The Productivity Commission is starting what will be the sixth major inquiry into aged care funding – a policy area which has become a no go area because of poor initial communications.
Come in Spinner: The hardest advice to get accepted
Probably the hardest job for a PR adviser – whether the client is a politician or a CEO – is to get them to mouth the phrases: ‘I don’t know’, ‘I was wrong’ and ‘I need to think about that’.
Come in Spinner: Act 107 scene 36 in the miner’s serial campaign
From the recent subtle shift in the mining sector’s anti-resource rent tax someone, somewhere deep in the mining lobby, has suddenly remembered the first anti-land rights campaigns.
Come in Spinner: Rudd and Abbott searching for PR’s holy grail
Throughout Australia – and the world – there are hordes of PR people, think tanks, politicians and others who spend their days and nights thinking about the holy grail of PR: how to frame issues, events, products and ideas in ways which set the agenda for debate and action.
Commemorating Port’s industrial maritime heritage
A discussion paper prepared in May 2010 on behalf of local community groups.
Come in Spinner: PR goes social media
At the annual Victorian Women in PR lunch last week one of the speakers mentioned that Ashton Kutcher was the number one Twitterer in the world.
Come in Spinner: Put out more flags
In Alan Bennett’s play The History Boys one of the characters says: “The best way to forget something is to commemorate it.” Nothing exemplifies that more than the way that Anzac Day commemoration has resulted in Australians either forgetting what they knew about Gallipoli, or never learning the truth.
Farewell to the Collections Council of Australia
Delivered at the function to mark the closing of the Collections Council of Australia in April 2010.
The communications revolution
Delivered to the Public Relations Institute of Australia's Communication Revolution! conference, April, 2010.
Come in Spinner: The sounds of silence
What do Melbourne’s centre of pub music, The Tote, and Arthur Conan Doyle’s reference to the dog that didn’t bark have in common?