PRSA Colorado Announces 2017 Board

PRSA Colorado announced its 2017 Board of Directors:

  • President: Renee Robinson, APR, director, corporate communications, Ball Corporation
  • Past-President: Nicole Yost, founder and president, Fyn Public Relations
  • President-Elect: Amy Sperber, APR, director/employee communications, Charles Schwab
  • Treasurer: Jerry Brown, APR, independent practitioner
  • Secretary: Suzanne Trantow, corporate communications consultant, Aguilar PR
  • Teresa Dougherty, APR, strategic communications consultant, Ledermark Communications
  • Elisabeth Monaghan, APR, consultant, Monaghan Communications
  • Diane Mulligan, APR, president & CEO, M&C Communications
  • Stacey Sepp, APR, founder and principal, Xstatic Public Relations
  • Elise Bishop, communications specialist, The WhiteWave Foods Company
  • Bill Doughty, APR, principal/consultant, Engaging Communications
  • Michelle Ellis, partner, Orapin Marketing + Public Relations
  • Kelly Janhunen, senior account director & partner, Linhart Public Relations
  • Quinn Kelsey, account supervisor, Olson Engage
  • Jessica Sidener, director of communications/programs/partnerships, Arapahoe Library District

The board members were elected by the membership at the organization’s annual meeting and terms run Jan. 1 – Dec. 31.

2016 PR Disasters – The Finalists

I joined KOA NewsRadio’s April Zesbaugh recently for my annual list of 2016’s biggest PR disasters, and I wanted to share the complete list of the year’s finalists:

Olympic swimmer Ryan Lochte, perpetually overshadowed by Michael Phelps, finally finds the spotlight for all the wrong reasons.

An allegedly inattentive Tesla driver gives the company its first fatal auto-pilot accident.

A viral video shows an employee of Kellogg’s urinating on a Rice Krispies production line.

The lack of diversity among nominees spurs the #OscarsSoWhite protest. In response, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences selects comedian Chris Rock to host the awards ceremony, who almost immediately draws criticism for mocking Asians.

India’s Tata Motors introduces its exciting new car – the Zica!

Snapchat introduces a Bob Marley “black face” filter to celebrate 4/20. Realizing the publicity bonanza that bad taste can give it, Snapchat then introduces the yellow face filter that offends many Asians.

Today Show host Billy Bush goes from boy wonder to persona non grata at NBC.

There is not a lot that can create bipartisanship in Washington these days, but allegations of price gouging by the maker of the Epi-Pen did just that.

Cinemark tries to make victims of the Aurora Theater shooting pays its legal bills.

Three years ago, Penn State set the gold standard for college athletics PR debacles. An unimpressed Baylor said, “Oh yeah. Watch this.”

Looking to reclaim its position back from Baylor, Penn State chooses to honor disgraced former coach Joe Paterno on the 50th anniversary of his first game.

Scientists discover that Dyson’s hip new hand dryers actually spread germs 190 times more than old-fashioned paper towels.

US Soccer goalie Hope Solo plays the Ugly American to perfection by calling the Swedish team “cowards” after they defeated the US team.

Chipotle tries to change the subject from E.coli after a disastrous 2015, and its Chief Creative Officer takes one for the team by getting arrested as part of a New York City drug ring investigation.

Homelessness, open drug use on the Cherry Creek Trail, violence on the 16th Street Mall and historically high rents all take their toll on Denver’s reputation.

Banks, airlines and cell phone providers are the businesses that people love to hate, and this year Wells Fargo vaulted itself to the top of that list by allegedly creating fraudulent accounts for its customers.

What do Samsung’s mobile phones and washing machines have in common? They both explode.

Miss Teen USA somehow holds on to her title following the discovery of racist tweets. Meanwhile, Joe’s Crab Shack uses photos of lynchings to give its restaurants an authentic decor.

The US Department of Defense asks veterans to repay enlistment bonuses 10 years after they were paid.

Chili’s takes away a veteran’s free meal.

Leading up to the Iowa caucuses, Stanford alumna and presidential candidate Carly Fiorina tweets that she is rooting against her alma mater and for the Iowa Hawkeyes in the Rose Bowl.

Tennis superstar Maria Sharapova is dropped by sponsors after testing positive for a banned substance.

Advertising giant JWT Global’s CEO is accused of sexual harassment. Not to be outdone, the chairman of Saatchi & Saatchi is put on leave for his insensitive gender diversity comments.

Facebook allows advertisers to exclude audiences based on race.

An Indian Wells tennis executive is forced to resign after belittling female players and the Women’s Tennis Association.

George Mason University is horrified when its newly named Antonin Scalia School of Law is being referred to as “ASS Law.”

A Sprint TV commercial shows focus group participants associating T-Mobile service with ghettos.

Analyst Curt Shilling is fired by ESPN for a social media post related to transgender bathrooms.

Both ABC and Michael Strahan incur the wrath of Kelly Ripa when she is blindsided by his departure from the Live with Kelly and Michael show to join Good Morning America.

The University of California at Davis goes to incredible lengths to try to cover up its Pepper Spray-Gate.

The National Football League is accused of trying to influence the results of scientific research through its grants.

A two-year-old is snatched and killed by an alligator at a Disney resort.

England voters looking to make a statement inadvertently vote to leave the European Union.

Jostens gives Denver Broncos defensive coordinator “Wade Peters” his Super Bowl ring.

Uber is sanctioned after it uses a CIA-linked intelligence firm to investigate lawyers and plaintiffs in a suit against the ride-sharing company.

The wife of a Tampa Bay Buccaneers football player tweets about the front office taking care of its “Jew buddies.”

Fox News cans Roger Ailes following allegations of sexual harassment by a number of female employees, including anchors Gretchen Carlson and Megyn Kelly.

The National Football League is forced to cancel its season-opening Hall of Fame game after the painted surfaces of the field become rock-hard.

NBC Olympics announcers Chris Marlowe, Al Trautwig and Dan Hicks take turns offending groups of viewers.

JetBlue sends an unattended 5-year-old to the wrong airport.

Big Sugar commissions Harvard studies to point the finger at fat and away from sugar as the cause of obesity and other health problems.

Skittles unwillingly finds itself at the heart of an immigration debate when Donald Trump’s son uses a bowlful of its candy as a metaphor.

CSG Named a Best Place to Work

Great Place to Work and Fortune have named Denver-based Communications Strategy Group as one of the top 10 Best Workplaces in Advertising & Marketing in its 2016 rankings. This year’s ranking consisted of more than 4,000 employees surveyed about their work experience. Respondents answered questions about how frequently they encounter behaviors that create a great workplace, which include management’s honesty and ethics, camaraderie among employees and fair and respectful treatment and clear expectations from management. This award comes on the heels of CSG being named as a “Best Place to Work” by the Denver Business Journal earlier this year.

Orapin Adds 7 New Clients

Orapin Marketing + Public Relations has added seven new clients to its roster:

  • DEFINE body & mind: A boutique fitness studio combining nutrition, mindfulness and unique fitness offerings will open its first Colorado studio in Denver’s LoHi neighborhood this fall
  • Integrated Work: A consultancy for mission-driven leaders and organizations which provides strategic impact consulting, applied leadership development and peer learning communities to accelerate their impact with measurable results.
  • Thirteenth Floor Entertainment: The 2016 season for Denver’s scariest haunted houses, 13th Floor and The Asylum, runs from mid-September through early November
  • Lawson Adventure ParkColorado’s newest outdoor family playground covering more than 40 acres in Clear Creek County features a variety of activities with lodging accommodations set to open later this fall.
  • LibertiA mission-inspired lifestyle brand creating exquisite jewelry with a meaningful impact to employ and empower U.S. refugees.
  • Franchise Expo WestDenver will soon be the epicenter of small business opportunities as thousands of entrepreneurs gather for the premier franchise event in the western U.S. Oct. 6-8 at the Colorado Convention Center
  • The Confident Parent: A pediatrician’s guide to caring for your little one without losing your joy your mind or yourself. Written by pediatrician and neonatologist Dr. Jane Scott, the book will be released November 1.

Metzger Albee Rebrands as MAPR

Metzger Albee Public Relations announced it is rebranding to the simplified name MAPR and expanding its relationship with Miami-based LINKS WorldGroup. Said president & CEO Doyle Albee:

“After a successful trial program, we have found that MAPR and LINKS complement each other well and are excited to deepen our relationship to service clients in both the U.S. and throughout Central and South America and the Caribbean. The name shift to MAPR continues to honor the strong base founder John Metzger built over a quarter of a century while also signaling the new capabilities we’ve added both here in Colorado and through our relationship with LINKS.”

 

GroundFloor Media Certified as B Corporation

GroundFloor Media has joined Door to Door Organics, Bhakti Chai, Etsy and Ben & Jerry’s, among others, in being certified as a B Corporation.  The certification indicates that a company is striving to meet the highest standards of overall social and environmental performance, transparency and accountability, as well as aspiring to use the power of business to solve social and environmental problems.

R&R Partners Lands State of Colorado Account

The Colorado Department of Natural Resources has selected R&R Partners as its new agency of record for the Colorado Wildlife Council. From R&R:

For the next five years and with an annual option to renew the contract, R&R will work with the Colorado Wildlife Council to bring a 360-degree approach to the overall educational campaign for Hug A Hunter. R&R will be tasked with exploring new and innovative communication touchpoints for the Hug A Hunter effort while educating the Colorado public on how hunting and fishing contribute to wildlife protection and management.

Dovetail Solutions Adds Chief Strategy Officer

dovetail solutions has added Matt Moseley as partner and chief strategy officer. Moseley most recently was with InterMountain Public Affairs and previously served as the communications director for the Colorado State Senate, the press officer for the United States Olympic Committee, and deputy communications director for the White House for the Summit of the Eight (G7 Summit).

The firm also added Lindsey Hall as client services partner and Zara Cooney as client services associate.

Linhart PR Announces Management Changes

Big changes are afoot at one of Denver’s largest and most successful PR firms:

Sharon H. Linhart, founder and managing partner, is transitioning into a new role with our firm that she started 20 years ago, and Paul Raab has been named the new managing partner, effective today. Sharon will remain involved in client service and business development through year-end, while ensuring a smooth transition for our clients and team. Beginning in 2017, she will devote her attention to her long-time passion for community and philanthropic service, as well as corporate board service. Raab, who joined Linhart PR 10 years ago, will take on the leadership role of managing partner, while continuing to serve key clients and overseeing the firm’s long-standing commitment to excellence in client service, teamwork and business performance.

Our firm’s other three partners – Carri ClemensKelly Janhunen and Kelly Womer – remain in their current roles, and our entire team looks forward to tapping the power of communications to solve business challenges and find opportunities for our clients. Later this year, we’ll host an Open House to celebrate our past, present and future together!

Additionally, partner Dawn Doty is leaving the firm to teach public relations at the University of Colorado Boulder’s College of Media, Communication and Information.

 

State of Colorado Study Finds Tough Job Market for PR Majors

Aldo Svaldi at The Denver Post reports:

Colorado’s workforce should grow twice as fast as the rest of the country through 2024, with many of those new jobs coming in higher-paying, knowledge-based occupations, according to a labor market study from the Colorado Office of Economic Development.

But the study — conducted by Mercer — found some big mismatches when it comes to the kind of college degrees students in the state are obtaining, and the jobs available.

“We are doing pretty good on the employer side. We will have to focus more on the talent side,” said Fiona Arnold, executive director of the state’s economic development office.

For example, Colorado graduates enough advertising, marketing and public relations majors each year to replace everyone employed in those fields in the state — and then some.

Denver Broncos PR Staff Wins National Award

Congratulations to the Denver Broncos’ public relations staff, which has been selected as the 2016 Pete Rozelle Award winners by the Professional Football Writers of America (PFWA). The Rozelle Award is given to the NFL public relations staff that “consistently strives for excellence in its dealings and relationships with the media.”

Denver’s PR department is led by Patrick Smyth (VP of public relations), assisted by Erich Schubert (senior manager of media relations), Seth Medvin (media relations coordinator) and Rebecca Villaneuva (corporate communications manager). The department was also assisted by interns Brock Anderson and Anne Noland.

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The Hits Keep Coming at Chipotle

When I was at StorageTek, the CEO asked me what it would take to get him on the front page of the Wall Street Journal. “Embezzle $100 million,” I joked.

Recently, Chipotle has seen a lot more coverage in the Wall Street Journal than it wants, and the hits just keep on coming. If you see Chris Arnold today, buy him a drink. He’s earned it.

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Cinemark asks shooting victims to cover $700k in legal fees

Now that Cinemark has been found not responsible for the Aurora theater shooting, it’s pretty easy to see why it would want to get the money it spent defending itself back. But I’ll give Cinemark the same advice I have given literally dozens of CEOs across many different industries: You are never sorry later for having taken the high road. Not to mention that the reputational damage for trying to collect $700,000 will be in the tens of millions of dollars.

Decibel Blue Launches ‘Green’ Sister Agency

Decibel Blue has launched a new sister agency that specializes in cannabis and sustainability – Decibel Green.

The firm first started doing cannabis-related work three years ago under the Decibel Blue brand, and it has represented the dispensaries Puff Pass & PaintYour Green Contractor and Sue Sisley. In addition to that work, the firm represents D.C.-based clients Marijuana Policy Project and Students for Sensible Drug Policy.

Barnhart Adds Two

Barnhart has added Christine Cowan as a new group account director and Hannah Morris as public relations and social media account executive.

Cowan joins Barnhart McCann Erickson in Birmingham, Mich., where she led the award-winning “Pure Michigan” tourism campaign. In her new role, she will manage and grow existing client relationships and help deliver client objectives.

And Morris will provide communications support to new and existing clients including the Denver Preschool Program and the Town of Parker. Prior to joining Barnhart, she was the marketing & communications coordinator for Project Angel Heart.

Once-Vaunted Ad Agency Factory Design Labs Fights to Survive

This weekend, Jason Blevins at The Denver Post examined the situation at Denver advertising agency Factory Design Labs, and it isn’t pretty:

The 20-year-old ad agency with super-posh offices in Cherry Creek once boasted The North Face, Aspen Skiing Co., Sports Authority, Oakley and Callaway Golf as clients. The big names are gone, and now the agency has left several magazines with unpaid bills and raised the ire of media outlets and at least one company that paid Factory to place ads.

Jonas Temple, CEO of FDL, acknowledged some challenges in a response to the article on Facebook:

In January 2015, I returned to Factory and partnered with Bob Reimer to lead a critical restructuring of the agency. Given the very difficult financial situation at that time, Bob and I identified two unimaginable choices for our strategy: file bankruptcy or fight to keep the doors open. With considerable pause we decided, as a company, to choose the more difficult road — continuing our commitments to our clients and our staff, and to the extent possible, make good on our historical debts.

During this process we have had to trim our staff, restructure the management team, radically reduce expenses, and generally create a new company that’s very different from our past.”

 

Tom F’ing Clark

If you like what Denver has become over the past couple of decades – it regularly appears on lists such as Best Places to Live, Fastest Growing Economies, Best Cities for Millennials, Most Educated Workforces, Most Fit Cities, etc. – you owe a debt of gratitude to the MDEDC’s Tom Clark.

Part visionary and part hustler, Clark appeared in Politico’s recent article touting the impact of RTD’s light rail initiative as only he could:

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GroundFloor Foundation Awards Three Grants

GroundFloor Media‘s Get Grounded Foundation has awarded its latest round of grants totaling $13,800 to three local community programs supporting youth services: Mount Saint VincentAutism Society of Colorado and Zuma’s Rescue Ranch.

A volunteer committee made up of individuals from the agency reviewed the grant applications for the spring 2016 awards. Applications for the fall 2016 grants will be accepted beginning Aug. 1, 2016.

Webb, Philosophy Win Big at 2016 PRSA Gold Picks

Webb Strategic and Philosophy Communication were the big winners at the the 2016 PRSA Colorado Gold Picks awards event. Using the proprietary and highly sophisticated Denver PR Blog formula to determine who fared best (two points for a gold, one point for a silver), the results are:

1. Webb Strategic (14 points) – Seven gold
1. Philosophy (14 points) – Five gold, four silver
3. WildRock (10 points) – Four gold, two silver
4. Denver Art Museum (8 points) – Nonprofit Award, three gold
4. Linhart PR (8 points) – Four gold
6. CIG (7 points) – Three gold, one silver
6. Colorado State University (7 points) – Two gold, three silver
8. Bawmann Group (6 points) – Three gold
8. Farm Credit Council (6 points) – Three gold
10. Blake Communications (5 points) – Two gold, one silver
10. Weber Shandwick (5 points) – Two gold, one silver
12. B Public Relations (4 points) – One gold, two silver
12. Denver Water (4 points) – Two gold
12. Fyn PR (4 points) – One gold, two silver
12. Lola Red (4 points) – One Grand Gold, one gold
12. Malen Yantis (4 points) – Small Practice award, one gold
12. MWH Global (4 points) – Two gold
12. SCRAM (4 points) – One gold, two silver
19. Darnaeur Group (3 points) – One gold, one silver
20. Bonfils Blood Center (2 points) – One gold
20. DISH Network (2 points) – Two silver
20. City of Commerce City (2 points) – Two silver
20. Fletcher Group (2 points) – One gold
20. Level 3 (2 points) – One gold
20. Mulligan & Co. (2 points) – Two silver
20. SideCar PR (2 points) – One gold
20. Sling TV (2 points) – One gold
20. Xstatic (2 points) – One gold
29. Orapin (1 point) – One silver
29. RightScale (1 point) – One silver

Webb Adds Three Governmental Clients

Webb Strategic Communications has added three major governmental entities as clients – the Denver Mayor’s Office, the Regional Air Quality Council, and the Colorado Municipal League.

Webb was awarded the communications support contract for Mayor Michael Hancock’s North Denver Cornerstone Collaborative (NDCC), an initiative to strategically align six major redevelopment projects in a vital area of north Denver. Webb has won a two-year contract with the Regional Air Quality Council (RACQ) to motivate residents along the Front Range to help reduce ground-level ozone pollution. And the firm has also entered into an agreement with the Colorado Municipal League (CML) to provide assistance in the promotion and planning for Colorado Cities & Towns Campaign.

PRSA Colorado Announces 2016 Award Winners

Congratulations to the 2016 PRSA Colorado Gold Pick special award winners:

  • Swede Johnson Lifetime Achievement Award : Dan Hopkins, Scientific and Cultural Facilities District
  • PR Person of the Year Award: Jordan Blakesley, B Public Relations
  • Business Person of the Year Award: Nicolle Davies, Arapahoe Libraries
  • Joe Fuentes Rookie of the Year Award: Taylor Prather, Eagle County Government
  • Mentor of the Year Award: Nicole Yost, Fyn Public Relations
  • Chapter Service Award: Elizabeth Jumel, Jumel Public Relations
  • PR Team of the Year Award: Colorado State University’s External Relations Team

The Special Award and Gold and Silver Pick award winners will be recognized at the Gold Pick Awards ceremony on Thursday, May 5, 2016, at the EXDO Event Center.

B Public Relations Moving on Up

B Public Relations has expanded its team, client roster and office space.

The hospitality and tourism firm recently added Chelsea O’Neill as assistant account executive and Lauren Counce as a digital content producer and copywriter. O’Neill and Counce join the two company principals, BrieAnn Fast and Jordan Blakesley, the company’s Social and Digital Media Manager, Merideth Hartung, and Catie Mayer, who was recently promoted to assistant account executive. The firm has relocated to 3070 Larimer Street, providing more space for the team.

BPR also has added several clients to its food-and-beverage roster: the Colorado Restaurant Association, Integrated Beverage Group, Richard Sandoval Restaurants, Cheese + Provisions and SROriginals.

Dovetail Solutions Adds Five New Clients

dovetail solutions has added five new clients: Colorado Education Association, Confluent Development, Safe Rx, The Cossitt Law Firm and BMC Investments. The firm also welcomed back two previous clients: The Boedecker Foundation and i2 Construction.

“These new clients further represent our firm’s continued commitment to a diverse client base with a rich and determined interest to marry a communications and community strategy that makes ideal fiscal and brand sense,” said Andy Boian, CEO of dovetail solutions.

Julin Formally Launches New Communications Firm

Mark Harden at the Denver Business Journal reports that former MGA co-founder Jeff Julin has formally launched his new communications consulting firm.

Julin Strategic Communications will “focus on assessment and development of stakeholder engagement programs for businesses and community-based organizations. In addition, the firm will also offer strategic planning and facilitation to help companies reach their business goals.”

The ‘Sharapova Response’

Miguel Piedra of RockOrange argues that tennis star Maria Sharapova’s response to a failed performance-enhancing drug test will become a crisis communications blueprint. From his column in PRWeek:

Her tack was one of honesty, directness, and accountability. She did not use spokespeople or press releases or even Oprah to come clean. In doing so, she has saved herself countless hours of brand-damaging news reports.

Her forthrightness is a case study in proper reputation management. It’s a stunningly bold and mature handling of the crisis, especially considering her youth as compared to the old hands who vainly clung to their claims of innocence, and the even older PR axiom that tells us to “deny, deny, deny.” …

Getting out in front of the story — let’s call this “the Sharapova Response” — means owning the narrative. Information flows from the source directly to the media, unfiltered, and even if it is obscured later it is done through the lens of an initially honest act.

Orapin Inks 3 New Clients, Resigns Additional One

Orapin Marketing + Public Relations has signed three new clients and re-signed one more. The agency has been named the agency of record for Century Communities, a national homebuilder headquartered in Denver; Golden Software, a Golden-based provider of scientific graphics software; and Dunbar Kitchen + Tap House, a neighborhood restaurant and pub located in Denver’s only historic cultural center, Five Points. OMPR is also entering its fifth year working with the Original Pancake House of Denver.

Broncos’ Osweiler Credited for Turning the Other Cheek

Fox31’s Drew Englebart covered Brock Osweiler’s recent tussle in Scottsdale, and included the PR perspective from dovetail solutions’ Andy Boian.

It’s unlike other athletes, including like Buffalo Bills running back LeSean McCoy, who was recently involved in a bar brawl, and the Los Angeles Clippers’ Blake Griffin, who punched a member of his team’s equipment staff. Osweiler avoided what could have been a PR disaster.

“At the end of the day, what happens is if you compose yourself and handle yourself well, there’s no story there and that’s what he did,” Boian said.

Chipotle Selects Burson-Marsteller as AOR

If you were chasing the Chipotle account, bad news: the company has selected Burson-Marsteller as its agency of record. Diana Bradley at PRWeek reports:

Chipotle Mexican Grill has picked Burson-Marsteller as its US AOR as the company tries to rebound from the E. coli crisis that caused widespread reputational damage and bogged down its fourth-quarter earnings.

Chris Arnold, communications director for the QSR chain, said Thursday that the company is “meeting with Burson tomorrow and will begin to map out a plan based on our priorities and needs.” He declined other comment on the matter. …

Chipotle split with previous AOR Edelman last fall due to “a sizable piece of business they were taking on that presents a conflict,” Arnold said at the time. …

More recently, the chain has been focused on rebounding from a widespread E. coli scare that began last fall. It has enacted several food-safety procedures, and it closed the doors of restaurants across the country on February 8 to ensure all employees were up to speed.

 

PRWeek’s Annual PR Salary Survey

PRWeek is out with its 2016 PR industry salary survey, and Chris Daniels reports:

As the labor market tightens in the U.S., PR employers must accept the unprecedentedly powerful position the workforce now occupies. …

There is more movement within agencies and corporate PR departments, as well as from company to company. This, in turn, heightens the pressure on employers to fight harder to keep talent, with pay raises an obvious means to do that.

The survey found 75% of respondents who have remained at their company in the past year received a pay increase in the past 12 months. And even among those who stayed in the same position, 68% saw their salary rise. …

 

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CJR: Is Denver Post’s Editorial Voice Getting Laryngitis?

Corey Hutchins at the Columbia Journalism Review reports:

On Monday of this week, something was missing from Colorado’s largest daily newspaper: For the first time in memory, no house editorial appeared in the pages of The Denver Post.

It wasn’t a glitch or a printing malfunction, just the latest small sign of retrenchment in the newspaper business. One of the Post’s editorial writers, Jeremy Meyer, left a few weeks ago for a job in government PR. There are no plans to replace him in the near future, according to Vincent Carroll, the editorial page editor.

That leaves Carroll—who became the page editor in 2013 when his predecessor, Curtis Hubbard, left to join a public affairs firm—as essentially the lone editorial writer left at the Post. And that means there will be days when publishing a locally written editorial won’t be possible.

“I do not know how often that will occur,” he said via email. “Probably once a week, maybe more often.”

That is a tremendously sad development for Denver. A newspaper’s editorial page can be a strong, forceful voice in a world that needs to be held accountable.

Denver PR Jobs

Among those hiring this week are 104 West, Malen Yantis Public Relations, Ogilvy Public Relations, Allstate Insurance, Colorado Department of Education, Fastaff Travel Nursing and U.S. Nursing (internship), Denver Health, Grayling, Growing Colorado Kids, Interstate Restoration, Larimer Humane Society, Molson Coors, Regis University, The State Innovation Exchange (SiX), Transamerica, University of Colorado Boulder, Vail Resorts (part time), Viaero Wireless and Wells Fargo.

DPD Union Head Objects to PR Efforts

John Furrugia, et al, at KMGH/Channel 7 report that the president of the Denver Police union, Detective Nick Rogers, objects to the money spent on the DPD’s public relations efforts.

“We’re spending that kind of money on videos that don’t drop the crime rate,” said Rogers, a 30-year veteran of the department. “[Videos] don’t solve burglaries and robberies. That’s our mission and I think we lost sight of that.”

Ironically, much of the work the DPD PR unit does is designed to distract the public from exactly the kind of violations of which Rogers himself has been accused.

‘The Kitchen’ in Trademark Fight with Wolfgang Puck

Julie Jargon at The Wall Street Journal reports:

A rising star of the farm-to-table restaurant world is facing off against an industry titan in a trademark dispute over a simple name: The Kitchen.

The spat pits Kimbal Musk, younger brother of famed entrepreneur Elon Musk, against Wolfgang Puck, whose business empire includes more than a dozen different restaurant concepts, cookbooks, and packaged food and cookware under his brand. 

Kimbal Musk started a chain of farm-to-table restaurants 12 years ago called The Kitchen, which now has four locations in Colorado and Chicago, along with a more casual version called The Kitchen Next Door, which has three locations. …

Last summer, Mr. Musk said, he began receiving calls from friends in the hospitality industry asking him if he was planning to open a restaurant in Grand Rapids, Mich. He soon learned that a new restaurant had opened at the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel called The Kitchen By Wolfgang Puck, where the recipes use “only the freshest, locally sourced ingredients,” according to its website. 

Mr. Puck also opened a fast-casual restaurant in the same hotel called The Kitchen Counter. The Kitchen By Wolfgang Puck is scheduled to open an outlet in Washington Dulles International Airport in the first half of this year.

As with many trademark disputes, it may come down to who has deeper pockets: Elon Musk’s little brother or a famed celebrity chef.

Denver PR Jobs

Among those hiring this week are Development Counsellors International, BeadforLife, Centura Health, City of Boulder Heads Up Campaign, City of Colorado Springs, CSU Health Network, Denver Health, Engineers Without Borders (internship), Fluor Corporation, KMGH, Molson Coors, Prologis, Public Service Credit Union, VisiTech PR and Windstream.

 

GFM’s Get Grounded Foundation Accepting Grant Applications

GroundFloor Media’s Get Grounded Foundation is accepting grant applications from Denver-area nonprofits serving at-risk youth. Created last year as the primary charitable giving arm ofGroundFloor Media, the 501(c)3 provides one-year community grants for new or expanded, innovative or entrepreneurial programs or projects within an existing, qualified nonprofit that directly support the healthy development of at-risk or neglected youth between the ages of 3 and 13 in the Denver Metro area.

To apply for grant funding, visit the Get Grounded Foundation website at http://www.groundfloormedia.com/foundation.

LiveWell Colorado Selects SE2

LiveWell Colorado, a nonprofit organization committed to preventing and reducing obesity, has selected SE2 to help educate and engage advocates after conducting a comprehensive agency review process. SE2 will help LiveWell Colorado educate Coloradans on the systemic barriers to nutritious food and physical activity and the ways in which they can advocate for making their communities as healthy as possible.

Julin, Smith Shut Down MGA Communications

Jeff Julin, president of MGA Communications, announced today that he and Cricket Smith, MGA’s executive vice president, have closed the firm.

“MGA had a terrific run as a nationally recognized, award-winning communications firm. Its programs for the Rocky Mountain Arsenal, led by MGA Chairman Mike Gaughan, were of particular note in what they achieved in community engagement and helping bring the site partners and community together on the clean-up solution,” Julin said.

He added, “We were also blessed with numerous incredibly talented people through the years that help the firm achieve what we did for our many great clients.”

Julin is forming a consultancy that will focus on development, analysis and assessment of communication and engagement programs.

Denver PR Jobs

Among those hiring this week are Pushkin Public Relations (internship), Alliance Française de Denver (AFD), Autism Society of Colorado, CH2M HILL, City and County of Broomfield, KUSA-TV (NBC), Larimer County, Metropolitan State University of Denver, Naropa University, Rose Medical Center, The Colorado Department of Revenue, The National Center for Women & Information Technology (NCWIT), Weld County School District 6 and Zimmer Biomet.

Great Moments in Marketing

Santanu Choudhury of the Wall Street Journal reports that India’s Tata Motors – parent company of the Jaguar and Land Rover brands, among others – is set to unveil the unfortunately named Tata Zica at an auto show next week as fears of the global Zika virus pandemic continue to grow.

Choudhury reports that, “Tata picked the name months ago using the first letters of ‘zippy’ and ‘car.’ … As more stories about the outbreak of the Zika virus and the disfiguring birth defects it can cause grabbed attention recently, it was too late to change the car’s name.”

Crossover Marketing Strategies Grow

If you think you are seeing more NFL players making cameos on TV shows, it is not your imagination. From the Wall Street Journal:

When CBS signed its deal to carry Thursday night football in 2014, part of its pitch was the power of its programming to promote the league and its players and that is when there was a marked increase in cameos by NFL stars.

“CBS uses the prime time line up to promote Thursday night football and they think the best way to do that is to integrate their programming with players, which we love and agree with,” said Tracy Perlman, the NFL’s vice president of marketing and entertainment. “We had a meeting with their marketing people and the conversation became, `what can we do to show you that we’re unique?’”  …

For the NFL, whose image has taken a hit when its players have run-ins with the law — from domestic abuse accusations to gun incidents — putting its stars on TV is an opportunity to show them in a good light and attempt to counter the negative perceptions.

NFL Inexplicably Fans Flames of HGH Story

For the second straight year, the NFL inexplicably has fanned the flames of a controversy that threatens to overshadow its signature event, the Super Bowl. Last year, it was Deflate Gate, a controversy that ultimately fell flatter than Tom Brady’s footballs. This year, NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy has used the lead up to the Super Bowl to shine a light on an ongoing NFL HGH investigation into Denver Broncos QB Peyton Manning.

Are Your Crisis Efforts Protected by Attorney-Client Privilege?

When you help a client involved in a crisis situation, are your communications with the client covered by attorney-client privilege? As with most complex yes-no questions, the answer is maybe. Attorneys Michael F. Buchanan and Angela Redai offer a helpful checklist of issues to consider to best protect yourself and your client:

While there are no guarantees that a court will uphold a claim of privilege, here are some steps that a company can take to improve its odds of maintaining a privilege assertion over communications with a PR firm:

  • The public relations or crisis management firm should be engaged directly by outside counsel, not the client.
  • The engagement letter should be carefully written by outside counsel to make clear that:
    • the PR firm is working under the direction of outside counsel and reporting directly to the law firm;
    • all communications between the PR firm and outside counsel and/or the client’s representatives shall be confidential and made solely for the purpose of assisting counsel in rendering legal services to the client;
    • all documents and work product prepared by the PR firm are confidential and should be treated as such; and
    • the PR firm has an obligation to protect the confidentiality of the information exchanged with counsel and all documents it prepares.
  • To the extent practicable, communications between the client and the PR firm should be through outside counsel or in the presence of outside counsel.
  • PR firms should label documents (including email traffic) as “Attorney-Client Privilege/Work Product Communications.”
  • Because it is essential that the services provided by the PR firm facilitate legal advice and services, great caution should be taken to define what services the PR firm is being asked to perform.
  • Careful consideration should be given to the nature of each service the PR firm is undertaking when contemplating a disclosure to it. If, in connection with a particular assignment, the PR firm is not engaged in helping outside counsel formulate legal strategy, sharing privileged information should be avoided.
  • The PR firm should invoice the law firm for its services whenever possible.

CBS News Investigates Wounded Warrior Project

Is there a PR crisis brewing at one of the nation’s most respected nonprofits? Chip Reid and Jennifer Janisch at CBS News report:

Where is the money is going? …

CBS News spoke to more than 40 former (Wounded Warrior Project) employees who described a charity where spending was out of control. Two of those former employees were so fearful of retaliation they asked that their faces not to be shown on camera.

“It was extremely extravagant. Dinners and alcohol, and just total accessm” one employee explained. He continued, saying that for a charitable organization that’s serving veterans, the spending on resorts and alcohol is “what the military calls fraud waste and abuse.”

According to the charity’s tax forms, spending on conferences and meetings went from $1.7 million in 2010, to $26 million in 2014. That’s about the same amount the group spends on combat stress recovery — its top program.

Denver PR Jobs

Among those hiring this week are the Alzeheimer’s Association of Colorado, American Lung Association, Aurora Public Schools, Chipotle, Clinica Family Health, Colorado Department of Public Safety, Colorado State University, Communications Strategy Group (internship), DMI, Fort Collins Coloradoan, HealthOne, Janus Capital Group, SearchSpring, The ALS Association Rocky Mountain Chapter and The International Erosion Control Association.