ICCO President and Chief Executive at Communications Directors Forum in Davos

Maxim Behar, ICCO President and Francis Ingham, ICCO Chief Executive, were today leading participants at the annual World Communications Forum in Davos.
ICCO is an official partner of World Communications Forum, which this year gathered more than 250 representatives from 35 countries at the Congress Centre in the Swiss mountain resort.
Behar and Ingham met with representatives from the Ukraine, Armenia, China, Turkey, Russia, Malaysia, Morocco, Jordan, South Africa, Egypt, and other countries, to discuss future cooperation with ICCO.
Speaking within a panel discussion, ICCO President Maxim Behar said:”The world is changing fast, our business even faster, and as we unite 32 countries within ICCO, we must be the leaders of these changes. We must make the case for the necessity of honest and transparent businesses. Soon the three main areas of modern communications – public relations, advertising, and digital will merge, and PR must be the leader of this new world.”
ICCO was recently recognised as Best International Association at the Association Excellence Awards at a Gala ceremony in London, and both ICCO representatives in Davos received congratulations on that occasion.

PRCA to launch new professional association in Middle East and North Africa

The Public Relations Consultants Association (PRCA), the biggest PR association in Europe representing and controling over 18,000 Public Relations people has actually revealed the launch of PRCA MENA (PRCA Middle East and North Africa). PRCA MENA will be the expert subscription association to represent PR consultancies, in-house interactions groups, and individuals in the United Arab Emirates, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco and Egypt.

PRCA MENA will be co-chaired by MENA PR market leaders Loretta Ahmed, CEO Middle East, Grayling, and Mohamed Al Ayed, CEO, TRACCS. Establishing members consist of leading MENA consultancies Golin MENA, Memac Ogilvy, Fleishman Europe, Q Communications, MCS Action – the UAE branch and Middle East center of the Action Global Communications network, Sept Public Relations, Active (Digital.

The association will enable members to share best practices, participate in world class training, network with like-minded professionals, and assist to raise requirements in the industry. Working together with ICCO (International Communications Consultancy Organisation), PRCA MENA will offer a global structure within which its members can develop global networks and links to London.

Loretta Ahmed stated: “I am delighted to be given the chance to co-chair this excellent brand-new resource for the Public Relations industry in MENA. As a Fellow of the PRCA I am completely knowledgeable about its successes in the UK, and believe that this move will help the market here to grow, to enhance its professionalism, and to enhance its profitability.”.

Mohamed Al Ayed included, “PRCA and TRACCS discovered comparable synergies, passions and a vision for the development and advancement of the PR market in MENA in 2013 and have been working together carefully given that then. There is plenty for us to discover and plenty to impart to our international PR counterparts, and PRCA MENA will intend to facilitate this exchange of knowledge and know-how.”.

Francis Ingham, PRCA Director General & ICCO Chief Executive said: “I’m really happy to be announcing the latest PRCA leap forward– this time into the Middle East and North Africa under the leadership of Loretta Ahmed and Mohamed Al Ayed.

“By developing a new, lively association throughout the entire area, we will bring PR experts even better together, and raise standards even higher. The link with the PRCA in the UK, and its management of ICCO in 32 countries, will make the area fantastically well connected with the international Public Relations neighborhood.”.

The launch event will happen on March 8th in Dubai and PRCA Partner YouGov will remain in attendance, providing essential understandings into the interactions landscape of the MENA area.

Boilerplate

Who we are: Founded in 1969, the PRCA is a UK-based PR membership body, operating in 45 countries around the world. We represent in excess of 20,000 people across the whole range of the PR industry. The PRCA promotes all aspects of public relations and internal communications work, helping teams and individuals maximise the value they deliver to clients and organisations. www.prca.org.uk

 

 

From talent, to creativity, to taxis: The learnings from ICCO Summit

Written by Ben Smith+

Like every business sector, public relations has some challenges at the moment, but what makes communications such an exciting place to work in right now is that, for me anyway, the opportunities outweigh the threats.

The issue is that if PR doesn’t respond to and deliver on these opportunities, we’ll miss the boat. By that I don’t mean that the public relations sector will disappear; I don’t think that will happen, but we won’t reach our potential in terms of the breath and importance of work that we do.

The recent ICCO summit in Milan was a senior meet up of some of the top agency talent in the world, and the challenges affecting PR consultancies globally were much discussed. I interviewed ICCO CEO Francis Ingham, immediate past president David Gallagher and Avian Media’s Nitin Mantri:

Here are my takeouts and learnings from my time in Milan:

# Expect accelerated change to the type of work PR agencies do and the way they are structured

Renee Wilson, global chief client officer at MSL, talked to delegates about the changes happening in PR firms, including the external influences of the PR ecosystem.

The influences of the PR Ecosystem on agencies:

There is a danger that the rapid changes in public relations result in an overly complex approach to communications, but good communications still need to be simple and easily understood. This slide highlights the challenge and opportunity of technology in public relations:

# The challenge of finding enough talent. For me this comes down to some simple numbers. If your agency is growing at 15% and you have a staff turnover of 15%, if you have a 100-person agency then you are going to have to find 30 new people. That’s 30% of your workforce and that is going to be difficult to do.  Especially when most of your competitors are doing the same.

The root cause of the problem is actually positive, but the solution is challenging. Especially when the skill sets of the people PR agencies need to employ are changing so rapidly and the methods that PR firms used to use to recruit cost effectively, for example specialist job boards, no longer work.

I suspect, in fact it’s obvious, that there is not a Eureka! solution to this, but it probably includes the following:

  1. Treat your current staff better.
  2. Retain spare capacity. If the business can afford it, hang on to your good people even if you lose the odd client.
  3. Promote from within, a sure way to retain your best staff.
  4. Invest in your agency brand.
  5. Invest in a training scheme that has a structure, is valued by staff and positively incentivises people to stay with you.
  6. Hire more graduates; you’ll lose some, but you’ll keep some.
  7. Be nicer to recruiters.
  8. Do better client work. If your employees are proud of their work, they’ll be happier and less likely to leave.
  9. Get better clients. If you’ve got a client who treats your people like shite, sack the client.
  10. Sort out your flexible working programme. Make working at your firm easier for parents than your rivals do.

# Creativity

For many clients creativity is vital. Creativity in PR is different in the way it manifests itself from creativity in other areas of the marcoms mix. That said, creative concepts that use big ideas to tie an integrated, cross channel campaign together are clearly the way to go. That’s inarguable and I don’t think it matters whether the PR firm comes up with the idea, the ad guys, the clients or whoever.

But I would issue one note of caution for PR – I would very be careful about defining creativity in public relations as the same as creativity in advertising. For me, very often (not always) creativity in PR campaigns is a different type of creative thinking than I see in advertising campaigns. With that in mind, Cannes is a great scheme to be involved in. I’m not suggesting not entering it, but global agency heads seem almost obsessed by it. It is dangerous to let success/or failure at any awards ceremony define your business, let alone your profession! So I’d encourage PR people to be confident about their creative credentials, not paranoid.

# Authenticity

My favourite presentation of the summit was Guto Harri’s talk around authenticity. He discussed the need for communications to be authentic, real and true. Guto regarded Tony Blair as one of the world’s great communicators who in the end abused the art of communications by not being authentic.

There is much bleating about the importance of ethics in PR at the moment (in the UK anyway) but as this is such an obvious debate, it quickly becomes frustrating;  I just don’t believe PR people are en masse dishonest. Sure there are a few bad eggs, but that is the same in every profession. A far more interesting, less obvious and helpful discussion is the need for communications to be authentic.

For example, in the image to the right, former UK Foreign Secretary William Hague was a serious man who would never have worn that cap, so the PR guy who is responsible for that shot (many years ago) made an error because the image is not authentic. It is not believable.

Guto believes communicators today still make these errors, and they do the reputation of the profession, their clients and themselves no good whatsoever. So if your next campaign isn’t authentic and true to the values and capabilities of the product or firm you represent, don’t do it – because it won’t work!

# Taxis

Hailing a cab from the street in Milan, as far as I can tell, is impossible. Just doesn’t work. I don’t think they are allowed to stop. So don’t even bother. The taxi ranks are equally depressing; no taxis ever turn up. If you want a cab in Milan, order it from your hotel. Works a treat. Uber worked well for some people out there, not for me.

Article published on: PRmoment.com

ICCO Summit: It’s ‘game on’!

Written by: Nicola Nel, Managing Direct, Atmosphere

Print@NicolaN3

I have just returned from the International Communications Consultancy Organisation (ICCO) Global Summit in Milan, Italy. What an experience! As an agency owner, I’m rejuvenated and inspired after sharing the stage with industry leaders from large networks such as Hill+Knowlton, Ketchum, Ogilvy and Burson Marsteller, to feisty independents such as fischerAppelt from Germany, Shine Communications in the UK, Levanter Africa from Kenya and Cannes award-winning Swedish PR agency Cohn and Wolfe.

By Nicola Nel, founder and MD of Atmosphere Communications

All over the world it is the same. To quote the inspiring David Gallagher, outgoing ICCO president: “Clients want more for less. Good people are hard to find and harder to keep. Competition is relentless and from unexpected quarters. And technology continues to disrupt business models.” So it is ‘game on’, whether you operate in Moscow, Seattle or Cape Town.

These are my top eight take-outs:

  • The wonderful world of PR is changing, rapidly. A few years ago our worlds were divided into advertising or third-party endorsement via editorial ink. But now the web has changed the rules. Companies and brands who develop relationships directly with consumers are the ones who are winning.
  • There is global optimism about opportunities in the PR industry. Agencies are tapping into marketing budgets with digital and tech driving the growth. Good PR companies are re-inventing as communications players using measurement and analytics to drive change.
  • If you can’t measure it, don’t do it. Every campaign can be measured and should. The new Barcelona Principles provide guidance on measuring integrated campaigns.
  • Interconnected strategies rule. Great campaigns that lead to business results for clients all have the following in common: they balance insights, creativity and engagement, and use at least two or more channels.
  • Hire for attitude, train for skills. Agencies – and companies all over the world – all sing the same refrain. Talented professionals are hard to find and we keep on fishing in the same pond. Look for people who think differently, as diversity creates creativity.
  • Solving a human problem creates meaning. Marketers are learning from PR people that brands that apply their expertise to solve a human problem – and therefore don’t only push their product – create a connection and meaning in a noisy market.
  • Reputation advisers are growing in importance globally. The 24/7-connected consumer demands immediate responses when things go wrong. The need to protect a brand – corporate, personal or political – means public relations experts are in high demand.
  • Media relations are waning in certain markets. Paid and owned channels dominate. There is an ethical debate emerging, however – are consumers being made aware that the content in their favourite ‘independent’ publication or broadcast outlet has been paid for by the brand?

It is a very exciting time to be in our industry. My team and I are looking forward to making the necessary changes to ensure that Atmosphere, and our clients, remain focused on the future.

Maxim Behar Letter to the ICCO Summit Attendees

Dear all,

Let me express my sincere thanks to you for coming to the ICCO Summit in Milan and actively contributing to the Global PR event of the year. Your presence was significant and I really believe that the presentations you heard, the contacts you made and the time you spent in Milan were really valuable for your business.

Nowadays, as you perfectly know, our business is changing every day and the communications industry is among the fastest developing in the world. This requires from all of us completely new qualities, management abilities, knowledge and practices. That is why, in ICCO we are strongly determined to be the leaders in our business and to spread globally the best, the newest and the most comprehensive achievements in the industry among our members, supporters and partners.

My request to you is whenever you have any ideas to share or stories to tell, contact me anytime. I look forward to see you again soon and hope to see many of you at the ICCO Global Awards on 26 November in London.

All the best,
Maxim Behar
ICCO President

m: +359 888 50 31 13
e: max@m3bg.com

Augure’s Summary of the ICCO Global Summit, Milan 2015

augure2

Written by: Irene Cau, Country Manager Augure Italia

Two weeks on from the ICCO Summit 2015 in Milan, at Augure we’d like to share with you the top 5 outcomes we’ve drawn from this amazing event and some resources that will help you to implement these ideas at your agency:

  1. Agencies need to change their structure to face industry changes: Rethink the model, hire differently, own the sandbox  (via Fred Cook)
  2. We’ve got amazing examples of how to communicate concepts without words, just with images (via Candance Kuss)
    • However, sometimes there aren’t enough internal resources to create eye-catching and visually attractive content. If this is your case, check it out this post in which we share some easy-to-use tools to create visual content.
  3. Creative work shows 54% more ROI than non-creative work (via Fiorenza Plinio)
  4. Social Media Community Management, multimedia content creation, insight and planning and creativity are all major relevant skills needed by PR Executives. On the other hand, paid media, research and CSR are less relevant skills.
    • If you don’t believe me, here’s an infographic with the main differences between Digital PR and traditional Public Relations
  5. Complexity, costs and time are still major challenges for measuring ROI.
    • Don’t let these challenges stop you from measuring your ROI, download this white paper that shows, step by step, how to create a measurement system for your influencer engagement strategy.

We loved taking part in the ICCO Summit 2015 and seeing you there! If you want to continue talking about how Augure can help you improve your agency’s efficiency, get in touch with us!

Visit the Augure website.

Augure's Summary of the ICCO Global Summit, Milan 2015

augure2 Written by: Irene Cau, Country Manager Augure Italia Two weeks on from the ICCO Summit 2015 in Milan, at Augure we’d like to share with you the top 5 outcomes we’ve drawn from this amazing event and some resources that will help you to implement these ideas at your agency:

  1. Agencies need to change their structure to face industry changes: Rethink the model, hire differently, own the sandbox  (via Fred Cook)
  2. We’ve got amazing examples of how to communicate concepts without words, just with images (via Candance Kuss)
    • However, sometimes there aren’t enough internal resources to create eye-catching and visually attractive content. If this is your case, check it out this post in which we share some easy-to-use tools to create visual content.
  3. Creative work shows 54% more ROI than non-creative work (via Fiorenza Plinio)
  4. Social Media Community Management, multimedia content creation, insight and planning and creativity are all major relevant skills needed by PR Executives. On the other hand, paid media, research and CSR are less relevant skills.
    • If you don’t believe me, here’s an infographic with the main differences between Digital PR and traditional Public Relations
  5. Complexity, costs and time are still major challenges for measuring ROI.
    • Don’t let these challenges stop you from measuring your ROI, download this white paper that shows, step by step, how to create a measurement system for your influencer engagement strategy.
We loved taking part in the ICCO Summit 2015 and seeing you there! If you want to continue talking about how Augure can help you improve your agency’s efficiency, get in touch with us! Visit the Augure website.

The Swedish model – How to turn rookies into Cannes winners

Written by: Joseph Borenstein, Cohn & Wolfe Sweden Print@J_Borenstein
Linnéa Rinäs, Cohn & Wolfe Sweden Print@linnearinas

We were invited to the ICCO Global Summit 2015 to talk about our winning campaign from Cannes Young Lions this summer. However, since talking about one single campaign for 30 minutes gets kind of dull, we decided to  broaden the theme and name our seminar “The Swedish model – How to turn rookies into Cannes Winners”.

In many markets, the PR business is very hierarchical and it takes many years for a junior consultant to even meet the client. Not to mention taking own initiatives, like pitching on a new client or managing a big account. For us, that has never been an issue. Our CEO has never been afraid of letting us try, letting us fail, and letting us succeed.

We therefore decided to share with the audience a few Swedish-inspired tips for how they themselves can turn their rookies into Cannes Winners:

  • Throw away the titles! We would never have won our awards if we would have been stuck in the blogger-email, journalist-calling, social media-copy-trap for 2 years. Which is easy if you’re bound by titles and official work descriptions. In Sweden, we dropped a lot of the formal structures at companies in the 70’s, and we sure don’t miss them. What junior consultants may lack in experience, they compensate with in curiosity – let them not only be part of creative processes, but sometimes even lead them!
  • Mix & Match! A wannabe engineer with a political junkie. A sports geek and a fashionista. Unexpected combinations of people can be pretty awesome!
  • Enable us! Our boss sometimes say that the least she can do is to not stand in our way. That might sound harsh, but I’d say it’s crucial to believe and trust in your younger team members. They want do things differently than you? Explore a whole new way of doing PR? Let them try! They might fail from time to time, but so what? That’s how people learn and grow, both as individuals and as businesses. And that’s how you get to keep your talent past the famous 3-year “I quit”.
  • Let us have fun! It’s been proved that millennials want a fun and social workplace, and that doesn’t mean we’re slackers. One of the reasons we work at Cohn & Wolfe is that it is hard to imagine a more fun place to be. Our colleagues are the goofiest, funnest and sweetest people we’ve ever met, and sometimes our open floor plan feels more like a schoolyard than an office. Does that mean we win less new clients, score less coverage, or are less productive? On the contrary. It just means we have fun along the way.

We came to Milan not only to tell the story of how we won Cannes Young Lions, but also to encourage agency leaders  to nurture and take care of the talent they have within their agencies. Because we’re pretty sure that every single agency has the potential of winning a Young PR Lion  – by just following our tips.

Next year, we’re going be too old to compete in Cannes Young Lions, but we’ll be standing on the side, cheering for the next generation of Cohn & Wolfers to get their chance to shine. And we’re looking forward to seeing not only all agency leaders from the ICCO Summit, but their junior PR-talents as well.

See you in Cannes!

Eight things you need to know from the ICCO Global Summit in Milan

Written by: Tanya Hughes

Print@TanyaTalkPR

Over 150 communications and PR leaders from all around the world gathered in Milan last week to attend the International Communications Consultancy Organisation (ICCO) Global Summit. This year’s theme was “Food For Thought” and explored how consultancies and communicators are surviving and thriving in our changing world. SERMO president, Tanya Hughes, joined the heads of some of the biggest independent agency networks for the “Going Global 2.0″ panel discussion. Here are her top eight take outs from the conference on the state of the global PR industry:

1

The two biggest drivers of change in the PR industry are the rise of social media and PR’s increased presence at Cannes Lions – the world authority on creativity in communication, still dominated by ad agencies, but changing fast.

2

AVEs RIP! PR must deliver business results. Ask yourself if your account teams know the share price of their clients.

3

Corporate and brand reputation are now indivisible – marketing and communications are converging. It’s estimated that 60% of market value can be attributed to reputation.

4

And the CEO’s reputation matters. Successful CEOs must now fulfil a public engagement mandate. For PR agencies too, the CEO must embody the brand.

5

Agencies need to restructure to attract young talent – millennials are demanding: they want best possible technology, equality and diversity, customisation, rewards beyond salary, mentoring, a ‘noble’ purpose, recognition access to leadership and empowerment.

6

Over 400 hours of video are uploaded per minute on to YouTube. To have stand out your content needs to appeal to a community (spark and be part of a conversation), engage (hit on a passion point) and have authentic value (entertainment, inspiration, education).

7

Video series are a big trend on YouTube.

8

PR agencies give 20% of their work away. They like to be liked, but the more they give clients, the more they’ll want. That means Fridays are free!

Click here to read more on SERMO

Connecting PR Women Around The World #agencypublisher

Written by: David Gallagher

dgPrint@TBoneGallagher

GLOBAL WOMEN IN PR To Launch At ICCO Summit In Milan

I have learned a few things about the PR business over the years: it’s global, it’s highly interconnected and it’s powered by women.

The global part has happened recently, with PR consultancy now thriving around the world and contributing significantly to business, government and civil society in economies just about everywhere.

The connectivity goes without saying; every industry event is a homecoming and a reminder of how small the PR world is.  We all owe our careers to a surprisingly small number of people, and as anyone who has ever attended a PR conference or awards dinner, it’s hard to be heard over the buzz (roar?) of memories shared and friendships re-established.

And the powered by women bit – that’s a sign of our collective strength and a reflection of work yet to do.  It’s no surprise that a service industry built on empathy, insight and, well, communicating, would be one in which women thrive.  But while many PR agencies are largely populated by females, the numbers in senior management positions remains disproportionately underrepresented.

The International Communications Consultancy Organisation (ICCO) has enjoyed considerable success in recent years in all three areas – nurturing international expansion of the consultancy business, creating opportunities to network and collaborate and, now, playing a small role in helping PR women meet, mentor and shape the future of the industry.

A new organization – Global Women In PR (GWPR) – committed to furthering the industry by helping women meet, share, mentor and shape our future.  GWPR will launch at the ICCO Global PR Summit in Milan, Italy this week, and here’s the official announcement:

Milan, October 6th 2015 – A new international association, linking independent networking groups of senior women working in PR, is being launched at the forthcoming ICCO (International Communications Consultancy Organisation) Global Summit in Milan (October 8th – 9th).

Global Women in PR (GWPR) has been formed to act as an umbrella organisation to enable groups of senior PR women worldwide to come together to share ideas, contacts and experiences and to campaign on the major issues directly affecting women working in the PR industry today.

The development of GWPR is fully supported by ICCO and their President David Gallagher had this to say about the new initiative “women are the heart, soul and mind of PR consultancy all over the world, and we at ICCO are pleased to be associated with GWPR’s ambitious global plans.”

Following the recent success of Women in PR (WPR) in the UK and its resurgence as a significant and powerful networking organization; former Joint-Presidents Angela Oakes and Susan Hardwick felt that the time was right to encourage other countries to form their own WPR associations.

“The widely reported gender pay gap and the lack of women in the boardroom are two major issues which are not limited to the UK PR industry, but affect those working in PR worldwide. Coupled with what we believe to be an important vehicle for senior women to meet in a non-competitive environment, WPR also offers its members a chance to help shape the future of the industry and to act as mentors to the next generation. We want our successful networking blueprint in the UK to be rolled out globally and are taking the first steps to make this happen,” commented Angela and Susan.

The launch of GWPR is being supported by Business Wire (a Berkshire Hathaway company) and a major sponsor of WPR in the UK. “We are delighted to be supporting this important launch,” said Kim Deonanan Business Wire Regional VP, Northern & Central Europe.

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David is a senior partner and CEO for Ketchum in Europe, and outgoing president of ICCO.