One year on there's no end
to the gloom
11/12/09 08:47 Filed in:
blog
I was preparing the traditional review of the year
for yesterday’s IoD Aberdeen committee Christmas
dinner and looked out the notes for 2008. I realised
that I could almost have got away with delivering the
same messages.
In December 2008 we had already been forced to
recognise that the ‘Credit Crunch’ was much more than
a blip. It was going to be a full-blown recession and
probably one of the deepest we have seen in more than
a generation.
Last year, I had referred to the chamber breakfast on
the economy in November 2008. The first speaker, Nick
Parsons of nabCapital, had explained how he had made
a few checks about the venue and the event before
agreeing to speak:
- Did the function room windows open?
- Was the event to be held in a ground-floor
function room?
• Were there to be knives on the breakfast tables?
Well, 12 months on, the economic news is still gloomy
as ever.
Against that background, I did have a wry smile while
watching
The Scottish Conspiracy on BBC this
week. The programme talked about how North Sea oil
saved the UK economy in the 1970s. They also
presented the quote from then government adviser
Gavin McCrone.
In a memo, just released under the 30-years rule, he
had said that – if the nationalists had got their way
– Scotland would “tend to be in chronic surplus to an
embarrassing degree”!
Well, instead of being embarrassingly in surplus.
Scotland and the UK are embarrassingly deeply in the
red as we head towards 2010.
The survivors of this tough economic environment will
be those that invest in their brands.
Or as Doug Leone, of Sequoia Capital puts it; “In a
downturn, aggressive PR and communications strategy
is key”.
© Ken McEwen Public Relations, 2009.
www.kenmcewen.com All rights reserved.
Tags: economy, blogs