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Wikipedia

Burson Cohn & Wolfe

Burson Cohn & Wolfe is a multinational public relations and communications firm, headquartered in New York City. In February 2018, parent WPP Group PLC announced that it had merged its subsidiaries Cohn & Wolfe with Burson-Marsteller. The combined agency is now known as Burson Cohn & Wolfe.[4]

Burson Cohn & Wolfe
TypePrivate
Industry
Founded1953; 70 years ago (1953)
(Burson-Marsteller)
1970; 53 years ago (1970)
(Cohn & Wolfe)
Merged in 2018; 5 years ago (2018)
(Burson Cohn & Wolfe)
Founders
  • Harold Burson & Bill Marsteller
  • Bob Cohn & Norman Wolfe
Headquarters200 Fifth Avenue, New York City, United States
Key people
  • Donna Imperato (CEO)[1][2]
  • Jerry Lombardo (CFO)[3]
Number of employees
4,000 (2018[1])
ParentWPP plc
Websitebcw-global.com

Operations

BCW (Burson Cohn & Wolfe) was the world's third-largest public relations firm by revenue, as of 2018.[5] It employed more than 4,000 people in 42 countries as of 2019.[1] BCW is part of the BCW Group, whose brands include: AxiCom, BWR, Direct Impact, GCI Health, HZ, PSB, Prime Policy Group, and Goodfuse.[6][7][8][9]

BCW offers clients creative content and integrated communications services across the following sectors: business-to-business, consumer, corporate, crisis management, corporate social responsibility, healthcare, public affairs, and technology.[10]

Donna Imperato serves as global chief executive officer (CEO).[1] She was previously CEO at Cohn & Wolfe.[11] BCW is split into divisions by geographic region: North America, Latin America, Europe and Africa, the Middle East, and Asia-Pacific. Each region is led by a regional president who reports directly to the global CEO.[12] Other notable employees include Karen Hughes, former senior aide to U.S. President George W. Bush;[13] and Tom Reed, a former six-term Congressman from Corning, New York.[14]

History

BCW traces its roots to the founding of Burson-Marsteller in 1953 and Cohn & Wolfe in 1970. As part of a restructuring strategy, in 2018 parent company WPP PLC merged Burson-Marsteller, the sixth-largest PR firm worldwide, and Cohn & Wolfe, which ranked 12th.[15] The merger created the third-largest PR firm, which was named BCW (Burson Cohn & Wolfe).[16] WPP stated that it merged the firms due to their complementary skills, including Burson-Marsteller's public affairs and corporate work and Cohn & Wolfe's digital creative content, consumer, and health care work.[17]

In August 2018, BCW acquired HZ, an integrated creative agency, headquartered in Rockville, Maryland, with additional offices in Baltimore, Los Angeles, New York and Washington, D.C.[16][8]

Burson-Marsteller

History

Prior to its merger with Cohn & Wolfe, Burson-Marsteller comprised 77 offices and 85 affiliate offices, operating in 110 countries across six continents.[18] The company was founded by Harold Burson (1921–2020) and William Marsteller in 1953, and, by the early 1980s, had become one of the largest public relations companies in the world. In 1979, it became a subsidiary of Young & Rubicam, which in turn was acquired later by WPP Group PLC.[19] In 2018, it merged with Cohn & Wolfe and renamed Burson Cohn & Wolfe.[20]

1950s and 1960s: Company founding and early history

 
Harold Burson and Bill Marsteller plan out their firm's expansion into Europe

Prior to the establishment of Burson-Marsteller, co-founders Harold Burson and William "Bill" Marsteller owned separate agencies, focused on public relations and advertising, respectively. Burson had established Harold Burson Public Relations in 1946 and was based in New York City. Meanwhile, Marsteller had founded the Chicago-based advertising agency Marsteller Gebhardt and Reed (later renamed Marsteller Inc.) in 1951.[21] Burson and Marsteller met in 1952 when Marsteller needed a PR agency to work on an account for his client, Rockwell Manufacturing,[22] and was referred to Burson. The two agencies shared the Rockwell account and, later, an account for Clark Engineering Equipment Company.[23] In 1953, they entered into a partnership,[24] creating a new public relations firm that was owned jointly by Burson and by Marsteller's advertising agency.[25]

Beginning with a staff of four and just two main clients,[26] operations quickly grew, and in the early 1960s Burson-Marsteller began to establish a presence outside of the United States. In 1960, they opened an office in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, becoming the first U.S. PR agency to do so.[27] One year later, in 1961, following the founding of the Common Market in Europe, the company established its first European office in Geneva, followed shortly by an office in Brussels in 1965.[28] At this time Hill & Knowlton was the only other U.S. PR firm with an office outside the United States.[19] In 1967, Burson-Marsteller opened its first London office.[28]

1970s: General Motors

One of the firm's earliest clients was the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors (GM) that made diesel locomotives, beginning in 1956. It was the only PR agency retained by GM at the time.[29] In 1970, Burson-Marsteller was engaged by the main division of GM to manage its PR,[22] following stiff competition from larger firms. According to Harold Burson, GM was seeking outside PR management following the publication of Ralph Nader's book Unsafe at Any Speed, which called into question GM's design practices, and led to negative media representation of the company. GM remained a client of Burson-Marsteller for the next 11 years.[30] At the time they took on GM, Burson-Marsteller was the 10th largest PR firm in the United States.[31] In 1974, Wolcott and Company, a Los Angeles-based public relations firm founded by Robert "Bob" B. Wolcott Jr., merged with Burson-Marsteller. Wolcott Co. had offices in New York, Washington, D.C., and San Francisco. Bob Wolcott joined the executive management team and was in charge of West Coast and Asian operations.[32]

1980s: Young & Rubicam and worldwide expansion

In 1979, the company was sold to the communications group Young & Rubicam. In his memoirs, Burson described the decision as being made for two primary reasons. First, Burson-Marsteller required capital to finance its expansion. Second, Marsteller's advertising agency had declined in profitability and "needed management fixing".[19] Following the takeover, Burson became executive vice-president and a board member of Young & Rubicam.[21][33] As part of Young & Rubicam in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Burson-Marsteller became known for its crisis management work.[34] Notable clients consulting Burson-Marsteller for crisis management included: Babcock & Wilcox, following the Three Mile Island accident in 1979; Johnson & Johnson, during the 1982 Tylenol crisis;[35] and Union Carbide Corporation following the 1984 Bhopal disaster.[36][37] The company was also involved in the introduction of New Coke in early 1985. In interviews Burson has stated that the negative reaction of the public to the new product was unexpected.[37] Following the reintroduction of the original Coke recipe, the strategy that Burson-Marsteller advised Coca-Cola to employ was to "be humble" and apologize to the U.S. public for making the decision to change to New Coke.[31][35] Just two months after original Coke was reintroduced as Classic Coke, sales of Coke, Coca-Cola Classic and Cherry Coke had risen 10 percent compared with the previous year.[38]

The 1980s also saw the company become involved in large-scale publicity events. In 1984, Burson-Marsteller first brought entertainment and sports together to generate publicity for its clients with the organization of the AT&T Olympic Torch Relay, sponsored by the telecommunications company.[39] This was the largest promotional event that the company had undertaken to date, with up to 150 people working full-time on organizing the 8,000-mile relay.[40] One year later, Burson-Marsteller executive Geoff Nightingale came up with the idea of Hands Across America as a fundraising event for USA for Africa sponsored by its client Coca-Cola.[41]

By 1983, Burson-Marsteller had become the world's largest PR firm, with $63.8 million in revenue for that year.[22] The following year it acquired Cohn & Wolfe, an Atlanta-based public relations firm,[42] which operated as a subsidiary of Burson-Marsteller until 2000. Burson-Marsteller had established its first offices in Asia in 1973, with offices in Hong Kong, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur and Tokyo,[31] and by the mid-1980s it had further expanded overseas operations with the founding of offices in Australia and New Zealand.[43] A subsidiary of the Xinhua News Agency (New China News Agency) went into partnership with Burson-Marsteller in 1985, providing commercial public relations for foreign firms in China and for Chinese companies internationally.[44] This subsidiary later became China Global Public Relations, mainland China's first specialized public relations consulting firm.[45] Following Burson-Marsteller's appointment as the official public relations counsel for the Seoul Olympics in 1988,[24] it was the first foreign public relations firm to be granted a license to open a wholly owned communications and marketing office in South Korea.[46]

Burson-Marsteller also expanded into Central and South America during the 1980s. Offices were established in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and São Paulo. A regional headquarters was established in Miami, Florida, in May 1989,[47] and with the regional headquarters in place, the company won MasterCard International's Latin American account, which became one of the firm's largest accounts at the time.[48]

The agency's business grew by about 24% annually during the 1980s, according to Burson, and PR Week stated in 1988 that Burson-Marsteller was "the largest international PR firm in the world" by that point.[24] The following year, Burson stepped down as CEO of the firm. He continued to work on major accounts such as Coca-Cola and Merrill Lynch,[37] while James H. Dowling succeeded him as the second ever CEO of Burson-Marsteller.[49]

1990s: Global presence and Philip Morris

By 1990 Burson-Marsteller had branches in 28 countries, with 52 offices and over 2,300 employees.[33] Notable international work carried out by Burson-Marsteller in the early 1990s included a public relations campaign undertaken for the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism in 1993, following terrorist attacks on tourists in Egypt. The campaign aimed to encourage tourists to visit Egypt, focusing on recent archaeological discoveries.[50]

In December 1994, the company received attention after an executive at Burson-Marsteller was killed by a mailbomb sent by the "Unabomber". The Washington Post reported that Ted Kaczynski targeted Burson-Marsteller executive Thomas Mosser due to a belief Exxon had consulted with Burson-Marsteller during the Valdez oil spill. Burson-Marsteller stated that they had advised Exxon in the past and had been asked to review and analyze Exxon's handling of the disaster afterwards, but had not been engaged to manage the crisis itself.[51]

In the 1990s the company also received considerable attention for PR campaigns on behalf of tobacco company Altria (formerly Philip Morris Companies Inc.) in which it was engaged to discredit anti-smoking research and legislation attempts.[52] In 1993 Burson-Marsteller helped organize a response to a 1992 United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) report which had identified secondhand smoke as a Group A human carcinogen.[53] The strategy employed by Burson-Marsteller was to build doubt among consumers about the scientific validity of the EPA report and to target legislators who supported curbs on smoking.[54] As part of this strategy, the company organized a smokers' rights group called the National Smokers Alliance (NSA),[55] to target politicians who supported anti-smoking legislation.[56][57] The NSA was founded with an estimated $4 million in Philip Morris seed money and the involvement of some fifty other tobacco industry players.[58]

Their activities also included support for The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition (TASSC), which was created in 1993 by APCO Worldwide, another major public relations firm, with funding from Philip Morris.[59][60] In Europe, Burson-Marsteller provided support for an advertising campaign in 1996 carried out by Philip Morris. Advertisements were published comparing the health risks of secondhand smoke exposure with a range of other activities. This campaign received significant coverage in the media across Europe.[61] Burson-Marsteller was criticized in the media for its involvement with Philip Morris, and in 1999 a demonstration was held outside the firm's headquarters, protesting their role as PR for Philip Morris.[62] Those involved went to great lengths not to reveal the tobacco industry support of these organizations, to give the appearance they represented grassroots opposition to anti-smoking laws rather than the business interests of their sponsors.[63][64]

At the end of the 1990s, the firm had retained its position as the largest PR agency in the world, with fees of over $274 million for that year.[37] As part of the company's continued growth, it acquired grassroots lobbying organization Direct Impact in April 1999.[65][66] In the same year, Harold Burson was named by PR Week as the PR industry's "most influential person of the 20th century".[22][37]

2000s

Young & Rubicam became a subsidiary of the media group WPP Group PLC in 2000, and Burson-Marsteller became part of WPP.[22] The U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing first hired Burson-Marsteller in 1995[67] to publicize the new designs of U.S. currency bills, both within the United States and internationally. The Bureau had launched a second redesign of the bills in ten years, with the intention of preventing counterfeiting.[68] As well as the media campaign, Burson-Marsteller was also involved in research prior to the redesign to ensure that the new designs would be acceptable to the public.[69]

In December 2005, Burson-Marsteller acquired the Indian firm Genesis PR as a wholly owned subsidiary. Following this acquisition India and China became Burson-Marsteller's second and third-largest markets worldwide, based on number of employees.[70] The renamed Genesis Burson-Marsteller was announced as the company's hub for the South Asian market in 2008.[71] Prior to the acquisition, since 2002, Genesis had been Burson-Marsteller's exclusive representative in India.[72]

Mark Penn became the CEO of Burson-Marsteller in December 2005,[73] following a period of instability at the firm during which there were three leadership changes in one year.[74] Penn's predecessor, Tom Nides, had left Burson-Marsteller after eight months in the role.[75] A White House political pollster for six years, he was best known for his work with President Bill Clinton, Tony Blair and Bill Gates.[76] Penn (who had not previously worked within PR) introduced new strategies at Burson-Marsteller, including one called "DIGS" (digital, integrated, global, strategic)[77] and "Evidence-Based Communications",[77] described by the company as a scientific and data-driven approach to communications,[78] which drew from Penn's background in research.[74]

Penn and Burson-Marsteller received negative media attention in 2008 when his work on behalf of the Colombian government (then seeking a free-trade agreement with the United States) became a political liability for the presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton, who was opposed to a free-trade pact with Colombia. Penn described the dual role an "error in judgment" following which the Colombian government terminated its client relationship.[79][80] Clinton later revised her opinion in favor of the free-trade pact.[81][82]

Penn's leadership at Burson-Marsteller has been cited by PR Week as a model for the public relations industry, particularly combining public affairs experience with public relations.[83][84][85] In April 2011, industry expert Paul Holmes named Burson-Marsteller the U.S. Large Agency of the Year, citing its double-digit growth within the United States and record 2010 profits as factors in the award, crediting Penn with improved performance and Burson's "global recovery".[74]

Burson-Marsteller's notable clients in the late 2000s (decade) include Ford Motor Company, which took on the company as crisis management consultants in 2009,[86] and American International Group (AIG), on whose behalf the firm undertook crisis management work in 2008 and 2009. Burson-Marsteller was brought in by AIG to help respond to requests for information from customers, employees and the media, due to the liquidity crisis it suffered in September 2008.[87] In 2010, Burson-Marsteller announced it had made a commitment to no longer accept work on behalf of the tobacco industry.[88]

In May 2011, Burson-Marsteller was hired by Facebook to conduct a PR attack on Google.[89][90] Burson-Marsteller contacted a number of media companies and bloggers in an effort to get them to write unflattering stories about Google. The campaign backfired when one of the bloggers went public by posting the emails he received from Burson-Marsteller on the Internet.[91]

Don Baer, the former communications director for the Clinton administration, was named CEO of Burson-Marsteller in 2012.[92] He served in that capacity through February 2018, when WPP merged Burson-Marsteller with Cohn & Wolfe to create a new agency called Burson Cohn & Wolfe.[93]

Services

Burson-Marsteller provided public relations and advertising services to clients, including multinational corporations and government agencies. It was known primarily for its crisis management services and political lobbying. It won numerous awards from the public relations industry over the years for its work in high-profile crisis management, including the late 1990s Asian financial crisis, a 2002 extortion attempt against British company GlaxoSmithKline, and a response described as the "gold standard" for its crisis management of the 1982 Chicago Tylenol poisonings. Other high-profile crisis cases include the manufacturers of the Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station and Egypt following terrorist attacks on tourists in 1993. At times it has also been the subject of protests and criticism for its use of smearing and doubt campaigns (to undermine concerns about passive smoking for Philip Morris in the 1990s and anti-Google smear campaigning for Facebook in 2011)[94][95] and its work for regimes facing severe human rights criticisms (Argentina and Indonesia).[96] The firm also worked in corporate PR, public affairs, technology and healthcare communications, and brand marketing.

Training

Within the industry Burson-Marsteller was known for its effective company employee training programs[97] and for having helped to develop the careers of many members of the public relations industry.[98] From early in the company's history, employees were expected to participate in ongoing training. Due to this practice, Harold Burson estimated in the early 1980s that 65 percent of the company's costs were related to human resources.[99] The aim of Burson-Marsteller's training was to create a uniform approach to public relations across all clients and locations.[48] In 2005, the company launched Burson-Marsteller University, providing comprehensive training to its executives in developing corporate communications that are consistent worldwide while remaining culturally appropriate.[100] In 2009, when the firm debuted a new approach to public relations called "Evidence-Based Communications", Burson-Marsteller also introduced an extensive training program designed to help employees apply it to ongoing projects and new proposals.[101] Specific training was also provided to employees relevant to their practice areas. In the Issues & Crisis Group, employees were trained to communicate the correct information during crises for a variety of different clients and issues.[34]

In an interview in 2003, Harold Burson was quoted as saying that Burson-Marsteller has been " A training ground for the industry",[19] with more than 35,000 people continuing to participate in the company's alumni network as of 2010.[102] Notable former employees at Burson-Marsteller include: Thomas Nides, the U.S. Deputy Secretary of State; Lord Watson of Richmond, a member of the House of Lords; Perry Yeatman, senior vice president of corporate affairs at Kraft Foods; Kathryn Beiser, vice president of corporate communications at Discover Financial Services; Bob Feldman and Jeff Hunt, co-founders and principals of PulsePoint Group communications consultancy;[98] and Daniel Lamarre, CEO of Cirque du Soleil[103] and prominent figures in a number of PR companies, including the CEOs of Ketchum Inc.,[98] Cohn & Wolfe and Wunderman.

Crisis management

Through its crisis management work, Burson-Marsteller was identified with many major corporate crises of the past half-century.[26][104] Burson-Marsteller added crisis management as a service following Young & Rubicam's 1979 takeover of the company. In 2008, Burson-Marsteller established a global practice called the Issues & Crisis Group (ICG) that focus specifically on this area of communications.[105] The practice had a network of specially certified experts in crisis management located in its offices worldwide.[104] Services included providing communication with clients' employees, customers and the general public during crises.[34]

In addition to helping clients deal with crises as they occurred, Burson-Marsteller also provided clients with assistance in developing contingency plans for potential crises.[104] The firm provided intelligence reports to clients either hourly or daily that advise of new issues, public reception, and critical or supportive responses[106] and carried out market research into CEO and corporate reputation.[107] Burson-Marsteller offered services including communications tools and techniques intended to help companies to recover following a crisis.[104]

In particular, Burson-Marsteller had a close working relationship with many global producers and marketers of petroleum products, especially assisting on key communications of specific crisis situations such as oil spills and serious accidents. It also worked with these companies in the development of environmental upgrade programs. Significant clients included Shell[33] and ExxonMobil.[26]

The company received a number of awards for its work in crisis management. In 1999, Burson-Marsteller was awarded a Public Relations Society of America Silver Anvil, the public relations industry's highest award for organizations, recognizing its communications program aimed at restoring confidence in the Korean economy during the Asian financial crisis of 1998.[108] It also received a Silver Anvil in 2003 for its work with the United States Postal Service for managing communications during the anthrax crisis.[109] In 2002, the company received a Golden World Award, the highest award from the UK-based International Public Relations Association, for its crisis management work on behalf of GlaxoSmithKline following an extortion attempt involving its Panadol brand.[110]

Since the early 1980s, Burson-Marsteller had dealt with a range of much-publicized crisis management situations, from industrial accidents to acts of terrorism. Notable early cases include work involving the 1982 and 1986 Tylenol contaminations and the Bhopal disaster.

Tylenol

Burson-Marsteller's handling of the Chicago Tylenol poisonings for Johnson & Johnson in September 1982 has been referred to as the "gold standard" for crisis management.[111] Seven people in the Chicago area were killed when they took Tylenol capsules tainted with cyanide,[112] and Johnson & Johnson went to Burson-Marsteller for advice on how to approach the situation.[113] After an eighth death, which occurred in California, the response by Johnson & Johnson was to announce a nationwide recall of all Tylenol capsules.[112] Burson-Marsteller organized a press conference televised across 35 markets in the United States, addressing the recall and reporting that the product tampering had occurred on the shelves, not during manufacturing.[31][34] During late October 1982, a brief television campaign was undertaken asking for the public to trust Tylenol,[114] and Burson-Marsteller carried out nationwide polling which found that the majority of the population still had confidence in Johnson & Johnson.[35] Ninety percent of respondents stated that they did not hold the manufacturer responsible for the deaths.[114]

At a Burson-Marsteller organized press conference in November 1982, Johnson & Johnson introduced new tamper-proof packaging,[114] becoming the first company to introduce triple-sealed packaging, which later became the industry standard.[31] The conference gave Johnson & Johnson the opportunity to announce that they were reintroducing Tylenol capsules to the market and would replace any Tylenol that consumers had thrown away.[114][115] In addition, Johnson & Johnson published advertisements with coupons for consumers to use to replace Tylenol that had been thrown out,[114] and produced commercials and print advertisements thanking the public for their "continuing confidence and support".[115] Within six weeks of the introduction of the repackaged product Tylenol's sales returned to the previous level.[31] In 1983, Burson-Marsteller was awarded a Silver Anvil for "out-of-the-ordinary crisis management" for its work with Johnson & Johnson.[116] The company was brought back to handle crisis management during a second Tylenol crisis, involving cyanide tainting in New York in 1986.[111]

Bhopal

The Bhopal disaster was one of the world's worst industrial catastrophes. In 1984 a gas leak killed over 2,000 people at a plant in Bhopal, India, and poisoned thousands more.[117] The plant was jointly owned by Union Carbide Corporation, now Dow Chemicals, and the Indian government, and run by local Indian management. Burson-Marsteller consultants were brought in by Union Carbide to organize communications following the leak and provide advice to Union Carbide executives.[118] Specifically, the company set up an information center to provide information to the media and help to transmit news from the remote location to newspaper, TV and radio outlets,[26] and facilitate daily press conferences that reported on steps taken following the accident. Under advice from the consultants and corporate lawyers, Union Carbide CEO Warren Anderson traveled to Bhopal where he was placed in custody by the Indian government. Anderson posted bail, returned to the United States, and refused to return to India. He was declared a fugitive from justice by the Chief Judicial Magistrate of Bhopal on February 1, 1992, for failing to appear at the court hearings in a culpable homicide case in which he was named the chief defendant.[119] While his visit to India several days after the leak was viewed positively by the media and other corporations and brought attention to Union Carbide's actions in showing its concern for what had happened in Bhopal[120] it did not deflect criticism of Union Carbide for cutting costs on safety measures.[121] While Burson-Marsteller has been criticized for its involvement with Union Carbide, Harold Burson has stated that he is proud of the company's work in helping the media cover the story.[36]

Other cases

After the Three Mile Island accident of 1979 became the most significant accident in the history of U.S. commercial nuclear power generation, Burson-Marsteller conducted public relations work for Babcock & Wilcox, the plant's manufacturer.[122]

The company organized a campaign for Egypt's Ministry of Tourism following terrorist attacks on tourists in 1993. The campaign focused on Western Europe and the United States, and featured TV commercials and other media coverage of new archeological discoveries and the role of Egypt in the Middle East.[50]

Blackwater USA, the private military company, took on Burson-Marsteller's subsidiary company BKSH to help founder Erik Prince prepare for a congressional hearing in 2007. In September of that year, Blackwater guards were involved in a shooting in Baghdad in which 13 Iraqis were killed. Blackwater faced a great deal of negative publicity and Prince was asked to testify before the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.[123]

Corporate PR

Burson-Marsteller's second-largest practice was its Corporate and Financial Communications group.[124] The company's corporate PR practice focused on four different specialties: corporate brand positioning, financial communications, organizational performance, and C-suite positioning.[125] One of the agency's longstanding corporate clients was the Saudi Arabia Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC). The company began work with the petrochemical producer in the late 1970s when they first entered the market in the Middle East.[126] Other notable corporate clients have included Procter and Gamble, British Gas Plc, Philips, Unilever, Du Pont, Coca-Cola, GlaxoSmithKline,[33] Merrill Lynch, General Electric,[22] Monsanto, the Federal Communications Commission, and Colgate-Palmolive.[86]

Technology

Burson-Marsteller first established a technology group in its New York office in the early 1980s, specializing in "high-tech PR services".[127] The company's technology practice expanded rapidly over the 1990s with major clients including Apple, Sun Microsystems and Qualcomm and its headquarters moved to Silicon Valley in the late 1990s. The practice focused specifically on public relations for technology companies[128][129] and organizations using technology as a key part of their business.[130] Notable clients included HP,[131] Intel[132] and business software corporation SAP AG.[133]

Public affairs

Within Burson-Marsteller's public affairs practice, the company specialized in public relations and communications for government and corporate clients.[134] Notable public affairs clients included the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing,[67] the Hebrides Range Task Force, for whose campaign Burson-Marsteller won several awards in 2010,[135] South Korea, including representation of the Seoul Olympics Organizing Committee in the late 1980s,[136][137] and the Brazilian government tourism agency.[138] Burson-Marsteller had taken on government clients who have been controversial, in particular during the 1970s when clients notably included Romania, Indonesia, and Argentina.[139] The company received awards for its public affairs work, including an award for the Europe/Middle East/Africa public affairs agency of the year at the 2009/10 SABRE awards, the world's largest awards competition for the public relations industry,[78] and a Silver Anvil from the Public Relations Society of America in 2004 for their work for the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.[140]

Romania

Burson-Marsteller represented the Romanian government in the early 1970s, during which time the country gained Most Favored Nation status for trade with the United States. At the time the United States and other western nations regarded Romania's president Nicolae Ceauşescu as the friendliest of the Soviet bloc leaders to their interests. U.S. President Nixon visited Ceauşescu in Bucharest in 1969, which he viewed as a diplomatic opportunity to gain access to China,[141] and later the Romanian dictator was said to be instrumental in arranging Nixon's visit to China. Burson-Marsteller was brought in by the Romanian government specifically to promote trade and tourism for Romania; one result was a week-long visit to the country by NBC's Today program.[139]

Indonesia

Following the 1991 Santa Cruz massacre of East Timor protesters by occupying Indonesian forces, the Indonesian government retained Burson-Marsteller[142][143][144] "to help improve the country's human rights and environmental image", according to the Far Eastern Economic Review. Another contract was signed in 1996.[145] The company was retained in total from 1992 to 1998.[142][143] Over the six years that the company worked for the country's government, Burson-Marsteller promoted Indonesia's trade opportunities to encourage foreign investment[142] and aided the country in its attempts to improve its human rights image.[146][147]

Argentina

Burson-Marsteller carried out public relations work for the last Argentine military dictatorship (1976–1983), for which it received criticism.[96] The corporation accepted the military junta government of General Jorge Videla as a client with the full knowledge of and advice from the U.S. State Department, and the remit of attracting industrial investment, marketing Argentine bonds, promoting Argentine products, mainly wine, and improving the image of the dictatorship around the world.[139] In doing so the company produced press kits and direct mailings, arranged for journalists to visit Argentina, and held lunches with business groups and financial seminars.[148]

For years Burson-Marsteller denied working directly with the Argentine military, stating they only worked for the Ministry of Economics to assist in economic development. Later on, Burson-Marsteller admitted to working with the dictator to improve the nation's image.[149]

At that time human rights organizations were denouncing state crimes against humanity including forced disappearances and torture that were taking place in what later became known as the Dirty War. Burson-Marsteller maintained that it was not asked to defend Human Rights Violations; however, researcher Rubén Morales wrote that the company created a slogan to coincide with the September 1979 Inter-American Commission on Human Rights' fact-finding visit which stated in its English translation, "We Argentines are right and humane".[150][151]

Naomi Klein wrote in The Shock Doctrine that Burson-Marsteller account executive Victor Emmanuel stated that violence was necessary to open up Argentina's economy since securing investment was impossible if a state of civil war existed, and that while acknowledging that "a lot of innocent people were probably killed", "given the situation, immense force was required".[152] The quotes are drawn from a 1996 interview by Marguerite Feitlowitz. In her account of that interview, Feitlowitz describes Emmanuel replying to a point about kidnappings and secret camps: "It was arguably almost necessary."[153]

Feitlowitz describes an initial 33-page report completed under Emmanuel's supervision as echoing the regime's language, referencing, for example, "well-financed subversion campaigns of international origin." The report outlined three target groups for their campaign: "those who influence thinking," "those who influence travel," and "those who influence investment." She goes on to write:

Journalists, they knew, would be the toughest customers. "[Many] consider the Argentine government oppressive and repressive, a dictatorial military institution which deserves little more than condemnation." So prominent reporters got special attention, in the hopes that they would "help build a system of conduits in the leading newspapers and magazines [in the West]. Linked to this was a negative campaign aimed at ... individuals and reporters singled out by [Argentine magazine] Para Ti.[153]

Burson-Marsteller placed an advertising supplement in The New York Times Magazine in 1979; according to Emmanuel, content was probably supplied by the Argentine finance minister. A more extensive 31-page supplement ran in Business Week the next July.[153] Evidence from Wikileaks revealed in 2013 that Burson-Marsteller pressured the Associated Press to publish an article with an American executive mentioning their support for the regime in 1976.[149]

According to Feitlowitz, Argentine dictator Jorge Videla renewed Burson-Marsteller's contract twice.[153]

Ukraine

In 2012, Burson-Marsteller was hired by Ukraine's ruling Party of Regions (PoR), "to help the PoR communicate its activities as the governing party of Ukraine, as well as to help it explain better its position on the Yulia Tymoshenko case", as explained by Robert Mack, a senior manager at Burson-Marsteller.[154]

The tasks of the PR company included setting up press interviews for Ukraine's deputy prosecutor general, Renat Kuzmin, during his visits in Brussels. Kuzmin has been criticized for his direct accusations to Tymoshenko, including for a 1990s contract killing, helping to violate Kuzmin's status as an independent jurist. Other PR companies reported the operation to the UK's Crown Prosecution Service as possibly in violation of the UK bribery act, as "Kuzmin is getting PR benefit as a gift from PoR".[154]

The public relations contract coincided with a government campaign against former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, detained in a penal colony, and whose case had been top in the agenda of EU-Ukraine relations, delaying the signature of a DCFTA and Association Agreement between the two.

Turkey

In May 2017, shortly before clashes at the Turkish Ambassador's Residence in Washington, D.C., the Turkish administration of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan became a client of the agency. An inquiry by journalists of Der Spiegel regarding the hiring by the Turkish government remained unanswered by Burson-Marsteller.[155]

Healthcare

Burson-Marsteller established its Healthcare practice in the 1980s and by the early 1990s was listed as the top ranked healthcare PR firm by O'Dwyer's PR Services Report.[156] The company's healthcare practice provided public relations and communications for clients in pharmaceutical, biotechnology, healthcare provider, policy, nutrition, cosmetics and consumer health markets.[157] Significant campaigns undertaken by the practice have included a campaign launching the first biotechnology firm[156] and also the organization of the first National Breast Cancer Awareness Month.[158] Notable clients included AstraZeneca, Allergan, Wyeth,[159] Schering-Plough, Sandoz, and Bristol-Myers Squibb.[156] Burson-Marsteller won a number of international awards for campaigns by its healthcare practice,[159] including a Platinum PR Award for its 2002 National Breast Cancer Awareness Month campaign.[158]

Google smear campaign

It became public knowledge that Burson-Marsteller had been soliciting negative articles about Google's privacy practices after security researcher Christopher Soghoian re-posted a pitch[160] he received from a company representative. Other influential outlets, including USA Today,[161] confirmed that they had received similar pitches and even offers for help in writing article content. It was soon discovered by The Daily Beast that Google-competitor Facebook had hired the firm[162] to promote press coverage critical of Google's practices, although the firm did not initially divulge to writers who had paid for their services. This was confirmed by Facebook itself shortly after.

Two former reporters who had been hired by Burson-Marsteller helped in what became known as the "whisper campaign" against Google.[163] John Mercurio and Jim Goldman, both former journalists, brought attention to Google Social Circle, pushing negative commentary about Google on broadcast and in print media. Mercurio and Goldman claimed the new program from Google violated users' privacy and that it used information gathered by Facebook.[163]

Burson-Marsteller admitted its role in the campaign, and claimed to have parted ways with Facebook.[164]

Brand marketing

Burson-Marsteller's brand marketing practice included consumer lifestyle communications and brand communications across a range of markets.[165] Notable campaigns by the practice included the launch of Segway[166] and brand marketing for Old Navy.[167]

Cohn and Wolfe

History

Cohn & Wolfe was a global communications & public relations firm. In 1984, Burson-Marsteller acquired the Atlanta-based public relations firm,[42] and it operated as a subsidiary of Burson-Marsteller until 2000. It was part of Young & Rubicam and then also a part of WPP. In 2018, it merged with Burson-Marsteller.[168] It was founded by Bob Cohn and Norman Wolfe in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1970.

In 1999, the firm managed the campaign for Paxil, a drug produced by GlaxoSmithKline.[169][170] The firm also ran a publicity campaign on social anxiety disorder,[169][170] which made Paxil the world's top-selling anti-depressant.[169][170]

Subsidiaries and affiliates

Burson Cohn & Wolfe operates a number of subsidiary companies, including grassroots marketing consultancy Direct Impact, government affairs and lobbying firm Prime Policy Group, advertising consultancy Proof Integrated Communications, and strategic communications consultancy PivotRED.[171] In addition to these subsidiary companies, Burson Cohn & Wolfe also has a large number of affiliates, with partners in 60 countries and 70 affiliate offices worldwide. Among them, Burson Cohn & Wolfe has formed strategic partnerships with firms inside the United States, including Targeted Victory, a political and advocacy consultancy,[172] and also international firms including Mikhailov and Partners in Russia[173] and Engage Burson-Marsteller in the Dominican Republic.[174]

See also

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Bibliography

External links

  • "Burson-Marsteller : Corporate Crimes". Corporatewatch.org. 2002.
  • Burson-Marsteller at SourceWatch

burson, cohn, wolfe, multinational, public, relations, communications, firm, headquartered, york, city, february, 2018, parent, group, announced, that, merged, subsidiaries, cohn, wolfe, with, burson, marsteller, combined, agency, known, typeprivateindustrypub. Burson Cohn amp Wolfe is a multinational public relations and communications firm headquartered in New York City In February 2018 parent WPP Group PLC announced that it had merged its subsidiaries Cohn amp Wolfe with Burson Marsteller The combined agency is now known as Burson Cohn amp Wolfe 4 Burson Cohn amp WolfeTypePrivateIndustryPublic RelationsMarketingCommunicationsFounded1953 70 years ago 1953 Burson Marsteller 1970 53 years ago 1970 Cohn amp Wolfe Merged in 2018 5 years ago 2018 Burson Cohn amp Wolfe FoundersHarold Burson amp Bill MarstellerBob Cohn amp Norman WolfeHeadquarters200 Fifth Avenue New York City United StatesKey peopleDonna Imperato CEO 1 2 Jerry Lombardo CFO 3 Number of employees4 000 2018 1 ParentWPP plcWebsitebcw global wbr com Contents 1 Operations 2 History 3 Burson Marsteller 3 1 History 3 1 1 1950s and 1960s Company founding and early history 3 1 2 1970s General Motors 3 1 3 1980s Young amp Rubicam and worldwide expansion 3 1 4 1990s Global presence and Philip Morris 3 1 5 2000s 3 2 Services 3 3 Training 3 4 Crisis management 3 4 1 Tylenol 3 4 2 Bhopal 3 4 3 Other cases 3 5 Corporate PR 3 6 Technology 3 7 Public affairs 3 7 1 Romania 3 7 2 Indonesia 3 7 3 Argentina 3 7 4 Ukraine 3 7 5 Turkey 3 8 Healthcare 3 9 Google smear campaign 3 10 Brand marketing 4 Cohn and Wolfe 4 1 History 5 Subsidiaries and affiliates 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksOperations EditBCW Burson Cohn amp Wolfe was the world s third largest public relations firm by revenue as of 2018 5 It employed more than 4 000 people in 42 countries as of 2019 1 BCW is part of the BCW Group whose brands include AxiCom BWR Direct Impact GCI Health HZ PSB Prime Policy Group and Goodfuse 6 7 8 9 BCW offers clients creative content and integrated communications services across the following sectors business to business consumer corporate crisis management corporate social responsibility healthcare public affairs and technology 10 Donna Imperato serves as global chief executive officer CEO 1 She was previously CEO at Cohn amp Wolfe 11 BCW is split into divisions by geographic region North America Latin America Europe and Africa the Middle East and Asia Pacific Each region is led by a regional president who reports directly to the global CEO 12 Other notable employees include Karen Hughes former senior aide to U S President George W Bush 13 and Tom Reed a former six term Congressman from Corning New York 14 History EditBCW traces its roots to the founding of Burson Marsteller in 1953 and Cohn amp Wolfe in 1970 As part of a restructuring strategy in 2018 parent company WPP PLC merged Burson Marsteller the sixth largest PR firm worldwide and Cohn amp Wolfe which ranked 12th 15 The merger created the third largest PR firm which was named BCW Burson Cohn amp Wolfe 16 WPP stated that it merged the firms due to their complementary skills including Burson Marsteller s public affairs and corporate work and Cohn amp Wolfe s digital creative content consumer and health care work 17 In August 2018 BCW acquired HZ an integrated creative agency headquartered in Rockville Maryland with additional offices in Baltimore Los Angeles New York and Washington D C 16 8 Burson Marsteller EditHistory Edit Prior to its merger with Cohn amp Wolfe Burson Marsteller comprised 77 offices and 85 affiliate offices operating in 110 countries across six continents 18 The company was founded by Harold Burson 1921 2020 and William Marsteller in 1953 and by the early 1980s had become one of the largest public relations companies in the world In 1979 it became a subsidiary of Young amp Rubicam which in turn was acquired later by WPP Group PLC 19 In 2018 it merged with Cohn amp Wolfe and renamed Burson Cohn amp Wolfe 20 1950s and 1960s Company founding and early history Edit Harold Burson and Bill Marsteller plan out their firm s expansion into Europe Prior to the establishment of Burson Marsteller co founders Harold Burson and William Bill Marsteller owned separate agencies focused on public relations and advertising respectively Burson had established Harold Burson Public Relations in 1946 and was based in New York City Meanwhile Marsteller had founded the Chicago based advertising agency Marsteller Gebhardt and Reed later renamed Marsteller Inc in 1951 21 Burson and Marsteller met in 1952 when Marsteller needed a PR agency to work on an account for his client Rockwell Manufacturing 22 and was referred to Burson The two agencies shared the Rockwell account and later an account for Clark Engineering Equipment Company 23 In 1953 they entered into a partnership 24 creating a new public relations firm that was owned jointly by Burson and by Marsteller s advertising agency 25 Beginning with a staff of four and just two main clients 26 operations quickly grew and in the early 1960s Burson Marsteller began to establish a presence outside of the United States In 1960 they opened an office in Toronto Ontario Canada becoming the first U S PR agency to do so 27 One year later in 1961 following the founding of the Common Market in Europe the company established its first European office in Geneva followed shortly by an office in Brussels in 1965 28 At this time Hill amp Knowlton was the only other U S PR firm with an office outside the United States 19 In 1967 Burson Marsteller opened its first London office 28 1970s General Motors Edit One of the firm s earliest clients was the Electro Motive Division of General Motors GM that made diesel locomotives beginning in 1956 It was the only PR agency retained by GM at the time 29 In 1970 Burson Marsteller was engaged by the main division of GM to manage its PR 22 following stiff competition from larger firms According to Harold Burson GM was seeking outside PR management following the publication of Ralph Nader s book Unsafe at Any Speed which called into question GM s design practices and led to negative media representation of the company GM remained a client of Burson Marsteller for the next 11 years 30 At the time they took on GM Burson Marsteller was the 10th largest PR firm in the United States 31 In 1974 Wolcott and Company a Los Angeles based public relations firm founded by Robert Bob B Wolcott Jr merged with Burson Marsteller Wolcott Co had offices in New York Washington D C and San Francisco Bob Wolcott joined the executive management team and was in charge of West Coast and Asian operations 32 1980s Young amp Rubicam and worldwide expansion Edit In 1979 the company was sold to the communications group Young amp Rubicam In his memoirs Burson described the decision as being made for two primary reasons First Burson Marsteller required capital to finance its expansion Second Marsteller s advertising agency had declined in profitability and needed management fixing 19 Following the takeover Burson became executive vice president and a board member of Young amp Rubicam 21 33 As part of Young amp Rubicam in the late 1970s and early 1980s Burson Marsteller became known for its crisis management work 34 Notable clients consulting Burson Marsteller for crisis management included Babcock amp Wilcox following the Three Mile Island accident in 1979 Johnson amp Johnson during the 1982 Tylenol crisis 35 and Union Carbide Corporation following the 1984 Bhopal disaster 36 37 The company was also involved in the introduction of New Coke in early 1985 In interviews Burson has stated that the negative reaction of the public to the new product was unexpected 37 Following the reintroduction of the original Coke recipe the strategy that Burson Marsteller advised Coca Cola to employ was to be humble and apologize to the U S public for making the decision to change to New Coke 31 35 Just two months after original Coke was reintroduced as Classic Coke sales of Coke Coca Cola Classic and Cherry Coke had risen 10 percent compared with the previous year 38 The 1980s also saw the company become involved in large scale publicity events In 1984 Burson Marsteller first brought entertainment and sports together to generate publicity for its clients with the organization of the AT amp T Olympic Torch Relay sponsored by the telecommunications company 39 This was the largest promotional event that the company had undertaken to date with up to 150 people working full time on organizing the 8 000 mile relay 40 One year later Burson Marsteller executive Geoff Nightingale came up with the idea of Hands Across America as a fundraising event for USA for Africa sponsored by its client Coca Cola 41 By 1983 Burson Marsteller had become the world s largest PR firm with 63 8 million in revenue for that year 22 The following year it acquired Cohn amp Wolfe an Atlanta based public relations firm 42 which operated as a subsidiary of Burson Marsteller until 2000 Burson Marsteller had established its first offices in Asia in 1973 with offices in Hong Kong Singapore Kuala Lumpur and Tokyo 31 and by the mid 1980s it had further expanded overseas operations with the founding of offices in Australia and New Zealand 43 A subsidiary of the Xinhua News Agency New China News Agency went into partnership with Burson Marsteller in 1985 providing commercial public relations for foreign firms in China and for Chinese companies internationally 44 This subsidiary later became China Global Public Relations mainland China s first specialized public relations consulting firm 45 Following Burson Marsteller s appointment as the official public relations counsel for the Seoul Olympics in 1988 24 it was the first foreign public relations firm to be granted a license to open a wholly owned communications and marketing office in South Korea 46 Burson Marsteller also expanded into Central and South America during the 1980s Offices were established in San Juan Puerto Rico and Sao Paulo A regional headquarters was established in Miami Florida in May 1989 47 and with the regional headquarters in place the company won MasterCard International s Latin American account which became one of the firm s largest accounts at the time 48 The agency s business grew by about 24 annually during the 1980s according to Burson and PR Week stated in 1988 that Burson Marsteller was the largest international PR firm in the world by that point 24 The following year Burson stepped down as CEO of the firm He continued to work on major accounts such as Coca Cola and Merrill Lynch 37 while James H Dowling succeeded him as the second ever CEO of Burson Marsteller 49 1990s Global presence and Philip Morris Edit By 1990 Burson Marsteller had branches in 28 countries with 52 offices and over 2 300 employees 33 Notable international work carried out by Burson Marsteller in the early 1990s included a public relations campaign undertaken for the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism in 1993 following terrorist attacks on tourists in Egypt The campaign aimed to encourage tourists to visit Egypt focusing on recent archaeological discoveries 50 In December 1994 the company received attention after an executive at Burson Marsteller was killed by a mailbomb sent by the Unabomber The Washington Post reported that Ted Kaczynski targeted Burson Marsteller executive Thomas Mosser due to a belief Exxon had consulted with Burson Marsteller during the Valdez oil spill Burson Marsteller stated that they had advised Exxon in the past and had been asked to review and analyze Exxon s handling of the disaster afterwards but had not been engaged to manage the crisis itself 51 In the 1990s the company also received considerable attention for PR campaigns on behalf of tobacco company Altria formerly Philip Morris Companies Inc in which it was engaged to discredit anti smoking research and legislation attempts 52 In 1993 Burson Marsteller helped organize a response to a 1992 United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA report which had identified secondhand smoke as a Group A human carcinogen 53 The strategy employed by Burson Marsteller was to build doubt among consumers about the scientific validity of the EPA report and to target legislators who supported curbs on smoking 54 As part of this strategy the company organized a smokers rights group called the National Smokers Alliance NSA 55 to target politicians who supported anti smoking legislation 56 57 The NSA was founded with an estimated 4 million in Philip Morris seed money and the involvement of some fifty other tobacco industry players 58 Their activities also included support for The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition TASSC which was created in 1993 by APCO Worldwide another major public relations firm with funding from Philip Morris 59 60 In Europe Burson Marsteller provided support for an advertising campaign in 1996 carried out by Philip Morris Advertisements were published comparing the health risks of secondhand smoke exposure with a range of other activities This campaign received significant coverage in the media across Europe 61 Burson Marsteller was criticized in the media for its involvement with Philip Morris and in 1999 a demonstration was held outside the firm s headquarters protesting their role as PR for Philip Morris 62 Those involved went to great lengths not to reveal the tobacco industry support of these organizations to give the appearance they represented grassroots opposition to anti smoking laws rather than the business interests of their sponsors 63 64 At the end of the 1990s the firm had retained its position as the largest PR agency in the world with fees of over 274 million for that year 37 As part of the company s continued growth it acquired grassroots lobbying organization Direct Impact in April 1999 65 66 In the same year Harold Burson was named by PR Week as the PR industry s most influential person of the 20th century 22 37 2000s Edit Young amp Rubicam became a subsidiary of the media group WPP Group PLC in 2000 and Burson Marsteller became part of WPP 22 The U S Bureau of Engraving and Printing first hired Burson Marsteller in 1995 67 to publicize the new designs of U S currency bills both within the United States and internationally The Bureau had launched a second redesign of the bills in ten years with the intention of preventing counterfeiting 68 As well as the media campaign Burson Marsteller was also involved in research prior to the redesign to ensure that the new designs would be acceptable to the public 69 In December 2005 Burson Marsteller acquired the Indian firm Genesis PR as a wholly owned subsidiary Following this acquisition India and China became Burson Marsteller s second and third largest markets worldwide based on number of employees 70 The renamed Genesis Burson Marsteller was announced as the company s hub for the South Asian market in 2008 71 Prior to the acquisition since 2002 Genesis had been Burson Marsteller s exclusive representative in India 72 Mark Penn became the CEO of Burson Marsteller in December 2005 73 following a period of instability at the firm during which there were three leadership changes in one year 74 Penn s predecessor Tom Nides had left Burson Marsteller after eight months in the role 75 A White House political pollster for six years he was best known for his work with President Bill Clinton Tony Blair and Bill Gates 76 Penn who had not previously worked within PR introduced new strategies at Burson Marsteller including one called DIGS digital integrated global strategic 77 and Evidence Based Communications 77 described by the company as a scientific and data driven approach to communications 78 which drew from Penn s background in research 74 Penn and Burson Marsteller received negative media attention in 2008 when his work on behalf of the Colombian government then seeking a free trade agreement with the United States became a political liability for the presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton who was opposed to a free trade pact with Colombia Penn described the dual role an error in judgment following which the Colombian government terminated its client relationship 79 80 Clinton later revised her opinion in favor of the free trade pact 81 82 Penn s leadership at Burson Marsteller has been cited by PR Week as a model for the public relations industry particularly combining public affairs experience with public relations 83 84 85 In April 2011 industry expert Paul Holmes named Burson Marsteller the U S Large Agency of the Year citing its double digit growth within the United States and record 2010 profits as factors in the award crediting Penn with improved performance and Burson s global recovery 74 Burson Marsteller s notable clients in the late 2000s decade include Ford Motor Company which took on the company as crisis management consultants in 2009 86 and American International Group AIG on whose behalf the firm undertook crisis management work in 2008 and 2009 Burson Marsteller was brought in by AIG to help respond to requests for information from customers employees and the media due to the liquidity crisis it suffered in September 2008 87 In 2010 Burson Marsteller announced it had made a commitment to no longer accept work on behalf of the tobacco industry 88 In May 2011 Burson Marsteller was hired by Facebook to conduct a PR attack on Google 89 90 Burson Marsteller contacted a number of media companies and bloggers in an effort to get them to write unflattering stories about Google The campaign backfired when one of the bloggers went public by posting the emails he received from Burson Marsteller on the Internet 91 Don Baer the former communications director for the Clinton administration was named CEO of Burson Marsteller in 2012 92 He served in that capacity through February 2018 when WPP merged Burson Marsteller with Cohn amp Wolfe to create a new agency called Burson Cohn amp Wolfe 93 Services Edit Burson Marsteller provided public relations and advertising services to clients including multinational corporations and government agencies It was known primarily for its crisis management services and political lobbying It won numerous awards from the public relations industry over the years for its work in high profile crisis management including the late 1990s Asian financial crisis a 2002 extortion attempt against British company GlaxoSmithKline and a response described as the gold standard for its crisis management of the 1982 Chicago Tylenol poisonings Other high profile crisis cases include the manufacturers of the Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station and Egypt following terrorist attacks on tourists in 1993 At times it has also been the subject of protests and criticism for its use of smearing and doubt campaigns to undermine concerns about passive smoking for Philip Morris in the 1990s and anti Google smear campaigning for Facebook in 2011 94 95 and its work for regimes facing severe human rights criticisms Argentina and Indonesia 96 The firm also worked in corporate PR public affairs technology and healthcare communications and brand marketing Training Edit Within the industry Burson Marsteller was known for its effective company employee training programs 97 and for having helped to develop the careers of many members of the public relations industry 98 From early in the company s history employees were expected to participate in ongoing training Due to this practice Harold Burson estimated in the early 1980s that 65 percent of the company s costs were related to human resources 99 The aim of Burson Marsteller s training was to create a uniform approach to public relations across all clients and locations 48 In 2005 the company launched Burson Marsteller University providing comprehensive training to its executives in developing corporate communications that are consistent worldwide while remaining culturally appropriate 100 In 2009 when the firm debuted a new approach to public relations called Evidence Based Communications Burson Marsteller also introduced an extensive training program designed to help employees apply it to ongoing projects and new proposals 101 Specific training was also provided to employees relevant to their practice areas In the Issues amp Crisis Group employees were trained to communicate the correct information during crises for a variety of different clients and issues 34 In an interview in 2003 Harold Burson was quoted as saying that Burson Marsteller has been A training ground for the industry 19 with more than 35 000 people continuing to participate in the company s alumni network as of 2010 update 102 Notable former employees at Burson Marsteller include Thomas Nides the U S Deputy Secretary of State Lord Watson of Richmond a member of the House of Lords Perry Yeatman senior vice president of corporate affairs at Kraft Foods Kathryn Beiser vice president of corporate communications at Discover Financial Services Bob Feldman and Jeff Hunt co founders and principals of PulsePoint Group communications consultancy 98 and Daniel Lamarre CEO of Cirque du Soleil 103 and prominent figures in a number of PR companies including the CEOs of Ketchum Inc 98 Cohn amp Wolfe and Wunderman Crisis management Edit Through its crisis management work Burson Marsteller was identified with many major corporate crises of the past half century 26 104 Burson Marsteller added crisis management as a service following Young amp Rubicam s 1979 takeover of the company In 2008 Burson Marsteller established a global practice called the Issues amp Crisis Group ICG that focus specifically on this area of communications 105 The practice had a network of specially certified experts in crisis management located in its offices worldwide 104 Services included providing communication with clients employees customers and the general public during crises 34 In addition to helping clients deal with crises as they occurred Burson Marsteller also provided clients with assistance in developing contingency plans for potential crises 104 The firm provided intelligence reports to clients either hourly or daily that advise of new issues public reception and critical or supportive responses 106 and carried out market research into CEO and corporate reputation 107 Burson Marsteller offered services including communications tools and techniques intended to help companies to recover following a crisis 104 In particular Burson Marsteller had a close working relationship with many global producers and marketers of petroleum products especially assisting on key communications of specific crisis situations such as oil spills and serious accidents It also worked with these companies in the development of environmental upgrade programs Significant clients included Shell 33 and ExxonMobil 26 The company received a number of awards for its work in crisis management In 1999 Burson Marsteller was awarded a Public Relations Society of America Silver Anvil the public relations industry s highest award for organizations recognizing its communications program aimed at restoring confidence in the Korean economy during the Asian financial crisis of 1998 108 It also received a Silver Anvil in 2003 for its work with the United States Postal Service for managing communications during the anthrax crisis 109 In 2002 the company received a Golden World Award the highest award from the UK based International Public Relations Association for its crisis management work on behalf of GlaxoSmithKline following an extortion attempt involving its Panadol brand 110 Since the early 1980s Burson Marsteller had dealt with a range of much publicized crisis management situations from industrial accidents to acts of terrorism Notable early cases include work involving the 1982 and 1986 Tylenol contaminations and the Bhopal disaster Tylenol Edit Burson Marsteller s handling of the Chicago Tylenol poisonings for Johnson amp Johnson in September 1982 has been referred to as the gold standard for crisis management 111 Seven people in the Chicago area were killed when they took Tylenol capsules tainted with cyanide 112 and Johnson amp Johnson went to Burson Marsteller for advice on how to approach the situation 113 After an eighth death which occurred in California the response by Johnson amp Johnson was to announce a nationwide recall of all Tylenol capsules 112 Burson Marsteller organized a press conference televised across 35 markets in the United States addressing the recall and reporting that the product tampering had occurred on the shelves not during manufacturing 31 34 During late October 1982 a brief television campaign was undertaken asking for the public to trust Tylenol 114 and Burson Marsteller carried out nationwide polling which found that the majority of the population still had confidence in Johnson amp Johnson 35 Ninety percent of respondents stated that they did not hold the manufacturer responsible for the deaths 114 At a Burson Marsteller organized press conference in November 1982 Johnson amp Johnson introduced new tamper proof packaging 114 becoming the first company to introduce triple sealed packaging which later became the industry standard 31 The conference gave Johnson amp Johnson the opportunity to announce that they were reintroducing Tylenol capsules to the market and would replace any Tylenol that consumers had thrown away 114 115 In addition Johnson amp Johnson published advertisements with coupons for consumers to use to replace Tylenol that had been thrown out 114 and produced commercials and print advertisements thanking the public for their continuing confidence and support 115 Within six weeks of the introduction of the repackaged product Tylenol s sales returned to the previous level 31 In 1983 Burson Marsteller was awarded a Silver Anvil for out of the ordinary crisis management for its work with Johnson amp Johnson 116 The company was brought back to handle crisis management during a second Tylenol crisis involving cyanide tainting in New York in 1986 111 Bhopal Edit The Bhopal disaster was one of the world s worst industrial catastrophes In 1984 a gas leak killed over 2 000 people at a plant in Bhopal India and poisoned thousands more 117 The plant was jointly owned by Union Carbide Corporation now Dow Chemicals and the Indian government and run by local Indian management Burson Marsteller consultants were brought in by Union Carbide to organize communications following the leak and provide advice to Union Carbide executives 118 Specifically the company set up an information center to provide information to the media and help to transmit news from the remote location to newspaper TV and radio outlets 26 and facilitate daily press conferences that reported on steps taken following the accident Under advice from the consultants and corporate lawyers Union Carbide CEO Warren Anderson traveled to Bhopal where he was placed in custody by the Indian government Anderson posted bail returned to the United States and refused to return to India He was declared a fugitive from justice by the Chief Judicial Magistrate of Bhopal on February 1 1992 for failing to appear at the court hearings in a culpable homicide case in which he was named the chief defendant 119 While his visit to India several days after the leak was viewed positively by the media and other corporations and brought attention to Union Carbide s actions in showing its concern for what had happened in Bhopal 120 it did not deflect criticism of Union Carbide for cutting costs on safety measures 121 While Burson Marsteller has been criticized for its involvement with Union Carbide Harold Burson has stated that he is proud of the company s work in helping the media cover the story 36 Other cases Edit After the Three Mile Island accident of 1979 became the most significant accident in the history of U S commercial nuclear power generation Burson Marsteller conducted public relations work for Babcock amp Wilcox the plant s manufacturer 122 The company organized a campaign for Egypt s Ministry of Tourism following terrorist attacks on tourists in 1993 The campaign focused on Western Europe and the United States and featured TV commercials and other media coverage of new archeological discoveries and the role of Egypt in the Middle East 50 Blackwater USA the private military company took on Burson Marsteller s subsidiary company BKSH to help founder Erik Prince prepare for a congressional hearing in 2007 In September of that year Blackwater guards were involved in a shooting in Baghdad in which 13 Iraqis were killed Blackwater faced a great deal of negative publicity and Prince was asked to testify before the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform 123 Corporate PR Edit Burson Marsteller s second largest practice was its Corporate and Financial Communications group 124 The company s corporate PR practice focused on four different specialties corporate brand positioning financial communications organizational performance and C suite positioning 125 One of the agency s longstanding corporate clients was the Saudi Arabia Basic Industries Corporation SABIC The company began work with the petrochemical producer in the late 1970s when they first entered the market in the Middle East 126 Other notable corporate clients have included Procter and Gamble British Gas Plc Philips Unilever Du Pont Coca Cola GlaxoSmithKline 33 Merrill Lynch General Electric 22 Monsanto the Federal Communications Commission and Colgate Palmolive 86 Technology Edit Burson Marsteller first established a technology group in its New York office in the early 1980s specializing in high tech PR services 127 The company s technology practice expanded rapidly over the 1990s with major clients including Apple Sun Microsystems and Qualcomm and its headquarters moved to Silicon Valley in the late 1990s The practice focused specifically on public relations for technology companies 128 129 and organizations using technology as a key part of their business 130 Notable clients included HP 131 Intel 132 and business software corporation SAP AG 133 Public affairs Edit Within Burson Marsteller s public affairs practice the company specialized in public relations and communications for government and corporate clients 134 Notable public affairs clients included the U S Bureau of Engraving and Printing 67 the Hebrides Range Task Force for whose campaign Burson Marsteller won several awards in 2010 135 South Korea including representation of the Seoul Olympics Organizing Committee in the late 1980s 136 137 and the Brazilian government tourism agency 138 Burson Marsteller had taken on government clients who have been controversial in particular during the 1970s when clients notably included Romania Indonesia and Argentina 139 The company received awards for its public affairs work including an award for the Europe Middle East Africa public affairs agency of the year at the 2009 10 SABRE awards the world s largest awards competition for the public relations industry 78 and a Silver Anvil from the Public Relations Society of America in 2004 for their work for the Bureau of Engraving and Printing 140 Romania Edit Burson Marsteller represented the Romanian government in the early 1970s during which time the country gained Most Favored Nation status for trade with the United States At the time the United States and other western nations regarded Romania s president Nicolae Ceausescu as the friendliest of the Soviet bloc leaders to their interests U S President Nixon visited Ceausescu in Bucharest in 1969 which he viewed as a diplomatic opportunity to gain access to China 141 and later the Romanian dictator was said to be instrumental in arranging Nixon s visit to China Burson Marsteller was brought in by the Romanian government specifically to promote trade and tourism for Romania one result was a week long visit to the country by NBC s Today program 139 Indonesia Edit Following the 1991 Santa Cruz massacre of East Timor protesters by occupying Indonesian forces the Indonesian government retained Burson Marsteller 142 143 144 to help improve the country s human rights and environmental image according to the Far Eastern Economic Review Another contract was signed in 1996 145 The company was retained in total from 1992 to 1998 142 143 Over the six years that the company worked for the country s government Burson Marsteller promoted Indonesia s trade opportunities to encourage foreign investment 142 and aided the country in its attempts to improve its human rights image 146 147 Argentina Edit General Jorge Rafael Videla Burson Marsteller carried out public relations work for the last Argentine military dictatorship 1976 1983 for which it received criticism 96 The corporation accepted the military junta government of General Jorge Videla as a client with the full knowledge of and advice from the U S State Department and the remit of attracting industrial investment marketing Argentine bonds promoting Argentine products mainly wine and improving the image of the dictatorship around the world 139 In doing so the company produced press kits and direct mailings arranged for journalists to visit Argentina and held lunches with business groups and financial seminars 148 For years Burson Marsteller denied working directly with the Argentine military stating they only worked for the Ministry of Economics to assist in economic development Later on Burson Marsteller admitted to working with the dictator to improve the nation s image 149 At that time human rights organizations were denouncing state crimes against humanity including forced disappearances and torture that were taking place in what later became known as the Dirty War Burson Marsteller maintained that it was not asked to defend Human Rights Violations however researcher Ruben Morales wrote that the company created a slogan to coincide with the September 1979 Inter American Commission on Human Rights fact finding visit which stated in its English translation We Argentines are right and humane 150 151 Naomi Klein wrote in The Shock Doctrine that Burson Marsteller account executive Victor Emmanuel stated that violence was necessary to open up Argentina s economy since securing investment was impossible if a state of civil war existed and that while acknowledging that a lot of innocent people were probably killed given the situation immense force was required 152 The quotes are drawn from a 1996 interview by Marguerite Feitlowitz In her account of that interview Feitlowitz describes Emmanuel replying to a point about kidnappings and secret camps It was arguably almost necessary 153 Feitlowitz describes an initial 33 page report completed under Emmanuel s supervision as echoing the regime s language referencing for example well financed subversion campaigns of international origin The report outlined three target groups for their campaign those who influence thinking those who influence travel and those who influence investment She goes on to write Journalists they knew would be the toughest customers Many consider the Argentine government oppressive and repressive a dictatorial military institution which deserves little more than condemnation So prominent reporters got special attention in the hopes that they would help build a system of conduits in the leading newspapers and magazines in the West Linked to this was a negative campaign aimed at individuals and reporters singled out by Argentine magazine Para Ti 153 Burson Marsteller placed an advertising supplement in The New York Times Magazine in 1979 according to Emmanuel content was probably supplied by the Argentine finance minister A more extensive 31 page supplement ran in Business Week the next July 153 Evidence from Wikileaks revealed in 2013 that Burson Marsteller pressured the Associated Press to publish an article with an American executive mentioning their support for the regime in 1976 149 According to Feitlowitz Argentine dictator Jorge Videla renewed Burson Marsteller s contract twice 153 Ukraine Edit In 2012 Burson Marsteller was hired by Ukraine s ruling Party of Regions PoR to help the PoR communicate its activities as the governing party of Ukraine as well as to help it explain better its position on the Yulia Tymoshenko case as explained by Robert Mack a senior manager at Burson Marsteller 154 The tasks of the PR company included setting up press interviews for Ukraine s deputy prosecutor general Renat Kuzmin during his visits in Brussels Kuzmin has been criticized for his direct accusations to Tymoshenko including for a 1990s contract killing helping to violate Kuzmin s status as an independent jurist Other PR companies reported the operation to the UK s Crown Prosecution Service as possibly in violation of the UK bribery act as Kuzmin is getting PR benefit as a gift from PoR 154 The public relations contract coincided with a government campaign against former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko detained in a penal colony and whose case had been top in the agenda of EU Ukraine relations delaying the signature of a DCFTA and Association Agreement between the two Turkey Edit In May 2017 shortly before clashes at the Turkish Ambassador s Residence in Washington D C the Turkish administration of Recep Tayyip Erdogan became a client of the agency An inquiry by journalists of Der Spiegel regarding the hiring by the Turkish government remained unanswered by Burson Marsteller 155 Healthcare Edit Burson Marsteller established its Healthcare practice in the 1980s and by the early 1990s was listed as the top ranked healthcare PR firm by O Dwyer s PR Services Report 156 The company s healthcare practice provided public relations and communications for clients in pharmaceutical biotechnology healthcare provider policy nutrition cosmetics and consumer health markets 157 Significant campaigns undertaken by the practice have included a campaign launching the first biotechnology firm 156 and also the organization of the first National Breast Cancer Awareness Month 158 Notable clients included AstraZeneca Allergan Wyeth 159 Schering Plough Sandoz and Bristol Myers Squibb 156 Burson Marsteller won a number of international awards for campaigns by its healthcare practice 159 including a Platinum PR Award for its 2002 National Breast Cancer Awareness Month campaign 158 Google smear campaign Edit It became public knowledge that Burson Marsteller had been soliciting negative articles about Google s privacy practices after security researcher Christopher Soghoian re posted a pitch 160 he received from a company representative Other influential outlets including USA Today 161 confirmed that they had received similar pitches and even offers for help in writing article content It was soon discovered by The Daily Beast that Google competitor Facebook had hired the firm 162 to promote press coverage critical of Google s practices although the firm did not initially divulge to writers who had paid for their services This was confirmed by Facebook itself shortly after Two former reporters who had been hired by Burson Marsteller helped in what became known as the whisper campaign against Google 163 John Mercurio and Jim Goldman both former journalists brought attention to Google Social Circle pushing negative commentary about Google on broadcast and in print media Mercurio and Goldman claimed the new program from Google violated users privacy and that it used information gathered by Facebook 163 Burson Marsteller admitted its role in the campaign and claimed to have parted ways with Facebook 164 Brand marketing Edit Burson Marsteller s brand marketing practice included consumer lifestyle communications and brand communications across a range of markets 165 Notable campaigns by the practice included the launch of Segway 166 and brand marketing for Old Navy 167 Cohn and Wolfe EditHistory Edit Cohn amp Wolfe was a global communications amp public relations firm In 1984 Burson Marsteller acquired the Atlanta based public relations firm 42 and it operated as a subsidiary of Burson Marsteller until 2000 It was part of Young amp Rubicam and then also a part of WPP In 2018 it merged with Burson Marsteller 168 It was founded by Bob Cohn and Norman Wolfe in Atlanta Georgia in 1970 In 1999 the firm managed the campaign for Paxil a drug produced by GlaxoSmithKline 169 170 The firm also ran a publicity campaign on social anxiety disorder 169 170 which made Paxil the world s top selling anti depressant 169 170 Subsidiaries and affiliates EditBurson Cohn amp Wolfe operates a number of subsidiary companies including grassroots marketing consultancy Direct Impact government affairs and lobbying firm Prime Policy Group advertising consultancy Proof Integrated Communications and strategic communications consultancy PivotRED 171 In addition to these subsidiary companies Burson Cohn amp Wolfe also has a large number of affiliates with partners in 60 countries and 70 affiliate offices worldwide Among them Burson Cohn amp Wolfe has formed strategic partnerships with firms inside the United States including Targeted Victory a political and advocacy consultancy 172 and also international firms including Mikhailov and Partners in Russia 173 and Engage Burson Marsteller in the Dominican Republic 174 See also EditBob Leaf International chairman Perception managementReferences Edit a b c d Shah Aarti February 27 2018 WPP Creates 3rd Largest PR Firm With Burson Cohn amp Wolfe The Holmes Report Retrieved June 18 2019 Don Baer to exit BCW at year s end www prweek com About August 11 2021 Bradley Diana February 27 2018 WPP Merges Burson Marsteller and Cohn amp Wolfe PR Week Retrieved February 28 2018 Donna Imperato CEO Burson Cohn amp Wolfe PR Week July 2 2018 Retrieved July 10 2019 Y amp R PR Rebrands as Goodfuse article PR Week online retrieved 2021 9 2 Moore Thomas May 17 2018 BCW Group merges two tech firms into AxiCom US PR Week Retrieved May 9 2019 a b Rittenhouse Lindsay August 14 2018 WPP s Burson Cohn amp Wolfe Acquires Creative Shop HZ Adweek Retrieved May 9 2019 Burson Marsteller an optimistic view PR Week May 1 2017 Retrieved June 26 2019 BCW Burson Cohn amp Wolfe The Holmes Report Retrieved July 10 2019 Bennett Bennett February 27 2018 WPP firms Burson Marsteller and Cohn and Wolfe merge The Drum Retrieved May 10 2019 Sudhaman Arun March 6 2018 Burson Cohn amp Wolfe Names Regional Leadership Following Merger The Holmes Report Retrieved July 10 2019 Ciarallo Joe July 9 2008 Former Bush Aide Karen Hughes Joins Burson Marsteller Adweek Retrieved July 10 2019 Aaron Navarro May 11 2022 Republican Tom Reed Resigns from Congress CBS News Shah Aarti February 27 2018 WPP Created 3rd Largest PR Firm With Burson Cohn amp Wolfe Holmes Report Retrieved May 10 2019 a b Gregg Aaron Heath Thomas August 14 2018 The world s biggest advertising conglomerate just swallowed up Rockville s homegrown agency The Washington Post Retrieved May 10 2019 Bradley Diana February 27 2018 WPP merges Burson Marsteller and Cohn amp Wolfe PR Week Retrieved August 20 2019 BursonMarsteller Launches Integrated Government and Political Services Group Press release Burson Marsteller February 17 2011 Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved February 28 2011 a b c d Karmali Naazneen June 23 2003 Let your good work speak for you PDF Business India Archived from the original PDF on August 17 2011 Retrieved January 27 2011 News Room Hub September 23 2021 a b Bryson York Emily October 12 2009 Ad legend Richard Christian dead at 84 The executive behind Keep America Beautiful is fondly remembered Advertising Age p 17 a b c d e f Much Marilyn May 11 2004 Harold Burson Burnishes Stars Innovate PR maven takes firms that shine and makes them more brilliant Investors com Archived from the original on January 27 2013 Retrieved January 27 2011 Burson Harold 2004 e pluribus unum The Making of Burson Marsteller pp 36 8 a b c Holmes Paul March 28 1988 35 Years at the helm PDF PR Week Archived from the original PDF on August 17 2011 Retrieved January 27 2011 Burson Harold 2004 e pluribus unum The Making of Burson Marsteller p 38 a b c d Beckett Andy August 13 1997 The Acceptable Face of Disaster The Guardian London Burson Harold 2004 e pluribus unum The Making of Burson Marsteller p 47 a b Burrell Ian August 31 2009 We have represented clients in the past that are controversial The Independent London Burson Harold 2004 e pluribus unum The Making of Burson Marsteller p 48 Burson Harold 2004 e pluribus unum The Making of Burson Marsteller pp 119 121 a b c d e f Hynum Rick Winter 2001 Wagging the dog PDF Ole Miss Alumni Review Archived from the original PDF on August 17 2011 Retrieved January 27 2011 404 PRSA www a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Cite uses generic title help a b c d Izat Janet June 28 1990 Still on top of his empire The founder and chairman of Burson Marsteller PDF PR Week Archived from the original PDF on August 17 2011 Retrieved 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p 5 a b Cohn amp Wolfe Public Relations opens Chicago office Business Wire November 2 1988 Burson Marsteller Peter Walford The Globe and Mail Toronto July 8 1987 Hooper John September 2 1985 China brushes up on public relations The Guardian London About CGPR China Global Public Relations Archived from the original on September 12 2011 Yoshihara Nancy June 6 1988 South Korea Holds a Coming Out Party Los Angeles Times Burson Marsteller Establishes Mexico Venture PR Newswire September 14 1989 a b Zisser Melinda November 13 1989 Growth Potential Spurs Agency into Latin America South Florida Business Journal Daniel Cuff January 7 1988 New Chief Is Chosen at Burson Marsteller The New York Times p 2D a b Holliday Kalen March 22 1993 Egypt plans campaign to win back tourists Advertising Age Thomas Pierre Weiser Benjamin April 13 1996 Reputed Manifesto Recovered The Washington Post p A01 Retrieved January 28 2011 Philip Morris and Burson Marsteller A Partnership University of California San Francisco Legacy Tobacco Documents Library Retrieved January 30 2011 Ong Bisa K Glantz Stanton A November 2001 Constructing Sound Science and Good Epidemiology Tobacco Lawyers and Public Relations Firms American Journal of Public Health 91 11 1749 57 doi 10 2105 AJPH 91 11 1749 PMC 1446868 PMID 11684593 Muggli M Hurt R Becker L 2004 Turning free speech into corporate speech Philip Morris efforts to influence U S And European journalists regarding the U S EPA report on secondhand smoke Preventive Medicine 39 3 568 80 doi 10 1016 j ypmed 2004 02 014 PMID 15313097 Gellene Denise December 17 1998 PR Chief Says He s No Spin Doctor Los Angeles Times p 8C http legacy library ucsf edu tid ttd85e00 pdf NSA Political Plan Outline December 1993 Philip Morris Inc Bates no 2023203153 3158 http legacy library ucsf edu tid lyo07e00 pdf National Smokers Alliance 1994 Political Action Plan February 3 1994 Philip Morris Co Bates no 2047897334 7347 http www no smoke org document php id 257 Archived April 3 2012 at the Wayback Machine American Nonsmokers Rights Foundation The National Smokers Alliance Exposed A Report On The Activities Of Philip Morris No 1 Front Group http legacy library ucsf edu tid qdf02a00 pdf Ellen Merlo Philip Morris USA Internal Memorandum to William I Campbell February 17 1993 Philip Morris USA Bates no 2021183916 3930 Ong EK Glantz SA November 2001 Constructing Sound Science and Good Epidemiology Tobacco Lawyers and Public Relations Firms American Journal of Public Health 91 11 1749 57 doi 10 2105 AJPH 91 11 1749 PMC 1446868 PMID 11684593 Rogers Danny July 12 1996 Campaigns Public Awareness Stoking up the smoking ban ire PR Week Burson Marsteller Confronted for Supporting Philip Morris INFACT s Kraft Boycotters Mobilize Nationwide PR Newswire April 29 1999 Ong EK Glantz SA November 2001 Constructing sound science and good epidemiology tobacco lawyers and public relations firms Am J Public Health 91 11 1749 57 doi 10 2105 AJPH 91 11 1749 PMC 1446868 PMID 11684593 Monbiot George September 19 2006 The Denial Industry The Guardian London Retrieved August 11 2010 Elliott Stuart April 14 1999 Acquisitions By 2 Companies The New York Times p 8C McAllister Bill April 14 1999 Burson Marsteller Buys Va Lobbying Firm The Washington Post ProQuest 1707156849 a b Parpis Eleftheria October 9 1995 Fresh Look for Some Old Favorites Y amp R Inc to Build Acceptance of Redesigned U S Currency Bills Adweek Quenqua Douglas August 16 2002 Burson Marsteller lands global remit for a new look US dollar PR Week Streisand Betsy September 28 2003 Need Change for a 20 bill Call Hollywood The New York Times Retrieved January 28 2011 Burson Marsteller Acquires Genesis PR Business Line December 13 2005 Burson Marsteller To Make India South Asian Hub Asia Pulse April 21 2008 Burson Marsteller Genesis PR Tie Up Business Line July 13 2002 Bosman Julie December 8 2005 Burson Marsteller Appoints Political Consultant as Chief The New York Times p 5 a b c Holmes Paul April 25 2011 Burson Marsteller Named US Large Agency of the Year Holmes Report Retrieved April 26 2011 Herskovits Beth December 12 2005 Burson Hires Pollster Penn to Become Firm s Next CEO PR Week US p 1 Charter David February 25 2006 The Most Important Man in Washington You ve Never Heard Of The Times a b Holmes Paul 2010 PR Agency Report Card 2010 Burson Marsteller The Holmes Report 32 34 a b PR Week Global Reports Burson Marsteller PR Week UK United Kingdom 2010 Archived from the original on November 2 2011 Retrieved January 28 2011 McKenna Barrie April 8 2008 There is No Better NAFTA Deal Despite What the Democrats Preach The Globe and Mail Toronto Broder John M April 5 2008 Colombia to Penn You re Fired The New York Times com Retrieved January 30 2011 Krause Jackson Flavia January 28 2011 U S Committed to Free Trade Accord With Colombia Bloomberg Businessweek Retrieved April 27 2011 Hillary Clinton Secretary of State Gives Her Opinions About Colombia Semana January 21 2009 Retrieved April 27 2011 Barrett Steve January 14 2011 A new sheriff hits town at H amp K PR Week US com Retrieved March 24 2011 Mattinson Alec January 12 2011 Paul Taaffe s Departure From Hill amp Knowlton Prompts Agency To Change Its Leadership Structure PR Week com Retrieved March 24 2011 Barrett Steve February 25 2011 H amp K s Martin rejects Burson comparison PR Week US com Retrieved March 24 2011 a b 2010 Agency Business Report Burson Marsteller PR Week May 1 2010 Retrieved January 27 2011 Garcia Tonya October 27 2008 AIG employs Burson s help PR Week US p 1 Vision Mission amp Ethics Burson Marsteller com Archived from the original on May 16 2011 Retrieved May 3 2011 Facebook vs Google fight turns nasty CNN May 12 2011 Retrieved May 11 2011 Byron Acohido Scott Martin May 12 2011 Facebook Burson discuss role in Google Circle dispute USA Today Retrieved May 12 2011 Untitled May 3 2011 Retrieved May 11 2011 Ho Catherine July 19 2012 Burson Marsteller taps former Clinton adviser Don Baer as new CEO The Washington Post Retrieved August 28 2019 Bradley Diana February 27 2018 WPP Merges Burson Marsteller and Cohn amp Wolfe PR Week Retrieved February 28 2018 Facebook admits to anti Google smear campaign The Sydney Morning Herald May 12 2011 Tobacco News Tobacco Org on line a b Guest Iain 1990 Behind the disappearances Argentina s dirty war against human rights and the United Nations University of Pennsylvania Press p 69 ISBN 0 8122 1313 0 PR Legend to Speak at TPRA Conference Harold Burson Burson Marsteller to Serve as Keynote Speaker Business Wire March 7 2007 a b c Hood Julia September 1 2010 The Burson Legacy Career Guide 2010 PR Week US Retrieved February 17 2011 Jones Alex March 26 1984 New no 1 in public relations The New York Times Burson Marsteller Launches Global Corporate Executive Training Program Market News Publishing December 8 2005 Burson Marsteller Makes Commitment to Evidence Based Communications Business Wire December 14 2009 Barrett Steve November 12 2010 Burson s legacy is as relevant as ever PR Week Retrieved January 27 2011 Lamarre Daniel June 19 2010 The Boss The Path to Cirque du Soleil The New York Times Retrieved February 21 2011 a b c d Burson Marsteller O Dwyer s PR Report 23 1 39 January 2009 Issues amp Crisis Group opens PR Week US July 14 2008 p 2 Burson Marsteller Launches Business Intelligence Tool to Help Clients Turn Raw Data into Solutions Canada NewsWire April 4 2007 Corporate Reputation Takes 3 2 Years to Recover from a Crisis Finds Burson Marsteller Market Research Business Wire July 19 2006 Burson Marsteller Takes Top Industry Award for Program to Restore Confidence in the Korean Economy Business Wire June 16 1999 Carter Bill Rutenberg Jim June 9 2003 2 P R Agencies Tie For Silver Anvils The New York Times p 10C PR gold for Panadol strategy B amp T Weekly Australia July 9 2002 a b Yang Jia Lynn May 22 2007 Getting a handle on a scandal Fortune CNN Retrieved February 10 2011 a b Malcolm Andrew October 6 1982 Tylenol 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Melchett joins PR firm that advised Monsanto The Guardian London Retrieved April 27 2010 Lardner Richard October 5 2007 Secrecy rule bars Blackwater from discussing work in Iraq limiting PR firm s effectiveness Washington Associated Press People Moves PR News 57 20 May 21 2001 Corporate Financial Communications Burson Marsteller com Archived from the original on December 16 2010 Retrieved February 15 2011 Rivas Paul October 14 1997 Market research agency launched in Riyadh Saudi Gazette Profiles of High Tech Firms O Dwyer s PR Services Report November 1994 p 26 Burson Marsteller Names William Fasig Chairman of Technology Practice Headquartered in Silicon Valley Business Wire May 11 1998 Fisher Lawrence M March 13 1996 Seeking to Fix Damaged Image Apple Hires Burson Marsteller The New York Times p 18D Technology Burson Marsteller com Archived from the original on December 16 2010 Retrieved February 17 2011 Grant Alex No free lunch for HP PR agencies Printing World p 12 Shah Aarti June 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2004 Archived from the original on September 11 2011 Retrieved March 4 2011 Price Raymond 1977 With Nixon Viking Adult pp 303 4 ISBN 0 670 77672 6 a b c President Soeharto Urges U S Business to Take Advantage of Economic Growth Policies PR Newswire September 25 1992 a b Franke Ruta Garance July 25 1998 From the K Street Corridor The National Journal 30 30 1762 Lloyd Parry Richard August 6 2000 Old Etonian Smoothie Fails to Buff Indonesian Leader s Image The Independent London p 17 Tsunami Washes Away Indonesian Human Rights Center for Media and Democracy Archived from the original on November 27 2010 Retrieved May 19 2011 Cohen Nick December 8 1996 Hold on a Minute The Observer p 28 O Dwyer Jack May 13 1992 B M Has 950 000 Indonesia Contract Jack O Dwyer s Newsletter 25 20 1 Hrebenar Ronald J 1997 Interest group politics in America 3rd ed p 96 ISBN 1 56324 703 8 a b RedRRPP com ar Burson Marsteller y la Dictadura Argentina RedRRPP www redrrpp com ar in European Spanish Archived from 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February 21 2011 a b Platinum PR Award Winner Public Service Announcement PSA Uses Lighthearted Peg To Promote Heavy Message PR News 59 44 November 17 2003 a b Helene Ellison Joins Burson Marsteller as Chair Global Healthcare Practice Business Wire March 16 2010 Soghoian Christopher Email Pastebin Retrieved May 14 2011 Acohido Byron May 10 2011 Google deflects PR firm s attack of Gmail privacy USA Today Retrieved May 14 2011 Lyons Dan Facebook Busted in Clumsy Smear on Google Newsweek Retrieved May 14 2011 a b Google deflects PR firm s attack of Gmail privacy USA Today Retrieved January 30 2017 Krietsch Beth Burson Marsteller and Facebook part ways PRWeek Retrieved May 14 2011 Brand Marketing at Burson Marsteller Bolsters Consumer Lifestyle and Brand Communications Capabilities with Appointment of Carline Jorgensen as Managing Director Business Wire August 25 2010 Burnett James December 10 2001 Burson Helps Turn PR Week US p 3 Ward Celeste September 22 2004 Old Navy Awards PR to Burson Marsteller Adweek WPP Announces the Merger of Burson Marsteller and Cohn amp Wolfe bcw global com February 27 2018 Retrieved January 29 2019 a b c Gambrill 2012 p 67 68 a b c Light 2010 p 104 Burson Marsteller Launches Strategic Consultancy PivotRED Businesswire com November 17 2010 Retrieved February 21 2011 Burson Marsteller Announces Strategic Partnership with Targeted Victory Enhanced Online News January 4 2011 Archived from the original on March 12 2012 Retrieved February 21 2011 Russia Mikhailov and Partners and Burson Marsteller become strategic partners Esmerk June 25 2009 p B5 Burson Marsteller Partners With Dominican Firm Holmes Report Retrieved June 23 2013 Bibliography Edit Taylor Catharine P October 11 2005 The creepiest marketing story ever told Adweek Carter Ben Brooks Gregory Catalano Frank Smith Bud E 2011 Digital Marketing For Dummies UK Edition For Dummies John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781119997771 Coates Tom October 4 2005 An apology from the Cillit Bang team plasticbag org Gambrill Eileen 2012 Propaganda in the Helping Professions Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195325003 Light Donald W 2010 The Risks of Prescription Drugs Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231146937 External links EditCompany site Burson Marsteller Corporate Crimes Corporatewatch org 2002 Burson Marsteller at SourceWatch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Burson Cohn 26 Wolfe amp oldid 1132980155, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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