider discretion to detain anyone suspectedof being an illegal immigrant,sparked an immediate backlash againstBrewer and the state, including pointedcriticism from President BarackObama. Oil industry kicks of anti-tax campaignsThe push <strong>com</strong>es as Congress isexpected to take up energy legislationthis summer and some progressivemembers push for new taxes on theenergy sector.The campaign, which was launchedJuly 6, is targeting Colorado, NorthDakota, Michigan, North Carolina,Pennsylvania, Virginia, Maine,Missouri, Ohio and West Virginia.API is highlighting the number ofjobs served by the sector in each state— 271,000 in Pennsylvania, forexample — and running ads featuringAmericans denouncing additionalenergy taxes.“Americans have historically beensuspicious of taxes on the industrythat produces most of the energy theyconsume,” Gerard added. AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM 19


FEATUREFinancial services pros report new fees, optimismSpeaking with PR pros with clients in the financial servicessector, it might be hard at first to figure out what everyone isso excited about.By Jon GingerichGranted, 2009 is over, but newfinancial growth in 2010 has beendisappointing — dismal even —and any signs of recovery have <strong>com</strong>e attortuously slow intervals, certainly notwith the robust fervor most of us wouldhave hoped.The stock market has been a carnival ofwild mood swings, oscillating from lowsto highs and every position in between.Interest rates remain low, but so does revenuegrowth. Many sectors (oil, retail)are expected to earn less in total netin<strong>com</strong>e than they did last year. The resultresembles a cartoon weather vane, misleadingsigns that point at seeminglyevery direction and yet nowhere at once.A historic oil spill didn’t help, and neitherhas extremely disappointing employmentgains. 2010 is also the year therecession truly hit Europe. In the midst ofit all, President Obama in July signed intolaw the boldest reforms of the U.S. financialindustry in the past century, one thatputs a much-needed magnifying glass oninstitutional affairs, protects consumersfrom predatory lending practices andguards the nation from the possibility ofanother bank bailout. While consumershave hailed its passage, it’s sent theinvestment <strong>com</strong>munity — skittish,abstemious — scurrying to K Street lobbyiststo decry an attack on jobs and businessperformance.Second quarter earnings reports haveso far given themarket a slightRichard Dukas,President & CEO ofDukas PRoptimistic boost,with S&P 500firms expected torake in almost $200billion more in2010 than they didlast year, and severalsectors revealingpossibilities of doubledigit revenuegrowth. These aregood signs, butwe’ve long beentrained to hold off on any prematureinvestment in hope.Federal Reserve Chairman BenBernanke’s July characterization of thecurrent market as “unusually uncertain”has now be<strong>com</strong>e the de facto rallying cryof the year. Most experts agree it won’tbe until at least mid-2011 that we begin tosee true recovery, a <strong>com</strong>forting signthough it seems an eternity away. So whysmile?A much-needed reputation makeoverAccording to PR pros, U.S.financial institutions in 2010have <strong>com</strong>e to an almost universalrealization that a good<strong>com</strong>munications plan isn’tsomething they can choosenot to have.“Generally speaking, I’veseen more <strong>com</strong>panies be<strong>com</strong>eaware of PR simply becausethe market is volatile andchallenging,” said Miri Segal-Scharia, Chairwoman of MS-IR. “More people are aware ofthe need to raise money evenwhen they don’t need it, simply becausethey don’t know what tomorrow willbring. The most interesting part of thisvolatile and challenging market is thefact that it’s made investor relations avery hands-on discipline. It’s more fromthe floor up, it involves more conversationand more of just trying to getclients into conference calls, and tryingto get analyst coverage. All of thesethings have had a great impact.”Richard Dukas, President and CEO ofDukas Public Relations, said in the pastseveral months his firm has seen amarked increase in both the amount ofbusiness and the level of services thatfinancial <strong>com</strong>panies have broached withhis firm.“Financial services and financial<strong>com</strong>panies, in general, definitely nowappreciate more than ever the value ofPR,” he said. “I wouldn’t say that budgetisn’t an issue, but I’d say that successful<strong>com</strong>panies are willing to paygood fees, even though smaller firmsmight still be struggling somewhat.”Evan Zeppos, President of Zepposand Associates, said one reason for therecent pickup lies in the fact that financialinstitutions have finally realized<strong>com</strong>munications isn’t limited to crisishelp, earnings reports or public affairs.Proactive reputation management — theart of putting your best foot forward —can do wonders at a time when perceptionsof the industry have hit an all-timelow.“There’s one client we’ve had a longtermrelationship with, who is wellregardedand has been very strongthroughout this [recession], and they’vetried to capitalize on the fact thatthey’ve always been so strong andsecure,” he said. “If you’re a good institution,if you have a strong reputation,that message will grab the attention ofcustomers.”“PR is going to have a verycentral role in the financial<strong>com</strong>munity,” Zeppos continued,“and institutions need totake heed of that and plan to<strong>com</strong>municate aggressively,both internally and with theircustomers. There’s been a lotof turmoil in the marketplace. Ithink the most important thingthe financial services industrycan do right now is aggressivelytell its own story. The onlyalternative is they’ll get sweptaway with the bad guys. Taking part inthis conversation means if you’re not atthe table, you’re probably on the menu.”Segal said while more clients arebeginning to “get it,” given the climatePR firms need to be more <strong>com</strong>petitiveand provide correspondingresults.“Just this morningI had a meetingwith a client — asmall client — whotold me that if youdon’t take an IRfirm, people willnot invest. Theyknow it’s a veryEvan Zeppos,President ofZeppos &Associates<strong>com</strong>petitive marketand you need sponsorship,”she said.“However, the marketis now moreMiri Segal-Scharia,Chairwoman ofMS-IR<strong>com</strong>petitive and <strong>com</strong>panies have ademand for more results. They want tosee the proof of what you’re able to do.Not everybody can do that.”Reforms could ‘help’ PRWhile it’s still too early to tell exactlyContinued on next page20AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


Dan Edelman celebrates 90th birthdayBy Jack O’DwyerDan Edelman, whose PR empirecreated the largest independentfirm of all, celebrated his 90thbirthday July 1 in Chicago with the helpof 80 family members and friends.Edelman, a native New Yorker, foundeda PR firm in Chicago in 1952 after beingtransferred to the city by a New York firm.While Dan spent most of his time inChicago, his son Richard built New Yorkinto an even bigger office. The firm laterexpanded internationally, and nowincludes more than 35 offices abroad.Edelman’s birthday party was highlightedby a review of the early days ofthe firm.Edelman, a graduate of ColumbiaUniversity (Phi Beta Kappa) and itsGraduate School of Journalism, worked ata newspaper in Poughkeepsie, NY, and asa stringer for United Press before joiningthe Army in 1942.He spent three and a half years in psychologicalwarfare including analyzingGerman propaganda on a daily basis.After the war, his first jobs were writingnews copy for CBS Radiofor Douglas Edwards,Arthur Godfrey and otherpersonalities. He alsoworked at MusicraftRecords, helping to publicizeits stars.A local maker of haircoloring products, ToniCompany, later asked thePR firm of EdwardGottlieb & Associates tohire Edelman.Toni then requested a PRperson near its Chicagoheadquarters.“Since I was the onlysingle man at Gottlieb, Iwent,” recalls Edelman.He later joined Toni asPR director and in 1952opened his own firm withToni as his first client.The Edelman firmreported total fees of $440million in 2009 whichincluded $92 million inNew York and $63 millionin Chicago. The Edelman family, clockwise from top left: John, Renee,Richard, Ruth and Dan.Photo by Richard ShayFINANCE PR OPTIMISTICContinued from previous pagehow Obama’s financial reforms are goingto impact PR, Segal posited that newmandates for accountability and transparencycould drive finance groups toseek PR help so as to maintain a healthyimage in the eye of public opinion.“A demand for more transparencymeans we need to <strong>com</strong>municate better,”she said.For this reason, PR pros said the lastthing they expect the reforms to hurtwould be PR budgets.“The reality is that so much PR spendingis dictated by revenue,” Dukas said.“Even though we live in a new era ofoversight, the reality is when it <strong>com</strong>es tomaking money, there really is no one betteror more creative than Wall Streettypes. Portfolio managers are the oneswho are really driving the decisions, andthey are impacted 100 percent by revenueand profitability.”“The bigger question now,” Dukas continued,“is what the appetite is going to beon Main Street and among consumers.The mutual fund business is predicatedon strong consumers demand — that’s alittle more questionable but the appetitefrom pension funds is picking up.”New financial trendsWhile it’s impossible to predict whattrends the future will bring, a big part ofthe game in finance involves predictingthe next big thing. Of course, futuremovements in the market will alwayshave an affect on the <strong>com</strong>municationslandscape as well.Dukas said he believes alternativehedge funds — hedge funds that are traditionalin structure but can work withnon-equity investments for long or shortterms — could soon account for a pick-upin PR representation. He also said the<strong>com</strong>munications industry could see anincrease in business from investmentbanks, as well as broker/dealers andstrategists.“For so long hedge funds have operatedon a model of anonymity. They werelike the hot, underground clubs in NewYork,” he said. “Along <strong>com</strong>es the recession,and all of a sudden hedge funds arecaught up in the crosshairs. They werevery slow to understand the value of marketing,let alone PR, and it’s hard to say ifthat will change but there are a minorityof hedge fund managers who now reallyappreciate the value of PR and marketing.”Zeppos believes the mergers and acquisitionsmarket, as well as a dormant housingmarket, could be returning to lifesometime soon.“For people who are involved in M&A,they’re going to see a lot of activity simplybecause a lot of stuff has bottomedout, so there’s a pent-up appetite,” hesaid. “And if you go to the crux of thewhole financial collapse, it was the housingmarket. There are a lot of things currentlyat play there, really in any activityrelated to home buying — mortgagebanks, real estate, investment trust orrefinance — these areas are going to befull of opportunities and challenges.”“I see positive things, based on recentmeetings I’ve had with <strong>com</strong>panies,”Segal said. “There’s still a lot of moneythat needs to be invested. Financialresults are the reflection of how businessesare doing. Many <strong>com</strong>panies tookadvantage of this time to squeeze theirexpenses, to let go of areas that werebleeding and to focus on growth areas.I’m cautiously optimistic.” AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM 21


Profiles8.10O’Dwyer’sGuide to:FINANCIAL PR &INVESTOR RELATIONSHenry Feintuch, President ofFeintuch Communications.Miri Segal-Scharia,Chairwoman, MS-IR.CARMICHAELLYNCH SPONG110 North Fifth StreetMinneapolis, MN 55403612/375-8500www.carmichaellynchspong.<strong>com</strong>Douglas K. Spong, APR,PresidentJill Schmidt, Senior PrincipalThrough its CorporatePractice, Carmichael LynchSpong helps clients protect andenhance their corporate reputations.The firm works with clientsto define and manage their reputationsboth on an ongoing basisand in times of significant changein management, corporate governance,financial or economiccycles and strategic direction.With staff in Minneapolis, NewYork, Chicago, Denver and SanFrancisco, the firm includes professionalswith significant clientsidecorporate experience, as wellas expertise in finance, law, printand broadcast journalism, publicpolicy and <strong>com</strong>munity outreach.Carmichael Lynch Spong provides<strong>com</strong>munications counseland support to <strong>com</strong>panies in awide range of industries, includingfinancial services, <strong>com</strong>mercial/industrial,consumer products,health care, food, retail andautomotive.The firm’s capabilities includecorporate PR, investor relations,financial <strong>com</strong>munications, mergersand acquisitions <strong>com</strong>munications,crisis <strong>com</strong>munications,issues management, strategicpositioning, litigation and regulatorysupport, media relations,employee engagement andresearch.Carmichael Lynch Spong isowned by the Interpublic Groupof Cos.CJPCOMMUNICATIONS350 Fifth Avenue, Suite 3901New York, NY 10118212/279-3115trozycki@cjp<strong>com</strong>.<strong>com</strong>www.cjp<strong>com</strong>.<strong>com</strong>Jen Prosek, Managing PartnerMark Kollar, Partner (Fin.Comms.)Thomas J. Rozycki, Jr., SeniorVP (Investor Relations)CJP Communication’sFinancial Communicationsclients span the financial servicesspectrum, including <strong>com</strong>mercialand retail banking; investmentbanking; M&A advisory;research and trading; insurance;asset and wealth management;private equity and venture capital;and hedge fund and alternativeinvestment vehicles.CJP drives tangible businessresults by ensuring that targetaudiences are reached with theright message utilizing all availablechannels, including print,broadcast, online and socialmedia.CJP’s <strong>com</strong>plementary InvestorRelations practice is designed todeliver a clear set of messages toWall Street, providing a platformfor proper valuation. We achievethis through four key areas ofexpertise: a deep understandingof a client’s operations and capitalstructure; the ability to provideconsistent and trusted counsel tosenior executives and boards ofdirectors; established relationshipswith institutional investors,equity/debt analysts and legalcounsel; and ongoing relationshipswith members of the financialmedia and relevant trade publications.DUKAS PUBLICRELATIONS100 West 26th StreetNew York, NY 10001212/704-7385richard@dukaspr.<strong>com</strong>www.dukaspr.<strong>com</strong>Richard Dukas, President &CEODukas Public Relations (DPR),ranked among the fastest growingindependent financial PR agenciesin the world by O’Dwyer’sfor the past four years, has extensivefinancial and investmentrelatedexperience, as well as atrack record of regularly securingpublicity for its clients in all ofthe top-tier media including: TheWall Street Journal, Barron’s,Financial Times and CNBC, aswell as in leading trade outlets.Approximately 85% of DPR’srevenues <strong>com</strong>e from the financialsector. DPR represents knownbrands and emerging firms in avariety of areas within the financialservices industry — bothretail and institutional — including:asset management (hedgefunds, mutual funds, ETFs),investment banking, wealth advisory,personal finance, creditunions and professional services.Top clients include: GabelliFunds, the investment managementfirm run by legendaryinvestor, Mario Gabelli;BlueMountain Capital, $4 billioncredit-related asset manager; andLCH Clearnet, one of the largestclearinghouses in the world.The agency’s CEO, RichardDukas, previously was the inhousedirector of corporate <strong>com</strong>municationsof a $9 billionmoney management firm.FEINTUCHCOMMUNICATIONSAND MS-IR245 Park Ave., 39th FloorNew York, NY 10167212/808-4900info@feintuchpr.<strong>com</strong>www.feintuch<strong>com</strong>munications.<strong>com</strong>www.ms-ir.<strong>com</strong>Henry Feintuch, PresidentMiri Segal-Scharia, ChairwomanFeintuch Communications, astrategic relations firm, and MS-IR, a full-service, globalinvestor relations firm, offer afully integrated approach to<strong>com</strong>munications for public <strong>com</strong>paniesor those seeking to gopublic.We create holistic programsthat address the broad range ofpublic <strong>com</strong>pany needs. Coreinvestor relations servicesinclude corporate positioning,institutional and sell-side targeting,IPO consulting and roadshows, conference call preparation,shareholder letters, M&Aadvice, speaking platforms andmore. Financial PR servicesrange from strategic media relations(trade, business and financial)to special events and tradeshow programs.Combined, we offer ourclients a half century of experiencein developing and implementingstreet-smart campaigns.Feintuch Communications is a22AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


PROFILES OF FINANCIAL PR AND INVESTOR RELATIONS FIRMSmember of ECP Global, aninternational alliance of premierindependent <strong>com</strong>municationconsultancies which are particularlyadept at coordinatingmultinational PR/IR projectsand programs.GRAYLINGMichael Murphy, CEOmichael.murphy@grayling.<strong>com</strong>+44 7785 116 018 (London)Anne McBride, Vice Chairmananne.McBride@grayling.<strong>com</strong>646/284-9431 (New York)James Acheson-Gray,International Managing Directorjames.achesongray@grayling.<strong>com</strong>+44 7904 649 125 (London)Grayling is the world’s secondlargest independentInvestor Relations, PublicRelations, Public Affairs andEvents consultancy with specialistservices including CSR,environment, sustainability anddigital.Around the world financial<strong>com</strong>munity relationships are thelifeblood of corporations; <strong>com</strong>paniessimply cannot grow andprosper without access to capital.Grayling offers clients a globalplatform for those lookingwithin, and beyond, their localcapital markets. With InvestorRelations experts in NorthAmerica, Latin America,Europe, Asia and the MiddleEast, we deliver global perspectivesmatched with local expertiseand language skills.Exceptional cross-border capabilities,matched with a strongemerging markets platformhighlight Grayling’s ability toprovide clients access to keymoney centers around theworld.HOPE-BECKHAMINC.17 Executive Park Dr., Suite 600Atlanta, GA 30329404/636-8200dvanvoorhis@hopebeckham.<strong>com</strong>www.hopebeckham.<strong>com</strong>David C. Van Voorhis, Director,Business Development & ClientRelationsHope-Beckham is <strong>com</strong>mittedto being your best resource forpublic relations, marketing<strong>com</strong>munications and experientialmarketing services —responding quicker, workingfaster and smarter and providingthe best possible value.We are dedicated to beingflexible and cooperative. Thereis no single best way to marketa <strong>com</strong>pany, product or service,but a variety of creative andsavvy options, and we strive toconsider them all.Hope-Beckham believes it isthe knowledge of the variety ofoptions available and our abilityto effectively implementthose options that achieves thebest results.Whether <strong>com</strong>municatingwith a client’s various constituenciesor creating programsand events that effectively positionan organization within theareas it serves, Hope-Beckhamis known for its creativity andcost effectiveness.Hope-Beckham is proud tohave been named by O’Dwyer’sin the Top Independent PRfirms for 2007, 2008, 2009 and2010.LINHART PUBLICRELATIONS1514 Curtis Street, Suite 200Denver, CO 80202303/620-9044slinhart@linhartpr.<strong>com</strong>www.linhartpr.<strong>com</strong>Sharon Linhart, APR, ManagingPartnerPaul Raab, APR, SeniorVP/PartnerKelly Womer, APR, ABC, VicePresidentLinhart PR specializes in helpingclients build reputation andrelationships based on trust. Weserve public <strong>com</strong>panies in sectorsincluding airlines, restaurants,footwear, building materials,healthcare, tele<strong>com</strong>municationsand energy, among others.Long-term relationships andhigh levels of client satisfactionhelp to set us apart. We use theNet Promoter Score methodologyto assess client loyalty. In 2009,we earned a 100 percent NetPromoter Score from our clientsfor the third consecutive year,meaning 100 percent would re<strong>com</strong>mendus to others seeking aPR firm.Almost every member of ourmanagement team has client-sidecorporate leadership experience.Our team includes veterans ofsome of the most respected PRfirms, including Burson-Marsteller, Fleishman-Hillard,Golin/Harris, Ketchum andOgilvy, and the most admired<strong>com</strong>panies, includingMcDonald’s and SouthwestAirlines.Capabilities include corporate<strong>com</strong>munications, financial mediarelations, crisis preparedness andresponse, change-management<strong>com</strong>munications, employeeengagement, executive leadership<strong>com</strong>munications, litigation supportand social media strategies.MACKENZIEPARTNERS, INC.105 Madison Avenue,17th FloorNew York, NY 10016212/929-5500www.mackenziepartners.<strong>com</strong>Dan Burch, Chairman & CEOMark Harnett, PresidentMacKenzie Partners, Inc. is afull-service proxy solicitation,investor relations and corporategovernance consulting firm specializingin mergers and acquisitionsand proxy contest-relatedtransactions. The firm hasoffices in New York City, LosAngeles, Palo Alto and London.MacKenzie’s services include— in addition to traditionalproxy solicitation — corporategovernance consulting, securityholdersolicitations, informationagent services for tenderand exchange offers, beneficialownership identification, marketsurveillance and associatedfinancial, investor and mediarelations services. We work inclose partnership with ourclients’ attorneys, investmentbankers and public relationsconsultants, providing adviceand counsel at each stage of thetransaction.MAKOVSKY +COMPANY16 East 34th Street.New York, NY 10016212/508-9600Fax: 212/751-9710www.makovsky.<strong>com</strong>Makovsky + Company,founded 30 years ago, hasbe<strong>com</strong>e one of the nation’s leadingindependent global publicrelations, investor relations andbranding / interactive consultanciesby adhering to its originalvision: that specialization inkey areas is the best way tobuild reputation, sales and fairvaluation for the client. Our<strong>com</strong>petitive edge is reflected inour brand energy line: “ThePower of SpecializedThinking.”Headquartered in New York,Makovsky has agency partnersin more than 27 countries and in37 US cities through IPREX,the second largest worldwidecorporation of independentagencies, of which it is afounder. Named to the 2010 Inc.5000 list of America’s fastestgrowing <strong>com</strong>panies, Makovskywas also just named “2010Midsize PR Agency of the Year”by the Bulldog Awards and“Multispecialist Agency of theYear” by the Holmes Report.Ken Makovsky just won theStevie Award as “PR Executiveof the Year.” Other accoladesinclude a full <strong>com</strong>plement ofSilver Anvils, Sabre Awards,IABC Awards, Creativity inPublic Relations Awards, BigApples and recognition by leadingindustry trade publicationsas one of the nation’s leading B-2-B <strong>com</strong>munication firms.Makovsky + Company internalvalues — innovation, initiation,<strong>com</strong>munication, collaboration,motivation and education— are about ensuring externalvalue and realizing the firm’smission: smart people workingin harmony to help our clientsand the agency win. With a historyof financial services clientsin every major sector — fromasset management and bankingto credit cards, insurance andbenefits consulting —Makovsky + Company has distinguisheditself in an areawhere few of its peers havegained a foothold. Our professionalstaff brings the necessaryexperience, sophistication andcreativity to this <strong>com</strong>plicatedand demanding environment.Our experience is so deep, infact, that financial servicestechnology providers in theareas of risk management, trustadministration and securitiestrading retain us to handle their<strong>com</strong>munications needs.The September issue of O’Dwyer’s willprofile firms that specialize in beautyand fashion PR.If you would like your firm to be listed,contact Editor Jon Gingerich at 646/843-2080 or jon@odwyerpr.<strong>com</strong>AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM 23


PROFILES OF FINANCIAL PR AND INVESTOR RELATIONS FIRMSNASDAQ OMXOne Liberty Plaza, 50th FloorNew York, NY 10006212/401-8918demetrios.skalkotos@nasdaqomx.<strong>com</strong>www.nasdaqomx.<strong>com</strong>/corporatesolutionsDemetrios N. Skalkotos, SeniorVice President, Global CorporateSolutionsExpanding upon our unrivaled,transformative tradingtechnology, NASDAQ OMXCorporate Solutions powersglobal business <strong>com</strong>munications.From investor relations,to corporate <strong>com</strong>munications,to governance, NASDAQ OMXis the first and only exchangededicated to owning and operatingCorporate Solutions thathelp public and private <strong>com</strong>paniesworldwide minimize risk,maximize efficiency, andincrease transparency.NATIONALINVESTORRELATIONSINSTITUTE8020 Towers Crescent Dr., Ste. 250Vienna, VA 22182703/462-2204mmcgough@niri.orgwww.niri.orgMichael C. McGough, VicePresident, Marketing &Membership DevelopmentFounded in 1969, NIRI is theprofessional association of corporateofficers and investorrelations consultants responsiblefor <strong>com</strong>munication amongcorporate management, shareholders,securities analysts andother financial <strong>com</strong>munity constituents.The largest professionalinvestor relations associationin the world, NIRI’s morethan 4,000 members represent2,000 publicly held <strong>com</strong>paniesand $5.4 trillion in stock marketcapitalization. Membership inNIRI entitles the investor relationsprofessional to a widerange of benefits such as educationalprograms, publicationsand networking. For moreinformation about the “graduateschool” of investor relations,please contact NIRI’s membershipdepartment at 703/506-3570, or visit www.niri.org.RF | BINDERPARTNERS950 Third Avenue, 7th FloorNew York, NY 10022212/994-7500www.rfbinder.<strong>com</strong>Amy Binder, CEORobert D. Ferris, ExecutiveManaging Director; Chair, CapitalMarkets PracticeTom Pratt, Senior ManagingDirectorRF|Binder Partners providesexperienced and strategic counselas well as public relations and marketing<strong>com</strong>munications services toclients, worldwide.In the capital markets arena thisyear, financial regulatory reformmeasures are likely to result in severalimportant governance and disclosurechanges, with attendantimpact on the practice of investorrelations. Our professional staffprovides management and theBoards of our clients with importantperspective on the <strong>com</strong>plexities ofnew rules and guidelines, as well asbest practices, as they navigate themarkets in search for growth capital.RF|Binder helps clients gainbroadly-based recognition of assetvalues, performance and prospects,while fostering richer valuationsand lowering the cost of capital. Wealso work with non-public <strong>com</strong>paniesand organizations whose positioningchallenges require a closerunderstanding of capital flows.RF|Binder advises clients on<strong>com</strong>munications and positioningstrategies in respect of strategic corporateinitiatives, including M&A,divestitures, IPOs and follow-onfinancings, as well as going-privatetransactions, and in crises and contingencies,such as bankruptcy, tendersor proxy contests for controland accounting irregularities.Core IR activities include: <strong>com</strong>parativemarket analyses and perceptionresearch studies; targetingand investor outreach programs;messaging platforms and disclosurepolicy and procedures; traditionaland new media relations supportprograms; IR website development,and 24/7 counsel.RUDER FINN INC.301 East 57th StreetNew York, NY 10022212/593-6400Kathy Bloomgarden, co-CEO,New YorkLouise Harris, President,International, New YorkRachel Spielman, EVP, NewYorkRuder Finn designs and implementsaward winning financial<strong>com</strong>munications programs tohelp organizations enhance corporatereputation, build trust andincrease shareholder value.Working with some of theworld’s leading global <strong>com</strong>paniesin healthcare, technology, energy,automotive and financial services,Ruder Finn has particularexpertise in <strong>com</strong>municationsaround corporate strategy andperformance, controversial andcontested bids, corporate restructuringand <strong>com</strong>plex globalissues. We work with <strong>com</strong>paniesreaching out to new stakeholdersand financial markets, aswell as enhancing their focus onexisting ones.We continually strive to addvalue to our clients’ most criticalbusiness needs by bringing themstrategic thinking, global connections,insights and innovative useof media.Using proprietary researchfrom RF Insights to shape strategy,Ruder Finn’s core activitiesinclude message development,stakeholder mapping, executivepositioning, global analyst andmedia relations, as well as creationand management of innovativeonline and social media toolsand measurement.SARD VERBINNEN& CO.630 Third Avenue, 9th FloorNew York, NY 10017212/687-8080www.sardverb.<strong>com</strong>George Sard, Chairman & CEOPaul Verbinnen, PresidentSard Verbinnen & Co. is aleading strategic corporate andfinancial <strong>com</strong>munications firmwith offices in New York,Chicago and San Francisco. Weprovide <strong>com</strong>munications strategyand services to clients includingFortune 500 and global corporations,smaller public and private<strong>com</strong>panies, investment firms,financial and professional servicefirms and high-profile individuals.The firm’s highly experiencedsenior specialists providesound, objective counsel toclients across a broad spectrum ofindustries. Our work on behalf ofour clients en<strong>com</strong>passes corporatepositioning, media relationsand investor relations, transaction<strong>com</strong>munications, litigation support,crisis <strong>com</strong>munications andother special situations. We areregularly cited as one of the topM&A and crisis <strong>com</strong>municationsadvisors in North America.Founded in 1992, our firm isrecognized for our candid andthoughtful strategic advice, excellentwritten product and tacticalexecution, and tireless advocacyon behalf of our clients. Our seniorprofessionals are activelyengaged in both counsel andimplementation, and their diversebackgrounds and expertise,unparalleled relationships andcredibility with the media, anddeep understanding of the investment<strong>com</strong>munity drive the firm’ssuccess in helping our clientsnavigate <strong>com</strong>plex situationsinvolving multiple constituencies.SLOANE &COMPANY7 Times Square, 17th FloorNew York, NY 10036212/486-9500Fax: 212/486-9094www.sloanepr.<strong>com</strong>Elliot Sloane, CEOSloane & Company is anindustry-leading strategic <strong>com</strong>municationsfirm specializing incorporate and financial publicrelations, investor relations,transaction support, publicaffairs, crisis and litigation support.Differentiating us from thecrowd, the key to the firm’s successis bringing a fluid and experiencedcapital markets orientationto all our assignments.Over the past ten years, thefirm has earned a reputation forproviding strategic counsel to“C” level executives of Fortune500 public <strong>com</strong>panies, as well aslarge and mid-sized private businessesand associations. Ourclients include leading consumerproducts, pharmaceutical, technologyand financial <strong>com</strong>panies.Sloane & Company providesexpertise to clients across a widerange of industries in craftingtheir <strong>com</strong>munications strategies.The firm’s diverse portfolioinspires our professionals to thinkoutside of the traditional boundsto reach clients’ key constituenciesincluding customers,employees, investors, global andContinued on page 2624AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


PROFILES OF FINANCIAL PR AND INVESTOR RELATIONS FIRMSThe senior PR team at Zeppos & Associates includes John Gardner,Senior Account Executive; Brenna Kriviskey Sadler, Vice President;and Brian Knox, Vice President.SLOANE & CO.Continued from page 24local opinion leaders, industryexperts and political decisionmakers. Sloane’s team recognizesthe dynamic relationshipsbetween these crucial audiencesand knows how to best developand generate value from them.Our professionals understandand recognize the impact thatmedia coverage has on a client’svaluation and reputation, particularlyas it relates to key issues innational, state and local governments.Sloane & Company’s publicrelations programs are effectivebecause they begin with a<strong>com</strong>plete understanding of eachclient’s business fundamentalsand future goals. Every decisionis tied to these strategic objectives,helping our clients shapetheir core positioning in the marketplacewhile aggressively andcreatively pushing that positioningthrough global, national andregional media outlets.TREVELINO/KELLERCOMMUNICATIONSGROUP949 W. Marietta St., Suite X-106Atlanta, GA 30318404/214-0722Fax: 404/214-0729dtrevelino@trevelinokeller.<strong>com</strong>www.trevelinokeller.<strong>com</strong>www.wheelhousetk.<strong>com</strong>Dean Trevelino, Genna Keller,PrincipalsTrevelino/Keller delivers anintegrated <strong>com</strong>munications strategyof public relations, socialmedia and brand <strong>com</strong>municationsfor public and private <strong>com</strong>panies.Its depth within financial servicesincludes existing and emergingsegments such as traditionalbanks and credit unions, businesscash advance providers, mobilebanking <strong>com</strong>panies, loyalty marketingfirms, biopayments, paymentprocessors, e<strong>com</strong>merceproviders, retailers and other firstmovers. Founded in 2003, thefirm has launched several innovativeinitiatives, leading withStart-Up Council, a <strong>com</strong>munityfocused on delivering a gratisoffering of consulting services toassist start-up <strong>com</strong>panies. SocialStatus is the firm’s proprietarysocial media platform designed toeducate and engage <strong>com</strong>panies insocial media. Most recently,Trevelino / Keller has launched aseries of industry-specific <strong>com</strong>munitiesincluding TechSpartacus(www.techspartacus.<strong>com</strong>)focused on supporting b2b andtechnology <strong>com</strong>panies. Moreinformation can be found atwww.trevelinokeller.<strong>com</strong>.WALEK &ASSOCIATES317 Madison Avenue, Suite 2300New York, NY 10017212/889-4113Fax: 212/889-7174www.walek.<strong>com</strong>21/F ICBC TowerCitibank Plaza, 3 Garden RdCentralHong Kong852/2273-5102Fax: 852/2273-5999Thomas Walek, PresidentArmel Leslie, PrincipalMary Beth Kissane, PrincipalWalek & Associates is one ofthe largest and fastest-growingindependent, global financialand corporate public relationsfirms. Founded in 1998 in NewYork and in 2008 in HongKong, Walek specializes inpublic relations and investorrelations in capital markets,asset management, hedgefunds, private equity, professionaland financial services,information and financial technology,and public <strong>com</strong>paniesin all sectors. From buildingvisibility and brand to financialPR, financial transactions,product and service launches,and managing crises, Walekdelivers results that help clientsbuild business. Walek &Associates has received numerousawards, including the 2010Hedgeweek award for Best PRfirm, the Boutique PublicRelations Firm award fromHedge Fund Journal, numerousawards from The NationalInvestor Relations Institute andvarious PR industry awards.WEBERSHANDWICK919 Third AvenueNew York, NY 10022212/445-8000www.webershandwick.<strong>com</strong>Fox Court14 Gray’s Inn RoadLondon WC1X 8WSUnited Kingdom44 20 7067 0000Paul Jensen, Chairman, NorthAmerican Corporate PracticeThomas Coop, ManagingDirector, London Office, WeberShandwick FinancialWeber Shandwick’s financial<strong>com</strong>munications practice <strong>com</strong>binesthe market-specific expertise,experience and strategicfinancial <strong>com</strong>munications andinvestor relations skills of a specialistfirm, with the resourcesand international reach of a fullserviceglobal agency.As experts in <strong>com</strong>municationsrelating to international flows ofcapital, from initial public offeringsto mergers and acquisitions,spin-offs or demergers, bankruptciesand restructurings to quarterlyearnings outreach, WeberShandwick Financial counselslisted and privately-held <strong>com</strong>paniesand organizations on a globalbasis. It has advised on some ofthe largest and most <strong>com</strong>plextransactions in recent yearsincluding the $2.4 billion NYSEIPO of MasterCard, the $19 billionIPO of Kingdom HoldingCompany in Saudi Arabia,Cerberus’s $7.4 billion acquisitionof Chrysler and $14 billionacquisition of GMAC, ExproInternational’s $3.6 billion acquisitionby Umbrellastream, a privateequity-led consortium, andNortel Networks’ Chapter 11 filingand administration proceedingsin the U.S., Canada and theU.K.We work closely with clientsand their advisors to ensure consistenttargeted outreach to keystakeholders including investors,analysts, employees, customersand journalists to support effective<strong>com</strong>munication of importantfinancial activities both locallyand globally. Established relationshipswith key financial, businessand industry media andinvestment <strong>com</strong>munity influencersand real-time local marketintelligence in leading financialcenters allows Weber Shandwickto identify and mobilize advocatesin support of its clients’business objectives.ZEPPOS &ASSOCS., INC.400 East Mason Street, Suite 200Milwaukee, WI 53202414/276-6237Fax: 414/276-2322www.zeppos.<strong>com</strong>Evan N. Zeppos, PresidentZeppos & Associates is an independentfirm with demonstratedsuccess in financial <strong>com</strong>municationsmatters. The Wisconsinbasedfirm has represented banks,investors, corporations, non-profitsand others in <strong>com</strong>municatingabout financial reporting and successes,bankruptcy filings, creativefinancing agreements andmore. Zeppos & Associates hasworked on planning and implementing<strong>com</strong>munications aimed atmedia, investors, employees,shareholders, policyholders andother key stakeholders on a varietyof financial challenges and opportunities.The professional team atZeppos & Associates has a backgroundin government, and specificallyin banking and insuranceregulations, as well as in themedia. The firm also providesservices that include <strong>com</strong>munityoutreach,crisis<strong>com</strong>munications, grassrootsorganization, government relations,social media and more. 26AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9.10.11.12.13.14.15.16.17.18.19.20.21.22.23.24.25.26.27.28.29.30.31.32.33.34.35.36.37.38.39.40.41.42.43.44.O’DWYER’S RANKINGSTOP INVESTOR RELATIONS & FINANCIAL PR FIRMSEdelmanICRAPCO WorldwideCubitt, Jacobs & ProsekIntermarket Comms.Makovsky + Co.RF | Binder PartnersRuder FinnLevick Strategic Comms.Gregory FCALambert, Edwards & Assocs.Bliss PRDukas Public RelationsMiddleberg Comms.Regan Comms. GroupTravers, Collins & Co.Lane PRZeno GroupCooperKatz & Co.Jackson SpaldingRasky Baerlein Strategic Comms.Landis Comms.Linhart PRMcNeely Pigott & FoxKwittken & Co.Buchanan PRTrevelino/Keller5W Public RelationsKohnstamm Comms.Schneider AssociatesZeppos & AssociatesHope-BeckhamVollmerThe Zimmerman AgencySiegenthaler PRDawson + Murray + Teague Comms. DallasTransMedia GroupWinning Strategiesrbb Public RelationsMiamiRon Sachs Comms.Bridge Global StrategiesMaccabee GroupThe Rogers GroupRosicaNew YorkWestport, CTWash., D.C.New YorkNew YorkNew YorkNew YorkNew YorkWash., D.C.Wash., D.C.Grand Rapids, MINew YorkNew YorkNew YorkBostonBuffaloPortland, ORNew YorkNew YorkAtlantaBostonSan FranciscoDenverNashvilleNew YorkArdmore, PAAtlantaNew YorkSt. Paul, MNBostonMilwaukeeAtlantaHoustonTallahasseeNashvilleBoca RatonNewarkTallahasseeNew YorkMinneapolisLos AngelesParamus, NJ$22,696,82620,597,49711,454,1424,500,0003,633,5283,400,0002,600,0002,200,0002,035,7391,900,0001,845,6001,775,0001,700,0001,100,000988,000794,895647,779493,660407,545379,024353,050288,275273,829267,247244,934244,236225,000205,200203,394156,455154,917153,000151,978138,84092,34791,30285,00075,49463,60063,42058,38355,18335,37923,186© Copyright 2010 The J.R. O'Dwyer Co.


REPORT‘Great recession’ took toll on professional services PRBy Kevin McCauleyThe recession put aside once and for allthe notion that the professional servicessector of PR is impervious to aneconomic downturn.The bottom of the business just fell out.Important chunks of the PS practice are ashell of what they once were. The Bureau ofLabor Statistics reports that employment inthe legal profession is at its lowest since theaftermath of the terror attacks of 9/11.The nation’s top law firms either cut pay(Nixon Peabody and Baker & McKenzie) orsliced staff to deal with the corporate paringof legal bills.Leslie Corwin, who advises professionalservices firms at Greenberg Traurig, toldBloomberg that ’09 was the tightest yearthat he’s seen in a 36-year career. “We’re ina tsunami economy.”As ’10 unfolds, there is a glimmer of hopefor PR pros working in the legal professional.Even the whitest of white shoe firms,such as Cravath, Swaine & Moore nowfully understands the need to market oneself,according to Zach Lowe, of AmericanLawyer.<strong>com</strong>.Lowe blogged July 14 that Cravath mayhire “as many as four new members of amarketing team that will do everything fromfinding work within the firm’s history topitching its work to magazines.” That suresounds like PR.Another glimmer of hope: Wall Street isbeefing up staff in anticipation of an economyrecovery. The New York Times reportedJuly 10 that the biggest banks and brokeragehouses that led the country into the GreatRecession are beginning to hire staff.The financial work force in New York isnow slightly less than the 2003 level, theyear when the tech bubble burst. Each job inthe securities sector generates two additionaljobs in New York City, according to theBureau of Economic Analysis. That mathwill translate into growth for legal, accounting,management consulting, real estate andeducational portions of the professionalservices world.Hammered in ’09PR firms on O’Dwyer’s ranking of professionalservices agencies got hammered in’09. The Big 25 reported a 13 percentdecline in overall revenues to $67.4M.Number-one Edelman doubled that percentdecline, falling 26 percent to $27.5M.That fall-off contrasts sharply withEdelman’s overall performance.Richard Edelman guided Edelman to arespectable two percent dip in overall fees to$440M during the past year. He toldO’Dwyer’s the shop is enjoying a robustrebound in ’10.Some professional firms simply “threw inthe towel” in ’09, preferring to take a yearhiatus than report a sharp decline in fees.Only 51 firms reported fees in ’09 <strong>com</strong>paredto 66 in the previous year.Ronn Torossian’s 5W Public Relationstook the sixth notch on the professionalservices list. The New York-headquarteredshop dipped 8.6 percent to $2.5M.This year, says Torossian, “the professionalservices business has been more orless status quo or maybe up a little. Smallshops are spending more than the largermore conservative <strong>com</strong>panies in the space,that’s absolutely a trend we have seen.”Henry Feintuch, the KCSA StrategicCommunications alum, is using his financial/IRexperience to plot a foray into theprofessional services arena. He has justreturned from Singapore where he ran aseminar for the government’s economicdevelopment agency about opportunitiesthat about in the U.S.Feintuch’s work received support fromDavid Adelman, who was recently appointedthe U.S. Ambassador to Singapore. Thechief of Feintuch Communications says theSingapore experience may translate intowork in the People’s Republic of China ashis 18-month-old firm achieves more traction.On the immediate front, Feintuch seessteady improvement in business during thesecond-half with a perked-up ’11 waiting inthe wings.CJB, R&B on the moveCubitt, Jacobs & Prosek and RaskyBaerlein were big movers on the ’09 professionalservices list.CEO Jen Prosek reported a rise in fees to$800K from $448K as her shop surged fromNo. 36 to 18 in the rankings.Brian Hickey is managing director ofCJP’s professional services practice. He ledthe financial and professional servicesgroup at Walek & Assocs. and served asGlobal Director of Communicatons andMedia Relations for law firm Orrick,Herrington & Sutcliff before joiningProsek’s shop. CJP has done professionalservices work for Lovells, INSEAD,Firstsource and Acritas.R&B cracked O’Dwyer’s Top 10 Club in’09. The firm owns the fifth slot, up fromNo. 17 in ’08. Boston-based R&B’s risecoincides with its stepped presence in theprofessional services-rich Washington, D.C.market, coupled with the expansion of itscrisis and litigation <strong>com</strong>munications practice.Widmeyer debuts at No. 2Widmeyer Communications broke intothe professional services category at No. 2,registering fees of $4.6M or 48 percent ofthe firm’s overall $9.8M in<strong>com</strong>e.CEO Scott Widmeyer says WC’s professionalservices work is a mix of work for<strong>com</strong>panies, foundations and governmententities. The firm isNorth Americanagency of record forU.K.’s Pearson,which bills itself asthe world’s largesteducational <strong>com</strong>pany.WC counselsmanagement in curriculum,teacher professionaldevelopmentand in support has CJP Comms.CEO Jen Prosekof literacy programs. moving up theWidmeyer says professionalWC is involved with services rankings.the Carnegie Corp.’s“Opportunity Equation” program thatfocuses on improved science and mathteaching and learning via improved teachingskills and better coursework.He also singled out WC’s long-runningcampaign for “Stop Bullying Now!” bullyingprevention campaign among teens andtweens. Widmeyer sees good things thisyear. Part of his enthusiasm is based on the$3.5M pick-up in early January of the U.S.Consumer Product Safety Commission’snational campaign to educate parents, caregivers,consumers andindustry on swimmingpool and pool safety.To reduce entrapmentschild drowning,Widmeyer is to use“every means possibleto reach the public withinformation needed tokeep children safe inand around public andresidential pools andspas,” said CPSCScott Widmeyerexpects his firm togrow 15 to 20percent this year.chairman InezTenenbaum in announcing the award of thecontract under the Virginia Graeme BakerPool and Spa Safety Act.Widmeyer expects the CPSC businesswill help drive fees up in the 15 to 20 percentrange in ’10. That’s more than twice the7.4 percent gain in overall fees that theWashington, D.C.-based firm enjoyed in’09. 28AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


Building online <strong>com</strong>munities on social media’s foundationBy Eric FischgrundYou’ve created a Facebook page foryour business or client. You’ve setup a Twitter account, followed by aYouTube profile. Logos, contact information,and <strong>com</strong>pany bios have been updated.What’s missing? You may have agreat page background for Twitter or postthe most interesting and unique articles toyour Facebook “wall,” but if nobody’swatching, your content goes to waste.So, how do you build an audience foryour content? The following are a fewsuggestions you might find helpful whenlaunching a social media campaign for abusiness:Post links. This might sound like <strong>com</strong>monsense, but every day I encounteranother <strong>com</strong>pany that makes the mistakeof not posting their social media links totheir website. There are varieties of aestheticallyappealing visual designs youcan choose from. Whether it’s an iconthat says “Follow Us On Twitter” or onethat says “Like Us On Facebook,” getthose links on your homepage so you candirect your most likely followers — thosewho are interested enough in your <strong>com</strong>panyto already be checking out yourwebsite — to your social media sites!Sharing is caring in the digital mediaworld, so show some love for your newInternet friends. Read an article supportingmajor funding for your industry? Postit. The Wall Street Journal writes a favorablereview of your groundbreakingstate-of-the-art technology? Post it. YouPR news briefsMW ADDS SYSOMOSNews distribution service Marketwire hasacquired social media monitoring <strong>com</strong>panySysomos for an undisclosed sum.Both <strong>com</strong>panies have Toronto roots.Sysomos was created as a research projectat the University of Toronto in 2005 andcounts PR firms like Hill & Knowlton andShift Communications among its customers.Nick Koudas, Professor at the university, isco-Founder and President.Marketwire said the move gives its clientstracking and sentiment analysis capabilitiesfor outlets like blogs, social networks,Twitter, forums and video through Sysomos’services — MAP and Heartbeat.Marketwire is owned by Toronto privateequity firm OMERS.get the idea. The more people and placesyou can link to, the better chance youhave of your content being noticed.While doing this, it is important to givecredit where credit is due. There are variousways you can share outside contentcrediting those who authored it. Socialmedia is reciprocal; you’ll be surprisedhow many share your content with theiraudiences.Stimulate your audience. This phrasemay be overkill by now, but social mediais more than just posting editorial coverage,<strong>com</strong>pany news and relevant photosabout your <strong>com</strong>pany. Listen to what peopleare saying, and ask questions. Socialmedia is just like the real world — ifyou’re sitting across from someone at arestaurant talking AT them until you’reblue in the face, they’re going to stand upand walk away. Ask your audience forfeedback on your <strong>com</strong>pany; what they’recurrently doing or whether or not theyunderstand a <strong>com</strong>pany announcement,press release, etc.Monitor for your brand. You’re notthe only person out there talking aboutyour <strong>com</strong>pany (at least I hope not), sowouldn’t it make sense if those talkingabout you on social media outlets knewyou were out theretoo? If you’re notusing a professionalsocial media monitoringservice thenget out your detectivetools and dosome sleuthing onyour own. Startwith your <strong>com</strong>panyname, and move Eric Fischgrundoutwards fromthere. Keywords that define your <strong>com</strong>panyand industry and names of <strong>com</strong>petitorsshould be monitored on a daily basis.There are also websites out there that cando this for free, including SocialOomph,HootSuite and TweetDeck.There are many more ways to buildyour online <strong>com</strong>munities via social mediaand establish quality relationships thatresult in sales, investments, insight orwhatever else you’re looking for. Havefun, be creative, share and connect withothers. These steps are the buildingblocks for establishing long-term successonline.Eric Fischgrund is a Senior AccountExecutive at Beckerman in Hackensack,N.J. AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM 29


FEATUREProfessional services firms rebound with new toolsWhile many businesses have battened down the hatches toweather the ‘Great Recession,’ savvy professional services firmsare turning to <strong>com</strong>munications to position themselves for growthwhen the economy finally recovers — whenever that may be. Aschallenging as the downturn is for PR budgets, it’s also been a catalystfor well-capitalized professional services firms to solidifyclient relationships by launching new <strong>com</strong>munications initiatives.By Patricia L. HardenThe recession is spawning a wave ofconsolidation in many industries,with the strong survivors growingmarket share and absorbing weaker rivals.For healthy professional services firms, it’sa great time to be visible and demonstrateleadership. It’s a time when that visibilitymore readily translates into new strategicalliances, partnerships, and expanding businessopportunities as the <strong>com</strong>petitive landscapeshifts.For professional services firms, the revolutionin <strong>com</strong>munications has unleashed avast new arsenal of tools and channelsuniquely well-suited to showcase theirexpertise online. Clients in engineering, law,accounting, architecture and wealth managementare seizing this moment in time toposition themselves as highly visible leadersand “go-to” resources for prospects and themedia. With recovery glimmering on thehorizon, more firms are upping their investmentsto outflank recession-weakened <strong>com</strong>petitors.The sheer abundance of <strong>com</strong>municationschannels and tactics available to professionalservices firms underscores the need for a<strong>com</strong>prehensive <strong>com</strong>munications strategy —something that PR professionals are bestequipped to provide. Below is a list of 10<strong>com</strong>munications strategies that professionalservices firms are deploying to positionthemselves for accelerated growth in 2011and beyond.Increase and enhance client <strong>com</strong>munications.Clients are gold — and their care isnever more critical than in a recession.Whatever the format or medium, clients ofprofessional services firms want to hearfrom their trusted advisors during challengingtimes. This means direct client contact,as well as firm-wide messages from theCEO or Managing Partner. For clients who<strong>com</strong>municate only through quarterlynewsletters or statements, we re<strong>com</strong>mendmore frequent, event-driven <strong>com</strong>municationas a way of strengthening relationships intrying times.Formalize and deepen referral networks.It’s amazing how many professionalservices businesses that rely on referrals asthe lifeblood of their business lack a systematicapproach to obtaining these very referrals.In addition to one-on-one meetings,we’ve assisted clients in formalizing a programof “meet and greets,” where they hostreferral sources.Increase speaking engagements. Faceto-face<strong>com</strong>munications have added impactduring times of economic travail. It’s theideal time for “trusted experts” to step upand share their knowledge and perspective,which in turn solidifies their stature as leadersin their field.Clients are increasingly receptive to <strong>com</strong>munityspeaking engagements, as well asnational industry platforms. While tradeshow budgets may be reduced, industrypresence can be maintained through speakingengagements. Each speaking engagementin turn provides the potential for newsreleases or media advisories, client email oronline coverage of the event.Showcase expertise in blogs, podcasts,e-newsletters and webinars. These “realtime”<strong>com</strong>munications formats are readymadefor showcasing your clients’ knowledgeabout business issues and developmentsas they unfold. With the barrage ofnew regulations, CPAs, attorneys and otherexperts are well-positioned to issue nonpromotionalupdates on tax, accounting orhealth care rules. Brevity and timeliness arekey. With these periodic, informative <strong>com</strong>municationsproviding a value-added wayto keep your client’s name in front of theirclients and prospects. Even traditionallyconservative firms are beginning to see thevalue of blogs as a way to build relationshipsand dialogue with stakeholders, especiallyin regards to their future clients.Update website and optimize forsearch engines. Many professional servicesfirms created their websites in the earlyyears of the decade and have neglected themsince.With searches for all kinds of servicesincreasingly started online, it’s critical thatprofessional services firms search engineoptimize (SEO) their websites, so that theyappear as high as possible in online searchrankings.As long as the site is being optimized forsearch, it’s a good time to refresh the contentand design so that it reflects the firm’s currentpositioning and content is timely versusthe all-too-often outdated speaking engagementsand yesterday’s tired content.Capitalize on LinkedIn and onlineranking sites. LinkedIn is the primarysource for professionals in all walks of life.Be sure your clients’ profiles are up-to-dateand <strong>com</strong>pellingly presented. Every professionhas its own rankings and ratings sitesthat often require no more than a submissionto gain a listing, which can help boost onlinesearch rankings.Personalize your brand with video.Because professional services firms rely ontrust and chemistry as well as expertise towin clients, short video interviews withpractice leaders are a great channel forrevealing the “personality” of the firms’principals. Videos can be posted to websiteas well as on YouTube.Client surveys. In a recession, professionalservices firms recognize the value oftheir loyal clients more than ever. Severalfirms we work with have recently conductedclient surveys, to learn how they measureup, what’s working and what’s not. Surveyfindings can be leveraged in testimonials orcase studies on the client’s website or withempirical data-based claims, such as “90%would re<strong>com</strong>mend.”Bylined articles. Every niche of professionalservices has its own specialty andtechnical publications. With advertising inthe doldrums, these journals, whether onlineor in print, are increasingly reliant on articlessubmitted by experts in their respectivefields. Once your client’s article is published,you can link to it on the website, noteit in client emails, and otherwise leverage itto demonstrate thought leadership.Traditional media visibility. Despite therise of the blogosphere, traditional mediacontinues to have impact. With the spate ofregulations across industries, your professionalservices clients can be positioned asexpert <strong>com</strong>mentators on breaking news andissues in their categories. Even better, ifyour client can identify a trend of broaderinterest and <strong>com</strong>ment on it, you can shapethe story. Using Skype, clients can now dovideo interviews for national news outletsfrom their own offices.Patricia L. Harden is Managing Partnerof Harden Communications Partners, LLCin San Francisco. 30AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


ProfilesO’Dwyer’sGuide to:PROFESSIONAL SERVICES8.10ALLISON &PARTNERS505 Sansome StreetSan Francisco, CA 94111415/217-7500matthewdc@allisonpr.<strong>com</strong>www.allisonpr.<strong>com</strong>Matthew Della Croce, ManagingDirectorIt’s no secret that business iswon and lost on corporate reputation— and never more so than intimes rife with economic challengesand a focus on transparency.Effectively illuminating <strong>com</strong>petitivedifferences and expertiseto your stakeholders is essentialto building brand recognition andcultivating clients. At Allison &Partners, building brands thatconvey value and drive revenueis our top priority. We work withyour team to assess market positioning,trends and challenges todevelop strategies that effectivelyinfluence your stakeholders. OurServices include: B2B marketing,brand messaging and positioning,CSR and cause marketing, crisisand issues management, digitalmedia strategy and SEO, employee<strong>com</strong>munications, executivebranding and positioning, financial<strong>com</strong>munications, investorrelations, media strategy andtraining, M&As, restructuring,speaker’s bureaus, sustainability<strong>com</strong>munications and thoughtleadership.BLISSPR500 Fifth Avenue, Suite #1010New York, NY 10110212/840-1661Fax: 212/840-1663www.blisspr.<strong>com</strong>BlissPR is a New York-basedbusiness-to-business strategicmedia relations and marketing<strong>com</strong>munications firm specializingin the professional services, financialservices, and healthcare fields.Founded in 1975, we were one ofthe first PR firms in the country tofocus on PR for professional servicesfirms. In the past thirty years,we have been privileged to workwith some of the world’s mostprestigious strategy consulting,accounting, actuarial, banking, HRand law firms. At BlissPR, webelieve knowledge-based businessesdifferentiate themselves throughthe quality of their ideas and theirspeed to market. That’s why wespecialize in creating and promotingthought leadership. We helpclients develop points-of-view, predictions,trend <strong>com</strong>mentary, andinsights, positioning them asexperts in the media and categoryleaders in their markets. A goodmessage is tough to create. Webelieve when we have one it shouldbe delivered through all the relevant“traditional” and “new” mediachannels for maximum effect. Formore information, thought leadership,case studies, bios and thefindings of our new study, TheSocial Media Landscape forConsulting Firms, please visit ourwebsite: www.blisspr.<strong>com</strong>.COOPERKATZ &COMPANY INC.205 Lexington Avenue, 5th FloorNew York, NY 10016917/595-3030www.cooperkatz.<strong>com</strong>Andy Cooper, PrincipalRalph Katz, PrincipalAnne Green, President / COOCooperKatz has extensive experiencesupporting professionalservices organizations, includingmanagement consultants, industryanalysts, research organizationsand trade associations.The firm offers a unique integrationof marketing, public affairsand creative resources and providesclients with these capabilities:Developing thought leadershipprograms; Executing researchfor publicity purposes; Organizingan “experts bureau”; Providingcontent-oriented media training;Monitoring news and connectingsubject matter experts with timelymarketplace issues; Placing op-edsand bylines; Securing speakingopportunities; Conceiving, designingand executing business presentations,meetings, events, videos,trade advertising and collateralmaterials.CooperKatz’s professional servicesexperience has includedengagements for such clients as:American Society of Composers,Authors and Publishers (ASCAP);Association of NationalAdvertisers (ANA); CapgeminiFinancial Services; CapgeminiHealth; Guardian Life InsuranceCompany; Jackson Hewitt TaxService; Millward Brown;National Association of InsuranceCommissioners (NAIC); NielsenMedia Research; Noblis HealthInnovation; TowerGroup;TowersPerrin; and VNU.CREATIVEGROWTH GROUP,INC.3221 West Andrews DriveAtlanta, GA 30305404/664-7484www.creativegrowthgroup.<strong>com</strong>Andrew Dietz, Managing PartnerMira Leonard, PartnerCreative Growth Group isexclusively dedicated to helpingprofessional services firms growclient relationships and revenue.Because Creative Growth intentionallyintegrates professionalservices firm marketing <strong>com</strong>municationsactivities with businessdevelopment follow-through,clients realize faster and moremeasurable results. CreativeGrowth works with professionalfirms from strategy to executionof client attraction tactics: fromhelping to identify a client’s distinctive“claim to fame” to targetingideal client prospects andimplementing creative, contentrichapproaches to reach thosetargets. Creative Growth Group’sclients have included some of theworld’s leading professionalservices firms across a range ofprofessions from law andaccounting to strategy consultingand IT services. The firm haseven assisted major marketingfirms in their own growth initiatives.Creative Growth Group isalso the creator of the ClientAdvisor Awards program honoringthe economic impact of theprofessional services marketplaceand professionalism amongexpert services firms and theirclients.GIBBS & SOELL PR60 East 42nd Street, 44th FloorNew York, NY 10165212/697-2600Fax: 212/697-2646www.gibbs-soell.<strong>com</strong>Cos Mallozzi, Chairman & CEOLuke Lambert, PresidentRoger Ardan, VicePresident/Group HeadThe Professional Servicespractice of Gibbs & SoellPublic Relations provides highimpactstrategic <strong>com</strong>municationsand tactical public relationsprograms to financial andprofessional service organizationsseeking growth, recognitionand leadership for theirservices, products or firms.The practice provides abroad range of services, includingstrategic planning, <strong>com</strong>municationconsulting, productlaunch and support, events,media relations, media training,marketing <strong>com</strong>municationsand crisis <strong>com</strong>municationsprograms.Clients managed by the NewYork, Chicago, Raleigh andZurich (Switzerland) officesinclude accounting firms,banks, bankruptcy/financialrestructuring institutions, businessconsulting firms, investmentbanks/managers, insurance,industry associations,law firms, private equity, venturecapital and other servicesinstitutions.Clients: Berkery, Noyes &Co., Carter Ledyard & Milburn,Farmer Mac, Fitzpatrick, Cella,Harper & Scinto, GE RailServices, Labe Bank, MillionDollar Roundtable, OberweisAsset Management, Networkfor Teaching Entrepreneurship,Seneca Financial Group,Seward & Kissel, TradeCommission of Spain andTrustmark Insurance.32AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


PROFILES OF PROFESSIONAL SERVICES PR FIRMSHOPE-BECKHAMINC.17 Executive Park Dr., Suite 600Atlanta, GA 30329404/636-8200dvanvoorhis@hopebeckham.<strong>com</strong>www.hopebeckham.<strong>com</strong>David C. Van Voorhis, DirectorBusiness Development & ClientRelationsHope-Beckham is <strong>com</strong>mittedto being your best resource forpublic relations, marketing <strong>com</strong>municationsand experientialmarketing services — respondingquicker, working faster andsmarter and providing the bestpossible value.We are dedicated to being flexibleand cooperative. There is nosingle best way to market a <strong>com</strong>pany,product or service, but avariety of creative and savvyoptions, and we strive to considerthem all.Hope-Beckham believes it isthe knowledge of the variety ofoptions available and our abilityto effectively implement thoseoptions that achieves the bestresults.Whether <strong>com</strong>municating witha client’s various constituenciesor creating programs and eventsthat effectively position an organizationwithin the areas it serves,Hope-Beckham is known for itscreativity and cost effectiveness.Hope-Beckham is proud tohave been named by O’Dwyer’sin the Top Independent PR firmsfor 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010.LINDEN ALSCHULER& KAPLAN1251 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, NY 10020212/575-4545Fax: 212/575-0519llinden@lakpr.<strong>com</strong>salschuler@lakpr.<strong>com</strong>lkaplan@lakpr.<strong>com</strong>www.lakpr.<strong>com</strong>Lisa Linden, CEOSteven Alschuler, PresidentLloyd Kaplan, ChairmanLinden Alschuler & Kaplan, Inc.has built an outstanding reputationfor fresh ideas and effective strategiesthat help clients project theirmessages, fulfill their goals andachieve their bottom line objectives.Combining a strategicapproach to <strong>com</strong>munications withoutstanding strength in media relations,the firm has developed highlysuccessful public relations campaignsthat have produced nationaland international exposure forscores of clients in the professionalservices industry, including BigFour and other international professionalservices and advisory firms,major national and internationallaw firms, real estate-related servicesfirms, financial services <strong>com</strong>panies,business and managementconsultants, professional recruiters,accounting firms, as well asresearch and analysis <strong>com</strong>panies,among others. The firm has alsodeveloped and executed crisis <strong>com</strong>municationsprograms for major<strong>com</strong>panies and has worked on specialsituations including litigations,bankruptcies and mergers andacquisitions, and has particularexpertise working with clients atthe intersection of government andthe private sector.MARX LAYNE &CO.31420 Northwester Highway,Suite 100Farmington Hills, MI 48334248/855-6777 ext. 105mlayne@marxlayne.<strong>com</strong>www.marxlayne.<strong>com</strong>Michael Layne, ManagingPartnerMarx Layne & Co. has a longand successful track record of positioningprofessional services firmsas industry leaders in their respectivesectors.For over twenty years, our experiencedaccount executives havelaunched results focused <strong>com</strong>municationscampaigns for attorneys,accountants, financial institutions,financial planners, turnaroundmanagers,architects and engineers.Our proven ability to exceed clientexpectations has earned us a reputationas a valued partner to ourclients.With our depth of experience,we <strong>com</strong>bine the most effectivemarketing strategies to help professionalservice providers build brandequity and reputation, sell services,enhance credibility, and solidifyrelationships with their clients,prospects, and other stakeholders.At Marx Layne & Company, weunderstand the subtle nuances andlegal issues when marketing professionalservices. We are able totake our clients’ <strong>com</strong>plex messagesand package them in concise writtenformats that are <strong>com</strong>pelling toprint, broadcast and new media.Importantly, we have demonstrated,time after time, that successfulpositioning can generate new businessand retain existing clients forprofessional service firms.We reach our clients’ targetedaudiences through means beyondpaid advertising. Our professionalservices firm clients retain us toposition them as experts, to generatefeature profiles in leading businessmedia, to ghostwrite articlesubmissions for professional tradepublications, and to coordinatehigh-profile interviews in leadingnewspapers, magazines, radio, andTV news formats, locally, regionallyand nationally.From individual practitioners tolarge international firms, we positionour clients through strategicinitiatives including: local, nationaland international media relationscampaigns; media training andmessaging; article/editorial ghostwritingand submission; websitewriting, design and optimization;email campaigns; social media andonline reputation management;planning and implementation ofseminars; direct mail campaigns;design, writing and printing ofbrochures and newsletters.In all we do, we continue torespect the correlation between dollarsspent by our professional servicefirm clients and results.MICHAEL J.LONDON & ASSOCS.4 Daniels Farm Road, Suite 330Trumbull, CT 06611203/261-1549www.mjlondon.<strong>com</strong>Michael J. London &Associates is a leading full-servicepublic relations and <strong>com</strong>municationsagency that serves an eclecticclientele, in the Northeast from itsheadquarters in Connecticut and inthe South from its Florida base.Since its inception more than 20years ago, Michael J. London &Associates has established a solidpresence within the professionalservices realm, with particularemphasis on the legal sector. Theagency now provides manyConnecticut and New York lawfirms with highly structured andcost-effective initiatives that haveresulted in client firms frequentlyfeatured in national media as wellas in targeted, regional print andbroadcast. Media programs forlaw firms often are designed toenhance overall marketing. Inaddition, Michael J. London &Associates has been very successfulin earning media to supplementa client law firm’s legal actions ina specific case.The agency is driven by a teamof award-winning journalists and aPulitzer-nominated author.Widely noted for its achievementsin media placement and innovativecampaigns, Michael J.London offers an array of digitized<strong>com</strong>munications strategies inaddition to classic marketing andadvertising tools and collateralmaterials. Event production,speech writing, interview andspeech coaching, and <strong>com</strong>pletevideo and film production are alloffered.Carefully crafted and wellresearched plans allow Michael J.London’s clients to attain thegreatest possible visibility.QUINN & CO.PUBLIC RELATIONS520 Eighth Ave., Suite 2102New York, NY 10018212/868-1900Fax 212/465-0849www.quinnandco.<strong>com</strong>The Purple Lounge Blogwww.quinnandco.<strong>com</strong>/wordpressFacebook, LinkedIn and Twitter@QuinnandcoFlorence Quinn, PresidentSuzanne Billet Rosnowski,Partner, Real EstateCarla Caccavale Reynolds,Partner, TravelAt Quinn & Co. we <strong>com</strong>bineour signature creative approachto traditional media with strategicdigital media initiatives todevelop dynamic and highlyeffective integrated PR programs.We partner with clientsin our core areas of Real Estate,Food, Wine + Spirits and Travelto achieve goals, manage reputation,engage audiences andultimately drive business.Quinn & Co.’s real estatedivision has grown to be<strong>com</strong>ethe industry go-to for groundbreakingcampaigns. The teamhas helped to successfullylaunch new <strong>com</strong>panies as wellas differentiate some of the mostestablished residential, <strong>com</strong>mercial,architecture, development,legal and financial clientsworldwide.Our results-driven approachhas earned noteworthy recognition,most recently a BulldogReporter “2010 Gold Award forBest Campaign Under $10,000” forour work with Alchemy Properties.With this campaign, the team craft-Continued on page 34AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM 33


PROFILES OF PROFESSIONAL SERVICES PR FIRMSSchneider Associates’ President and Creative Director JoanSchneider (left) and COO/Partner Phil Pennellatore.QUINN & CO.Continued from page 33ed a Blowout Sale at Alchemy’sHudson Hill Condominium, NYC,the centerpiece of which was an e-video initiative with weekly chatswith the developer. This was a“first” for New York’s residentialindustry and helped spike sales 25percent. The real estate team wasalso recognized with a BulldogReporter “Gold Award forExcellence in Public Relations andPublicity for Best CompanyPositioning/Branding” for workwith Accelerated MarketingPartners in 2009. Additionally,partner Suzanne Rosnowski, wholeads the real estate division, wasnamed PR News’ “Top 15-To-Watch” nationwide in 2009.Quinn & Co.’s campaigns arerecognized globally. Most recently,we were the U.S. PR firm behindthe blockbuster The Best Job in theWorld campaign (TourismQueensland), which earned aHSMAI Adrian Best of Showaward for best travel PR campaignof the year, worldwide. Our firmhas conceived such unique programsas Extell’s one-of-a-kindpartnership with Lincoln Center,the first residential Moon Garden,the first Nanny Concierge, TheProcreation Vacation, the Martinion the Rock, and more.SCHNEIDERASSOCIATES2 Oliver Street, Suite 901Boston, MA 02109617/536-3300www.schneiderpr.<strong>com</strong>Joan Schneider, President andCreative DirectorPhil Pennellatore, COO/Partner,Professional Services and PublicAffairs Practice LeaderThe Vandiver Team (L to R): Donna Vandiver, President & CEO andAmy Crump, Chief Financial Officer.When marketing synergy is acritical requirement for success,<strong>com</strong>panies call upon SchneiderAssociates and its 30 years ofexpertise in public relations andintegrated marketing. Whether youare repositioning your brand; aligning<strong>com</strong>munications; navigatingthe organizational challenges of amerger or acquisition; or planningthe launch of a product, service,<strong>com</strong>pany, or <strong>com</strong>munity — youwant a partner who understandsmission critical demands. AtSchneider Associates, we are proudof our track record of deliveringeffective public relations campaignsfor professional servicesclients ranging from entrepreneurialfirms to the nation’s largest corporations.Our work for <strong>com</strong>mercialreal estate, engineering, andfinancial services clients has madeus one of the most trusted firms inthe Northeast.In our 30th year, SchneiderAssociates is a full-service publicrelations firm specializing inLaunch Public Relations ® . Clientsinclude prominent firms such asPatriot Partners, Equity Office,Nordblom Company, and FHOPartners. Learn more: www.schneiderpr.<strong>com</strong>THE VANDIVERGROUP, INC.510 Maryville Centre Drive,Suite 320St. Louis, MO 63141314/991-4641www.vandivergroup.<strong>com</strong>The Vandiver Group, Inc.(TVGi) is an award-winningstrategic <strong>com</strong>munications firmhelping clients build brands, reputationsand relationships by providinga full portfolio of <strong>com</strong>municationsservices such as: strategicplanning, branding, publicrelations, social media, creative,web design, market research, crisis<strong>com</strong>munications and executive/employeetraining.TVGi’s Pulse ® FeedbackSoftware is used to gather publicor employee <strong>com</strong>ment. Itengages users in conversations,then organizes the feedback intokey themes and topics, allowingorganizations to identify importantissues and track them.Founded in 1993, TVGi hassatellite offices in Nashville,K.C., L.A. and Chicago. CEODonna Vandiver is President ofPinnacle Worldwide, a networkof eighty premiere PR agenciesaround the world. TVGi is acharter member of WOMMA.Our global clients are from avariety of industries includingFortune 500 corporations andindustries such as healthcare,agriculture, transportation, education,government not-for-profitsand professional services.ZENO GROUP3222 N Street NW, Suite 500Washington, DC 20007202/965-7800mark.Shadle@zenogroup.<strong>com</strong>heather.Gartman@zenogroup.<strong>com</strong>www.zenogroup.<strong>com</strong>Mark Shadle, Executive VP andManaging Director, CorporateAffairsHeather Gartman, ManagingDirector, Washington, D.C.,Zeno’s Health Care Practice.Today, <strong>com</strong>panies and organizationsare under 24/7 scrutiny.News — both bad and good —travels around the globe in aninstant. The public, government,investors and the media demandtransparency. In this environment,<strong>com</strong>panies need strategies to protecttheir most valuable asset –their reputation.Zeno Group’s experienced corporateteam works across multipleindustry sectors with Fortune 500<strong>com</strong>panies, emerging enterprises,and privately–held firms toenhance and protect their reputations.We offer a <strong>com</strong>plete suite ofcorporate <strong>com</strong>munications services,including: Strategic planning,<strong>com</strong>petitive insights and stakeholderanalysis; Executivethought–leadership <strong>com</strong>munications;Financial <strong>com</strong>munications;Corporate social responsibility;Issues Management; Crisis planningand <strong>com</strong>munications; Policy,legislative and regulatory <strong>com</strong>munications.Another reality: governmentactions can determine success orfailure in the marketplace with thestroke of a pen. Public policy decisionsand regulatory interventionsfrom city halls to statehouses toWashington impact individual<strong>com</strong>panies, organizations andentire industries.Our team helps clients influenceand manage legislative and regulatorypolicy out<strong>com</strong>es with smartstrategies, stakeholder mobilization,and engagement of traditionaland digital media. We haveexperience at all levels of governmentfrom local to federal. 34AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9.10.11.12.13.14.15.16.17.18.19.20.21.22.23.24.25.26.27.28.29.30.31.32.33.34.35.36.37.38.39.40.41.42.43.44.45.46.47.48.49.50.EdelmanWidmeyer CommunicationsAPCO WorldwideSchwartz CommunicationsRasky Baerlein Strategic Comms.5W Public RelationsLevick Strategic Comms.Bliss PRAllison & PartnersRegan Communications GroupQuinn & Co.CooperKatz & Co.ETCMakovsky + Co.Gibbs & SoellBoardroom PRAirfoil PRCubitt, Jacobs & ProsekGregory FCAJackson Spaldingrbb Public RelationsKwittken & Co.Lambert, Edwards & Assocs.L.C. Williams & Assocs.Nyhus CommunicationsMcNeely Pigott & Fox PRSeigenthaler PRWinning Strategies PRAffect StrategiesDukas Public RelationsLinhart PRLane PRIW GroupGibraltar AssociatesThe Rogers GroupKohnstamm Comms.Zeno GroupNew WestPerry Comms. GroupZeppos & AssociatesShelton GroupSchneider AssociatesIntermark PRTrevelino/KellerPierson Grant PRRon Sachs Comms.O’Malley Hansen Comms.PeritusHope-BeckhamBridge Global StrategiesNew YorkWash., D.C.Wash., D.C.Waltham, MABostonNew YorkWash., D.C.New YorkSan FranciscoBostonNew YorkNew YorkCincinnatiNew YorkNew YorkPlantation, FLDetroitNew YorkArdmore, PAAtlantaCoral Gables, FLNew YorkGrand Rapids, MIChicagoSeattleNashvilleNashvilleNewark, NJNew YorkNew YorkDenverPortland, ORW. Hollywood, CAWash., D.C.Los AngelesSt. Paul, MNNew YorkLouisvilleSacramentoMilwaukeeDallasBostonBirmingham, ALAtlantaFt. LauderdaleTallahasseeChicagoLouisvilleAtlantaNew York$27,465,2974,621,4664,266,5053,491,9182,988,6702,535,4652,311,6272,267,0002,243,2051,855,0001,748,2851,171,7561,147,0411,100,000995,418900,000877,422800,000755,000752,432740,234659,777621,835603,957579,459509,156481,989452,965432,175425,000424,816407,562326,000300,063283,849267,519206,515191,131183,051154,917131,171108,514103,25095,00083,50079,32062,00050,52742,14517,235© Copyright 2010 The J.R. O'Dwyer Co.


OPINIONTwo cheers for (hated) LeBronBy Fraser SeitelCall me a contrarian or uninformedor just a plain, old idiot, but I thinkthat all things considered, basketball’sLeBron James did a respectable jobin handling the PR of his move to Miami.I’m well aware ofthe tidal wave ofopinion crucifyinghim for exemplifyingeverything fromselfishness and disloyaltyto narcissismand gaul.Prevailing, ahem,Fraser P. Seitel hasbeen a <strong>com</strong>municationsconsultant, author andteacher for 30 years. Heis the author of thePrentice-Hall text, ThePractice of PublicRelations.“wisdom,” seems tohave centered, ironically,on how cavalierlyCleveland’sformer “ChosenOne” chose totreat his hometownCleveland Cavaliers;turning his back in aprovocatively public renunciation of hisseven years with the team.Summarized Cav’s Majority OwnerDan Gilbert in an “Open Letter to Fans,”so full of sour grapes classlessness that itmade the young George Steinbrennerseem tactful, James’ action was a “heartlessand callous” act of “cowardlybetrayal.”And disgruntled sportswriters, journalisticpurists, and shut-in bloggers acrossAmerica seemed to agree with the righteouswrath of the moronic MajorityOwner.Well, excuse me but, with respect, whatwould you have advised LeBron if hesought your PR counsel?Here’s what I would have told him.First, seek control.I understand reporters don’t like it, butwhat’s the first thing a <strong>com</strong>petent PR professionaltries to do in behalf of hisclient?Control the agenda, the content, timingand tenor of the announcement.Ask BP, with its gaffe-a-minute CEO if“control” counts. Or Toyota. Or Govs.Sanford and Spitzer. Or Tiger Woods. OrMel Gibson.The fact of the matter is that theLeBron James “next destinationannouncement” was the biggest story insports for nearly three years. There wasno way — despite what the MondayMorning quarterbacks now suggest —to “low key” it or play it down.So LeBron tried — and succeeded in —doing it on his own terms, controlling notonly the agenda and content and timingand tenor, but also the news cycle andnetwork and announcer.In a PR sense — simply stunning.Second, be true to your purpose.It’s axiomatic in PR that you can’t pourperfume on a skunk.If your product is contaminated orcrashworthy or your <strong>com</strong>pany is responsiblefor the biggest oil spill in history oryou’ve been a serial adulterer or a bonafide anti-semite and racist — there’s notmuch, frankly, that PR counsel can dofor you.So if LeBron James was only after themost money he could make (not thatthere’s anything wrong with that), hecouldn’t pull off pretending there wassome higher motive.But in his case, in fact, there was. As hestated early and often in the process andreiterated the other night, his primarygoal was to go to a place where he could“win the championship.”Now what, in the name of Dr. Naismith,can possibly be wrong with that? A pampered,set-for-life, professional athletewho actually wants to win rather than justtaking the money!That “place” James had in mind turnedout to be Miami, the only franchisesmart enough to retain his two fellowsuperstar friends, Dwayne Wade andChris Bosh.Like Michael Jordan, who had ScottiePippen and Dennis Rodman, and KobeBryant, who had first, a young ShaquilleO’Neal and now, Pau Gasol — Jamesfinally had the supporting nucleus toallow him to <strong>com</strong>pete for the title.Compare that to wronged Cleveland,where for seven years the always hardworkingJames was surrounded by themuch more earthly likes of BoobieGibson, Anderson Varejao, SebastianTelfair, and a 38-year-old and vastlydiminished Shaq.The fact is despite Majority OwnerGilbert’s pathetic rant, Cavaliers’ ownershipwas either too cheap or too ignorantto provide James with the support heneeded to attain his championship goals.And he — and they — knew it.Interestingly, three former NBA greatswho joined the sour grapes chorus lambastingLeBron for leaving Clevelandwere Reggie Miller, Charles Barkley andChris Webber, none of whom, despiteProfessional Developmenttheir stardom, ever won an NBAchampionship.Third, be kind to Cleveland.LeBron’s greatest vulnerability, ofcourse, was the sting the announcementwould have (and the stink it would cause)in Cleveland.This was inevitable if he chose to goanywhere else.PR counsel would have re<strong>com</strong>mendedhe be ultra kind about his happy years inCleveland, his lingering good feelings forOhio, and his difficulty in reaching adecision to leave.All of which he conveyed convincinglyin his ESPN performance, with sincerityand magnanimity. The only other thinghe might have done, but didn’t, was to<strong>com</strong>mit philanthropically to some importantOhio charity to try to cushion theblow.“But why didn’t LeBron have the decencyto tell the Cavs first?” Ask the critics.Are you serious?! Do you honestlybelieve that a sore loser like Gilbert —whose real problem, by the way, is thathe now owns a doormat team and standsto lose $250 million as a result ofLeBron’s leaving — would have honoredJames’ desire to control his ownannouncement?No way.“Ok, but did LeBron have to rub it inwith a televised press conference extravaganza?”Come on. It was the biggest sports storyof the year. He donated his TV sponsorshiprevenues to the Boys & Girls Club ofAmerica. Ya’ think they thought his bigshow was “narcissistic and self-promotional?”Besides, would you rather watchLeBron James announce where he’sheaded or oil spewing from the Gulf ofMexico, Lindsay Lohan sobbing on herway to the slammer, or Al Gore sexpoodling?And as for the “self-serving press conference,”constituting, as one nitwitblogger phrased it, “the worst PR movein sports history,” let me get thisstraight.Here we have an international sportssuperstar who calls a press conferencethat, for once, doesn’t concern allegationsof rape or adultery or drugs or gun possessionor dog fighting, and he is guilty of“lousy PR?”Spare me. 36AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


While driving into work theother day, I listened to oneof the morning news radioprograms. The talk was not about arecession, but a depression, albeit not a“great” depressionbut nevertheless adepression. It seemsto make a recessionsound good. Part ofthe reasons for thisconclusion was theemployment rate.While there is not amajor decline in theunemployment rate,there are 14.6Munemployed withthis number increasingwhen the censusworkers return to theunemployment line. So, how does thisimpact your PR agency — small orlarge?What to do nowOver the years I have written numeroustimes on how to survive the economic storm.My advice has included the following:• Update or write a business plan.• Update or prepare a survival budget.• Evaluate staff needs. (The currenteconomic environment actually gave usan opportunity to improve the quality ofour professional staff.)• Revisit or prepare a resource allocationmatrix that shoots for 75% to 85%staff utilization.• Monitor write-offs. This does notmean after the write-off has occurred.• Maybe a client that has not paid youin 90 days or more is no longer a client.Consider stopping work.• Monitor cash collections daily.• Track client profitability. If you donot keep track of professional time byclient this will be difficult to do.• Make sure your rates are <strong>com</strong>pletive(see following discussion).• Do not over service.Client ProfitabilitySpeaking of client profitability, theway to determine if a client is profitableis to subtract from client revenue (feesand other in<strong>com</strong>e such as mark-up) directsalary and related costs and overhead.The first step is easy — how much didyou bill?Next, subtract salary costs, not justsalary. Salary costs include salary, pension,life insurance, medical insurance,payroll taxes, etc. This informationshould be available if you keep track oftime.The next step is to understand what isoverhead. First, if it is not salary andrelated costs, it is overhead. To arrive atyour overhead percentage, divide totaloverhead costs by direct billable salarycosts. For example, you are trying toapply overhead to a client engagementbased on direct costs. For every dollar ofdirect labor, overhead will be $1.10.By way of example, let’s assume thatXYZ PR earns a $300,000 fee fromABC, LLC. The total direct labor costcharged to the engagement is $190,000.Assuming a overhead rate of 100 percentof direct labor, overhead charged to theengagement will also be $190,000.Doing the math, you lost $80,000 onABC. Why? It could have been overservicing, time dumping, or miscalculationof the engagement scope.Speaking of losers, my friend Al Croftin his July 1999 issue of ManagementStrategies wrote some interestingthoughts and ideas on dumping losers. Ihave to tell you, eleven years later it isstill fresh advice. Here are some of histhoughts on deciding to dump a client:• Small, picky people do not show upwell on your bottom line and are nevergoing to get bigger or better;• Clients who demand too much ofyour time but scream at your hourlyrates;• Clients who are demanding but whohave too many things on their plate andseldom have time to provide the informationor guidance necessary to pushthorough approvals;• Clients who wouldn’t accept a newidea if you offered to give it away orwho are just plain boring to work for;• Clients whose products are ten yearsbehind the times, who haven’t done anythingnewsworthy in decades and won’thave anything interesting to say butwhose CEO keeps inquiring why his/her<strong>com</strong>pany wasn’t included in the mostrecent industry round-up; and/or• Companies whose idea of promptpayment is 90 days (or more).Benchmarking your way to successIt is critical that you benchmark youragency against the <strong>com</strong>petition. It isoften difficult to gauge your agencyagainst other firms your size because ofthe lack of creditable information.Financial ManagementManagement in the current economic environmentBy Richard GoldsteinRichard Goldsteinis a partner atBuchbinder Tunick &Company LLP, NewYork, Certified PublicAccountants.Information is nevertheless out there.For example, a call to Rick Gould,Managing Partner of StevensGouldPincus,or Al Croft, Publisher of ManagementStrategies, and a PR agency consultantmay just point you in the rightdirection. In June 2010, Rick Gould publishedthe “PR Agency Industry 2010Billing Rates and Utilization Report.” Iwould think this is an important survey tobenchmark your agency against.According to Gould, “…every PR agencyregardless of size should beperforming ongoing profitabilityanalysis.” By profitability analysis wemean determining profitability by client,account team, staff, project, division, etc.Running the numbersAll professional firms have or shouldhave a mechanism to determine a price.Most service industry firms attempt todetermine the hours necessary to servicea client need and multiply thosehours by a rate. Some firms use actualrates by staff level, others use a blendedrate and others use a concept called“activity based costing” (a future column).Regardless, the goal is to make aprofit. Once the “price” is determined,the hope is that the rates used to determineprice will be <strong>com</strong>petitive withother agencies in the market beingserved. There have been times that Ibeen able to read the proposals of otherfirms and therefore benchmark fees.Other times I call a firm and just ask therates they use. After years of practice,you get to know the <strong>com</strong>petition andinformation is shared. In the PR industrythis may not be an option.Therefore, the Gould survey is criticalin the benchmarking process. Forexample, account manger rates verifyfrom $217 per hour to $250 per hourdepending on agency size according tothe Gould survey.It is important for you to <strong>com</strong>pare yourrates against the Gould survey. If yourrates do not match up, you need to knowwhy. I bet salary is in line but overhead isnot. The next step may be to look at the“Gould 2010 Benchmarking Report.” Forsure, doing nothing gets you nowhereunless you are just lucky.A rate test: whenever I meet a newagency I always ask how they determinebilling rates. “Our rates average $200 perhour.” If such is the case, why when revenueis divided by billable hours, theaverage rate is $75. AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM 37


OPINIONCorporate love affair with lobbyists heats upBy Wes PedersenThis has been a banner year so farfor the men and women whomake the nation’s laws.They’re raking itin and there’s noend to what theywill take home byyear’s end.Here’s a clue,though: Last year,they made $3.5 billion,and this yearWes Pedersen is aretired ForeignService Officer andprincipal at WesPedersen Communicationsand PublicRelations Washington,D.C.the opportunitiesfor even more arenotches higher.Yes, things arelooking up forWashington’slobbyists.The explosive story is told by investigativereporter Stephen Brill in Timemagazine. Here’s the cover headline:“The Best Laws Money Can Buy.”The headline inside reads: “On Sale:Your Government. Why Lobbying IsWashington’s Best Bargain.”There’s a lot of tongue in check inthat line, “Why Lobbying IsWashington’s Best Bargain.” It’s thecorporate world that is getting the bargain.Brill focuses on the lobbying goingon to keep corporate taxes low and tokeep damages down from potential passageof the 2,319-page financial regulatoryreform bill ground out likesausages by a House-Senate conference<strong>com</strong>mittee.There would seem to be enough workGuest Columnto ensure constant employment forevery one of the 11,000-plus lobbyistsregistered to work in Washington – andfor the 1,900 firms that hire them.But consider the cases that stem forcorporate failings and wind up needinglobbyists. Every corporation involvedin the Gulf disaster — BP, its allies, andthe <strong>com</strong>panies that blame BP for thespill — has hired PR and lobbyingforces. Toyota is still paying big forHill representation, and GM andChrysler lobbyists only recently helpeddefeat a bill that would keep those <strong>com</strong>paniesfrom hiring outside lobbyists.Brill explains what a “bargain” lobbyingcan be: Lobbyists over the past yearhave been paid approximately $15 millionto protect the favorable carriedinterest tax treatment for heavy financialhitters. That sounds like a lot, but,Brill emphasizes, “This is a debate overhow some $100 billion will be taxed, ornot, over the next 10 years.”For that $15 million, the money managersfor Morgan Stanley, GoldmanSachs, Ford and other major players gotabout $10 billion in lower taxes. Bymaking the bill effective in 2011instead of the proposed 2010, thelobbyists achieved an immediate additionaltax savings of $2 billion for theirclients.As Brill sums it up, “For just a fewmillion, lobbyists can make clientsbillions.”Watch for Congress to plead cleanhands and even, perhaps, to once morelaunch investigations into how lobbyistscame to wield so much power overour elected representatives.Watch, too, for new examinations inCongress and the press into the rolebeing played in all this by the many formerSenators and Representatives whoare making far more money as lobbyiststhan they ever did in public service.Some day I’ll do a column explainingthe positive things that they can do.And why anyone can be a lobbyist andbe effective.But you should know all that. Youprobably do quite a bit of lobbyingyourself. It is, after all, another form ofpublic relations. 38AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


Who’s to blame when interviews go awry?By Virgil ScudderWatching recent media interviews— and seeing so manypublic figures handle them sobadly — I can’t help but wonder what theproblem is.Outgoing BP CEOTony Haywardmade so many verbalblunders he’sturned himself intoan almost <strong>com</strong>icfigure. FormerVirgil Scudderheads Virgil Scudder& Associates, amedia training andconsulting firm inNew York.General MotorsCEO Rick Wagonerwas such a poor<strong>com</strong>municator thathis lack of skillswas highlighted bythe New York Timesas a reason for hisdismissal.Connecticut Attorney General RichardBlumenthal, who’s now running for theU.S. Senate, went from an almost certainwinner to a potential loser due to falsestatements regarding his non-existentservice in Vietnam.What’s going on here?Media training has been around for 40years. Virtually every major <strong>com</strong>panynow requires it at some point in anexecutive’s career.Poor performances like the ones mentionedabove are the results of mistakesby spokespeople, media trainers, or PRprofessionals – or any <strong>com</strong>bination of thethree.Were these people never mediatrained? Did they ignore the lessons ofthe training? Were their public relationscounselors ignored? Let’s look atsome <strong>com</strong>mon mistakes executivesoften make when placed under thespotlight.Media fear. A large percentage of C-level executives see the news media asunrelentingly hostile and view anyinterview as a lose-lose situation. Theyhave to be shown examples of easy,business-friendly interviews to getthem into the game. They must bemade to realize that they can handleeven the toughest reporter if they prepareproperly and take positive controlof the interview.Misunderstanding the value. Manycorporate leaders see interviews as anego trip rather than an essential tool forenhancing the <strong>com</strong>pany’s reputation andinfluence. Shutting out positive interviewchances can be leaving opportunity— and money — on the table.Resistance to training. If you suggest“training” to a CEO, you may getthrown out of the office. CEO’s invariablythink they’ve had plenty of training.But, call it “coaching” or “messagerefining” and your chances of successimprove dramatically. Many of themwill respond to the concept of “havingyour own personal <strong>com</strong>municationscoach.” It strokes the ego.Sense of anointment. A day of mediatraining in 2004 does not prepare anexecutive to suddenly face the media in2010. Remember: this is skill honing,not the waving of a magic wand. It’s likeimproving your golf game. You need togo back and see the pro every fewmonths to stay in shape.Potential PR staff mistakes include:Fear of management. Some PR professionalshesitate to tell the boss that heor she could be performing better orcould use a little training (coaching). APR professional needs to give anhonest, not fawning, assessment of theexecutive’s performance — supportivebut candid. A good way to deal with thissituation is to find an ally: either a higherlevel <strong>com</strong>pany executive or an outsideconsultant who has the boss’s ear.Bible-length talking points. Even thebest PR pros sometimes have troubleboiling down message points to workableform. The result is that the executivegets a page full of words andremembers practically none of them.The right formula is simple: three shortheadline points (6-8 words) with examplesand proofs for each. The executiveshould know enough about the businessto fill in the details.Banning tough questions. A clientonce instructed me to get her executiveready to handle anything the media firesat him “but don’t ask him any toughquestions.” That’s like saying “we’llhave a couple of light practices on a softballfield to get ready to play the NewYork Yankees.” The trainer’s job is tofire all kinds of questions at the executiveand help that person find, andsmoothly deliver, the answers.Crowding. Too many people in atraining session means none will getenough practice to be truly effective.Guest ColumnWe re<strong>com</strong>mend no more than a fourto-oneratio for a full day of training— one instructor for every four executives— and no more than one or, atmost, two people in a half-day session.It’s false economy to do otherwise.As for media trainers:Too few practice interviews. Somemedia trainers spend too much timelecturing and not enough time drillingthe client with a variety of interviews.The lecture and message developmentportion of the program should usuallytake up no more than a quarter of theallotted training time.Unreasonable time constraints.Media trainers should never agree toless than half a day for an initial session,and should lobby hard for atleast a full day. The job can’t be doneright in an hour or two. The worstmistake a media trainer can make is tosend someone out not fully preparedto succeed in a media situation.Bad advice. Some trainers shouldsimply be doing something else for aliving, especially those who say,“ignore the reporter’s questions; justgo directly to your points.” The problemwith that approach is a loss ofcredibility. People see through it.Every question must be satisfied insome form, briefly where possible,before bridging to the interviewee’sagenda.Too much emphasis on cosmetics.While appearance is important, thissubject should be dealt with quickly.The essentials are: dress appropriately,sit up straight, smile, make good eyecontact with the interviewer, and usegestures. Once that has been said, thefocus should be on content, smoothdelivery, and making the executive<strong>com</strong>fortable in the media environment.I’ve left the most important bit ofadvice for last, as it involves everyone.Rehearse before speaking. Do adry run before any major interview,bringing back the media trainer if thesituation is tough. Even in a crisis,when things are chaotic and time islimited, a practice interview or mediabriefing is essential to ensure the rightthings get said and the wrong onesdon’t. If you question the value ofthis practice just turn on your TV andstart critiquing. AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM 39


OPINIONPRSA needs big hitters at the topBy Kevin FoleyWatching the British Open, acurious idea struck me. What ifthe Royal & Ancient Golf Clubhad the world’s best golfers take a multiplechoice test rather than play 72 holes of<strong>com</strong>petitive golf on the St. Andrews links?The test mightKevin Foley ownsKEF Media Assocs.,Inc., an Atlantabasedproducer anddistributor of electronicpublicity.include questionslike, When playingout of a bunker, youshould always a)close the club face;b) be sure to test thesand with your club,or c) open yourstance and club faceand swing through.The highest score onthe test would winthe title of ChampionGolfer of the Year.An absurdnotion, I know, for in golf as in any other<strong>com</strong>petitive endeavor, the real test isalways taken on the field of play. If you putthe time in, pay your dues, gain experienceand be<strong>com</strong>e good at what you do, your successwill be evident to everyone.You will rise up the leader board anddevelop a reputation as a winner.The PR business is no exception.Looking at the CVs of the top people in ourindustry, anyone can see these pros are successfulfor a reason.Yet the Public Relations Society ofAmerica does require a multiple choice testand you may not be a PRSA board memberwithout passing it. Your stature in theindustry, your achievements, your reputation,and the victories you’ve won on thefield of play mean less than the title “APR”after your name.Since starting my PR career some 30years ago, I have never been very involvedwith PRSA beyond the few meetings Ihave attended or addressed. PRSA seemeda convivial place to meet fellow professionalsand perhaps network, but I wassimply too busy building my business tobe<strong>com</strong>e very involved in Society activities.I am pretty certain that if I thoughtPRSA was truly relevant, I might be moreengaged. I suspect many others in the PRindustry might agree with me.My impression seemed to be validatedlast week when I went to the Georgia chapterof the PRSA’s luncheon to hear what thetwo PRSA national leaders had to sayabout the many pressing issues facing ourindustry. Surely Gary McCormick, APR,PRSA’s Board Chairman, and Bill Murray,its President and Chief Operating Officer,would have observations and insights ofvalue to our city’s PR practitioners.Instead, after introducing himself andMurray by saying — without a hint ofirony — “you probably don’t know whowe are,” the gathering of 155 professionalswas treated to a lengthy sales presentationby McCormick on the virtues of partneringwith the <strong>com</strong>pany for which he works.Mr. Murray chose not to speak at all.This isn’t leadership. This is two nicegentlemen enjoying an excellent adventureGuest Columnand it’s why I never joined PRSA. Untilmembers understand that our industry willbe relevant when we have Society leaderswho are relevant, it just doesn’t seem like agood use of my time.The top people at the Society should beleading PR professionals, passionate andoutspoken, tirelessly advocating the valueof public relations and always seekingways to expand our industry’s influence.Not only should they appear before everySociety chapter to discuss relevant PRindustry issues, they should address leadershipforums around the world; gatheringsof CEOs and CMOs, academicians, topgovernment leaders, and other importantaudiences. Their writings promoting ourindustry should appear in influential mediaall the time. And most important of all,they should always be available to thepress.Jack O’Dwyer, arguably the most importantand respected voice in the business,has been a critic of PRSA’s lack of transparencyfor many years. The current PRSAleadership has sought to marginalizeO’Dwyer rather than engage him. Theyseem to believe nobody pays attention toO’Dwyer and they couldn’t be morewrong.It would appear O’Dwyer’s efforts havefinally borne fruit. Some 350 influentialPR industry leaders have formed theCommittee for a Democratic PRSA andwon the backing of 65 leading PR executivesincluding at least one sitting PRSAboard member and Richard Edelman, wholobbied the PRSA board last month forremoval of the test requirement.Let’s hope PRSA delegates and membersare watching and listening. FARA News NEW FOREIGN AGENTS REGISTRATION ACT FILINGSBelow is a list of select <strong>com</strong>panies that have registered with the U.S. Department of Justice, FARA Registration Unit,Washington, D.C., in order to <strong>com</strong>ply with the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938, regarding their consulting and <strong>com</strong>municationswork on behalf of foreign principals, including governments, political parties, organizations, and individuals.Blue Star Strategies, LLC, Washington, D.C., registered June 10, 2010 for Ministry of Coordination of Production, Employment andCompetitiveness; Republic of Ecuador, Quito, Ecuador, regarding providing consulting services to support the outreach of the principal to the Executiveand Legislative branches of government, as well as the private sector in the United States.Edelman, Chicago, Ill., registered June 10, 2010 for Bombardier Inc., Montreal, Quebec, Canada, regarding increasing awareness and understanding ofBombardier among institutional investors, redefining the Bombardier story to reflect strengths in aerospace and transportation and demonstrating the <strong>com</strong>panyʼsleadership in the technology of transport. NEW LOBBYING DISCLOSURE ACT FILINGSBelow is a list of select <strong>com</strong>panies that have registered with the Secretary of the Senate, Office of Public Records, and the Clerk of theHouse of Representatives, Legislative Resource Center, Washington, D.C., in order to <strong>com</strong>ply with the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995.For a <strong>com</strong>plete list of filings, visit http://sopr.senate.gov.Broydrick & Associates, Washington, D.C., registered July 12, 2010 for National Catastrophe Adjusters, Inc., Fishers, Ind., regarding effortsto win a contract assisting with disaster <strong>com</strong>pensations for those affected by the Gulf oil spill.Capital Legislative Strategies, LLC, Washington, D.C., registered July 14, 2010 for Renaissance Technologies LLC, New York, N.Y., regardingfinancial regulations and legislation related to hedge funds.Crossroads Strategies, LLC, Washington, D.C., registered July 2, 2010 for Mars, Inc., McLean, Va., regarding issues related to the FY2011Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration Appropriations Act.40AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM


Firm protests Iraq PR awardFulcra Worldwide, the PR firm that has worked with theU.S. military in Iraq and Afghanistan, filed a protest June25 after the Department of the Army awarded a lucrativePR pact for Iraq to <strong>com</strong>petitor SOS International of Reston, Va.,last month.Fulcra, formerly known as Lincoln Group and, earlier, Iraqex,filed the protest over the $2.5M pact on June 25 and the case isunder review, according to the Government Accountability Office.A decision is expected by October. The contract cannotproceed until then.An RFP was issued in May for the eight-month strategic <strong>com</strong>municationscontract in Iraq, covering media advising, monitoring,content production and other PR-related tasks for the Armyas the U.S. winds down its presence following the 2004 invasion.Fulcra was the incumbent for the work, although SOS hasconducted similar assignments for the military.SOS has declined to <strong>com</strong>ment on the pact.Fulcra once employed Gen. Stanley McChrystal’s formerpress aide, Duncan Boothby, who resigned in the wake of therecent Rolling Stone scandal. The firm, which has changedhands since its inception, has apparently changed its name againto Strategic Social, according to its website. An email has notyet been returned.Matt Bigge, a former Army Ranger and Harvard BusinessSchool grad, is CEO of Fulcra, which has offices in Virginia andSilicon Valley. Offshore drillers tap D.C.lobbying repsAconsortium of shallow-water Gulf drilling <strong>com</strong>panieshas hired the Livingston Group and Bracewell &Giuliani, the Washington, D.C., government and publicrelations shops, to defend their operations amid the Macondowell disaster.The group, led by Houston-based Hercules Offshore, is usingthe moniker Shallow Water Energy Security Coalition. The <strong>com</strong>panies,which operate mainly in shallow water and drill fornatural gas, are fighting for their operations as the Obama administrationhas banned deepwater drilling and considers otheraction.Frank Maisano, former Hill press secretary and a media andstrategic <strong>com</strong>munications consultant at Bracewell & Giuliani,and George Felcyn, a PR veteran and Director of GovernmentAffairs at B&E, are working with the coalition.Bob Livingston, the former House Speaker-designate, alongwith former Congressmen Allen Martin and Steve Kreseski areon the Hercules team, according to a federal filing dated June22, which also includes other drilling <strong>com</strong>panies SeahawkDrilling, Rowan Companies and Ensco.“Shallow-water drilling has distinct physical and operationalcharacteristics that make it safe and reliable,” John Rynd, presidentand CEO of Hercules, said in a statement issued on behalfof the coalition.Hornbeck Offshore and Delta Towing are other <strong>com</strong>paniesinvolved.Hercules said that Chevron is trying to break a lease contractfor a Hercules rig in the Gulf in the wake of the federal government’ssix-month moratorium on Gulf drilling. Conservative PAC taps<strong>com</strong>ms. headAmerican Crossroads, a growing conservative politicalaction <strong>com</strong>mittee, has brought in Jonathan Collegiofrom the National Association of Broadcasters to direct<strong>com</strong>munications.The “527” political organization has vowed to spend millionson the midterm elections with a stated goal of raising $52 millionby the fall. Among its leadership is D.C. PR pro Jim Dyke,who runs his own shop after a <strong>com</strong>munications director stint atthe RNC during Presdent George W. Bush’s re-election campaign.Romney campaign alum Carl Forti is its newly mintedpolitical director.Collegio led NAB’s $1.2 billion campaign for the transition todigital TV and was press secretary for the National RepublicanCongressional Committee during the 2006 midterm election cycle.The group currently has Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) in itscrosshairs and kicked off a $120,000 ad in Nevada hitting themajority leader for “bailouts, government takeovers and spiralingdebt.”Former Bush aides Karl Rove and Ed Gillespie are helping thegroup raise money and its president said they have about $30million in pledges.AC raised $8.5 million in June. DI adds Shell, Hill vetsRobert Burley, a senior <strong>com</strong>munications executive forRoyal Dutch Shell overseas, has moved to Direct Impact,the grassroots PA unit of Burson-Marsteller, as anExecutive VP.DI has also added Jordan Stoick, Communications Directorfor Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), as a VP.Burley, an Oxford grad, worked in several global outposts forShell, including Melbourne, The Hague, Calgary and Londonover eight years, most recently as Senior External AffairsAdvisor and practice leader for government and media relationsin Australia.Stoick was previously Press Secretary for the SenateRepublican Conference, Rep. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.)and ex-Rep. Bob Beauprez (R-Colo.). In the DI vein, he wasgrassroots field director for then-Rep. John Thune’s successful2002 campaign for the Senate.DI and B-M are part of WPP. AUGUST 2010 WWW.ODWYERPR.COM 41


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