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Friday, 29 June 2012

Why I’m skating a marathon for UNICEF

Skating for UNICEF
John Liddle gets ready to skate a marathon
When you spend a lot of time writing about vulnerable children, you’d have to be a hard-nosed hack to ignore their cry for help.

Elliott House write and design publications to promote what our client Kantar’s 28,000 colleagues are doing for a campaign called Brighter Futures and we report back on the children who are benefiting from those donations. The company is aiming to raise US $1m for UNICEF to help change the lives of children in Bangladesh, Bolivia and Malawi.

It can be heart-wrenching. Poverty, sexual exploitation, the need to abandon education in order to make a living or support a family – the wretched plight of people who have had the misfortune to be born in the wrong place at the wrong time.

And yet it wasn’t the horror that prompted me to do something that might raise a few pounds to help.

It was the hope.

Because when you read more closely about the work that UNICEF is doing in these countries, it isn’t just about the direct aid to help children at the front line of poverty.

It is about helping governments and NGOs transform a political vision into a legacy that will result in sustainable change.

Take Bolivia. The South American country enacted a new constitution in 2010 that recognised the rights of children and adolescents.

That’s an important step. More than 40% (around four million) of the population is under 18, with half-a-million of those orphaned or abandoned. Another 800,000 have to do some kind of work to help support a family – that could be working in a shop or it could be prostitution or drug trafficking.

But Bolivia has recognised the problem and ensured that the rights of children form one of the fundamental pillars of how the country is run.

Of course, that doesn’t solve the problem. In fact, it raises more issues because the poverty of the country and the years of neglect of children mean that it hasn’t got the resources or the infrastructure to make their good intentions reality.

But that is the beauty of the support offered by UNICEF. As well as helping children directly at the front line, UNICEF has the muscle and the corporate ability to guide governments to putting in place an infrastructure to help young people.

These projects are not raising funds that will just end up in the pocket of some corrupt official or warlord. They have created a political will to make positive changes and are providing the support to make them last.

So when I pull on my skates next week at Planet Ice to do my marathon, yes I’ll be thinking of the blisters my feet will have by the end of it, the numb hands and the aching back. But I’ll also be thinking of the generosity of the people who have supported me and the future we may have given a child in Bangladesh, Bolivia or Malawi.

Please click here if you would like to support UNICEF and my marathon on ice.  

Monday, 18 June 2012

IOIC Award Winners


Cheryl and John Liddle at IOIC Awards 2012
Cheryl and John Liddle from Elliott House Communications

There’s nothing quite like recognition from your peers to give you pride in the work that you do.

On Friday night, we had some excellent news when the Institute of Internal Communication (IoIC) named one of our newsletters Class Winner in the Ezine Category for Best Use of Digital Media at their National Awards and gave another of our publications an Award of Excellence.

You may have seen from our earlier blog post that the same title won the Central Region Award in February – that was fantastic, but to be named the best in the UK alongside the top names in communication in the country is an outstanding honour and achievement.

The interactive monthly newsletter – Vision – was developed in conjunction with the internal communications team at Kantar Operations, as a key tool for its Worldwide CEO, Sharon Potter, to communicate with staff based in the UK, North America and India about the direction of the business. The newsletter also goes out across the wider Kantar group of companies.

The judges said that they were impressed with the level of interaction and creativity in our innovative newsletters. It is also a real testament to our relationship with the client at Kantar Operations – Vision is a product of real team work.

Our charity ezine Bright that we produce for Kantar’s Brighter Futures initiative to raise US$1m for UNICEF was also highly praised by the judges and picked up an Award of Excellence. It’s a fantastic interactive publication that we produce with a great team at Kantar. The only shame was that it was in the same category as Vision – and there could only be one Class Winner!

It was a glamorous affair with several hundred of the leading communicators in the country at a lavish ceremony at the London Hilton Park Lane presented by TV broadcaster Fiona Phillips. As well as the win, it was just a wonderful night, celebrating with great people from Kantar, Kantar Operations, and UNICEF.

And to top it all off, England beat Sweden in Euro 2012 – what a night!