Thursday, December 11, 2008

Glass Half Full: Chapter 3
A former drinks PR's optimistic guide to life after redundancy
10 November 2008

Days since redundancy: one month (decided against commemorative drinks party/shopping expedition)
Bona fide new business leads: two (v exciting)
Ratio of business to personal mails/texts sent from BlackBerry: improving
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On the whole, events of the past week have reaffirmed my ‘half full’ world view. And that’s despite the very depressing news on the economy. Up to three million unemployed, and a fair few of them in the south east and London? These are surely the sort of figures we thought we’d never see again? However, there are still pubs trading out there, and brewers making beer, and some of them want PR. So this is no time to sit and weep.

I’ve attended a press launch and an industry dinner, handed out a few business cards, followed up on initial conversations and now have a couple of meetings in the diary. And if just one of these prospects turns into a piece of business, I might recoup my investment in a haircut, spray tan and manicure. I’m rapidly learning that high maintenance and low funds don’t go together.

It seems slightly odd to be spending entire days effectively networking. I wonder how I managed to do it as well as a full-time job, and conclude I probably wasn’t doing it very well. If I had, I would presumably have been helped seamlessly into the next role by a lovingly-fostered contact. A life lesson I’m learning rather late in life.

Spurred into action by the one-month milestone, I’ve written a business plan. Not one that would pass muster on Dragons’ Den, but putting objectives, deadlines and finances on paper was both a sobering and empowering exercise. I’ve also faced up to the fact that, much as I’ve loved working in the drinks industry for 20 years, if there’s no work for me in it at the moment , my skills are transferrable. Pet food, power tools and personal hygiene all beckon, and the money is the same, wherever it comes from. .

I also have a website – albeit just one page at the moment – which means that now, visitors will get an idea of what I can do for them, rather than the previous, sloppy ‘under construction’ sign. If you’re claiming to be a good communicator, you surely have to get your own communications right. I’m grateful to my designers, Radius, who built the site and created the Shiel Communications identity.

With limited money coming in, I’m taking a close look at what’s going out. It’s easy to rein in on some spending; for example, I don’t need any more handbags or lipsticks for a while. I’m wary of cutting back too much, too soon, though. One of the better pieces of advice I received was to “concentrate on doing the things you can earn money from, and pay others to do the rest.” Dabbling in web design, cleaning the house or redecorating the office all smack of work avoidance. . I need to avoid them and crack on with some PR. And get my work-avoiding teenagers to address and stamp the Christmas cards this year.

A tale of two pubs
I am cheered by a Friday evening in my local pub, The Black Jug in Horsham. West Sussex. It’s busy, buzzy and yet relaxed, as it has been every Friday night for the last decade. Proving that, when pubs can provide what customers want – in this case, unfailingly good food, drink and service – they will draw a crowd, credit-crunch or no. Licensee Ally Craig and his excellent team deserve to weather the recessionary storm ahead.

Sadly, the same can’t be said for the cafĂ©-bar which recently turned away our party of four, despite having a number of empty tables, because their computerised booking system was down. My suggestion that they could book us in with a good old-fashioned pen and paper fell on deaf ears, and yet they were effectively reducing their takings for the night by around £2,500, by my calculation. In a different branch of the same chain a week later, service was so slow that customers were leaving before their meals arrived. Strikes me that what they’ve got wrong, and my local right, is staff training. Good training gives your team the confidence and flexibility to make sure the customers leave happy. You can bet I’ll go back to my local, but I won’t give the others a third chance to disappoint.

Ros Shiel was public relations manager for Beautiful Beer, a campaign funded by the UK’s brewers and pub companies to improve the image of beer. She was made redundant last October after funding for the project was cut and is now working as a freelance PR consultant and copywriter. Ros lives in Horsham and spends her free time running round the park, writing blogs and drinking beer in as many local pubs as she can justify visiting in the name of research.

http://www.shielcomms.co.uk/

Glass Half Full: Chapter 1
A former drinks PR’s optimistic guide to life after redundancy


3 November 2008

Days since made redundant: 14
% of redundancy pay-off spent on shoes, MAC lipsticks, Ocado deliveries..: scary
No. of mails/calls received on BlackBerry today: 8
% of said mails/calls from mates, not prospective clients: v high
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IF I had £1 for everyone who’s said in recent weeks, “one day, you’ll look back on this as a good thing” or “as one door closes, another opens”, my shoe fund would be looking a whole lot healthier than it does. While I’m sure the words are well-intended, if the person uttering them is still drawing a salary, you should be allowed to hit him. Quite hard. Or at least ask if he wants to swap places with you, the smug b*****d.

The other comment I keep hearing is “won’t you get distracted, working from home? All that daytime TV.” Er, no. Even the toe-curlingly awful prospect of trying to find work in the worst recession in living memory holds more appeal than 10 minutes in front of Lorraine Kelly. Though I’d make a case for catching The Jeremy Kyle Show now and again. Not only because JK is surprisingly hot, but the sheer screwed-up-ness of his guests’ lives will throw your own into cheering relief. Unless you actually are expecting triplets by your father-in-law…

But, putting aside the small matter of having no long-term income stream, there are upsides to my redundant status. Spending more time with my children, for example. And, seemingly, with the group of up to eight teenagers who occupy my living room most lunchtimes. Though slightly trying, this does give me a ready-made focus group of 16/17-year-olds who will probably answer anything for another go on the X-Box. All I need now is a client list of RTDs, condoms and Clearasil...

Where the long-term work is going to come from, I don’t yet know. But I do trust one of the pieces of advice I received, which is that the project you thought was ‘in the bag’ before you left your job will come to nought. Instead, you’ll get a call out of the blue from someone who knows someone who used to work with you, wondering if you could help them on a one-off job, not much of a budget... And that, mark my words, will be what keeps you in handbags and mini-breaks for the next five years.

Ros Shiel was public relations manager for Beautiful Beer, a campaign funded by the UK’s brewers and pub companies to improve the image of beer. She was made redundant last October after funding for the project was cut and is now working as a freelance PR consultant and copywriter. Ros lives in Horsham, Wet Sussex, and spends her free time running round the park, writing blogs and drinking beer in as many local pubs as she can justify visiting in the name of research.

http://www.shielcomms.co.uk/