15 Jul 2005
In spite of an economic slowdown, travel remains a vibrant business in the UK. Government figures show that 41 million of us took a foreign holiday in 2003, one million up on the year before. But the glossy consumer travel magazine market is anything but an easy ride. The Association of British Travel ...
01 Jul 2005
| by Anthony Hilton, City commentator on London's Evening Standard, anthony.hilton@haynet.com
This Government has a reputation for spin and the presentation of policy too often seems to take...government and private sector. But the Government has lost, whatever the verdict, by having its inner ...
01 Jul 2005
| by Ian Hall
-political media, such as women's mags (hence her NatMags link), with government messages.
She lambasts the 'tendency for people (in government) to say "We got it on The Ten O'Clock News, that's that announcement ...
and the public as 'fairly brutal' and says government has a growing desire for 'direct communications ...
01 Jul 2005
| by Dan Bloch
, gambling organisations, technology suppliers, government and analysts.
The commission has used HBL Media ...
01 Jul 2005
| by Dan Bloch
compensation' against the Government. Railtrack entered administration in 2001 after the Government cut off its ...
17 Jun 2005
| by Sarah Robertson
It is understood to have held preliminary discussions with a number of agencies for a combined PR and advertising contract but has yet to hold a formal pitch.
The Egyptian government also wants to raise awareness of its investment in security and its improvement schemes, such as the clear ...
13 May 2005
| by Sarah Robertson
, central and western Continental Europe, currently managed by six-year incumbent GCI. The second brief ...
29 Apr 2005
The Association of London Government (ALG) is auditing its comms function as it prepares to lobby
08 Apr 2005
| by Richard Cann
for Transport.
The organisation's nature as a government agency led to 'fairly heavy reactive' PR activity ...
01 Apr 2005
| by Ian Hall
The 54-year-old comms chief for European football's governing body is based in Switzerland but is in England to watch a brace of Champions League games.
Momentarily it seems unbecoming for such a distinguished man (his CV takes in the European Commission and United Nations; his education is staggeringly ...