AltaCircle Drivel


The More Things Change …
August 7, 2008, 11:35 pm
Filed under: AgencyLife, Interactive Marketing | Tags:

Just came across this article that was written back in 2000.  We were a year into having set up in the UK and the dot com boom was still expanding, although Boo.com had collapsed.  The amazing thing about this article to me is seeing how much of what we said then, we still say and do today.

Feature: Decoded: Organic - no call for booing

Decoded: Organic - no call for booing

Date: 25 July 2000

Along with Razorfish and Agency.com, Organic is one of the main US players operating on both sides of the Atlantic and, like many US interlopers, it’s quick to claim its relative years of experience as a competitive advantage. But Organic can legitimately claim to have been involved in one of the most salient experiences the sector has so far seen; one of its clients was Boo.com.

Not that the company bears any malice. John Baker, who moved across from the New York office to become UK managing director, says they parted on good terms and that Organic still stands by the work it did. “We still have people tell us that it was one of the most innovative sites,” he enthuses.

He does emphasise though, that Organic’s contribution was a small part, creating the Flash applications for the products and dressing room, as well as all the rich media advertising for Boo’s online campaigns. And, not surprisingly, there’s no longer any mention of the failed online sports fashion retailer in any of Organic’s press material; not so much standing by as saying bye.

Nevertheless, the experience is just one in Organic’s portfolio. Like it or not, the big US players are big precisely because they started earlier, and in a young industry, experience is all the more valuable.

3 card trick

Founded in San Francisco in 1993, Organic now boasts nine offices and 1200 employees worldwide. It opened its first international office in Sao Paolo, Brazil, at the end 1997, and is now operating in London, Singapore and Toronto, as well as across the US.

Having opened in London in June last year, the company has 90 employees based in its Queens Park office, including 25 engineers, 15 designers, 15 project management, 15 marketing solutions and 10 strategy consultants.

“We tend to operate with dedicated core teams, and build them out as we go,” explains Baker. “Unlike some agencies, we give the client around five key contacts -[for example] an engineering lead, creative lead and strategic lead, as well as the project leader.”

This, he says, helps keep communication open. “Experience shows us that if you only have a single point of client contact, like an account manager, it can become a bottleneck.”

As befits an agency located in Queens Park, just a stone’s throw from dotcom mecca in Notting Hill, its focus is on the more glamourous end of interactive services, specialising in design and marketing. Organics UK services are split into three departments: online marketing, i-business development and strategic consultancy.

Each of the sectors do operate standalone but, pressed for a particular strength, Baker says: “it has to be the integration,” meaning the offering of its three strands as a complete service.

Baker says i-business, the engineering part, forms the core of Organic UK’s work accounting for about 60% of its business. “We have strong skills in Flash, and with the ATG and BroadVision platforms. And we don’t think of WAP as a separate thing either,” he says. “It’s important to keep the engineers centralised, because they need to know how to make applications extensible to all devices.”

On the marketing side, which accounts for around 20% of business, Organic offers full online media services, from planning and executing basic banner campaigns to striking portal deals and running email campaigns.

Strategic consulting, which accounts for the last 20%, also includes offering its US-based customer services and fulfillment brokering. Baker explains: “We also offer consulting on everything after the customer hits the buy button - what kind of warehousing or packaging do they have? In the US we have relationships with warehouses and call centres, and can integrate our clients with these services if they require.”

Again, the Boo experience has bearing: “Boo had great (order) fulfillment in place and well-branded packaging. It’s just that their e-commerce engine was so horrendous.”

These services are currently only offered to UK clients on an ad hoc basis, but Baker says a full roll-out will take place here later this year. In the US, Organic is facilitating fulfillment for clients including Tommy Hilfiger and Iomega.

Clients and partners

Organic is one of IBM’s Global Services and Pervasive Computing partners, and does a lot of work with its WebSphere platform. It also has formal relationships with BroadVision, ATG (Art Technology Group), Open Market and Pandesic.

As Baker points out, such a range of partnerships is important because no one platform fits all clients. But while the company is not limited to these platforms, he also advises that the relationships are more than just marketing deals, providing training and technical support to Organic’s staff.

The company has a lot of its experience in industry verticals, such as electronic retail and telecoms. Clients include BT.com, for which Organic has recently completed its SME portal and Business Store on the BroadVision platform. It also built the front-end of IP telco Quip.co.uk’s site and eyestorm.co.uk.

As well as BT, Daimler Chrysler is Organic UK’s cornerstone client, working on its pan-European site. The company’s major US clients include Law.com, Blockbuster and Hewlett Packard.

Organic works on both fixed payment and retainer-based accounts, preferring the former for dotcoms and the latter for large corporates. Baker says this is because they tend to hand completed projects over to dotcoms, because, unlike traditional companies, the website is the dotcom’s core business.

Keeping to the front

Organic’s focus is very much on front-end solutions, with its skills in Flash and e-commerce systems. The company doesn’t do backend, preferring to work with other solutions providers for this, such as Unisys on the Quip account. “We don’t have a systems integrator approach,” explains Baker, “so we don’t do ERP or legacy integration.”

As is becoming increasingly common with larger agencies, last May it opened an R&D lab in its New York office, principally to experiment with wireless and broadband solutions. The lab operates in two ways. Firstly, the company funds research in areas it feels it needs to develop, to generate case studies and best practices, and secondly it co-funds with clients developments that directly benefit them. It’s currently running a WAP project for an undisclosed UK client.

Organic offers the usual company incentives to try and attract and keep staff, with “benefits, a recreation room, bagels, beer bashes and the like,” says Baker. It also stubbornly clings to one of the internet’s original business differentiators, proudly claiming its professional services take a “C2B” approach. As Baker puts it: “This reflects our user-centric development and the change in control from manufacturers to customers.”

Despite such platitudes, Organic is one of the few agencies that can point to some longevity. So what was the biggest lesson from the Boo experience? “I think it’s definitely a preference to have full service engagement on a project, to be accountable for what we do,” says Baker. “There were eight partners working on Boo, and we saw a lot of changes taking place that we couldn’t control, and all we could do was end on good terms.”

Source: Netimperative


Why it is fun working with George
April 26, 2008, 2:51 pm
Filed under: AgencyLife, Interactive Marketing | Tags: , , ,

This is an email George sent around the other day that is a classic collection of links cranked out as a “last thing before I run” e-mail.

Amazing set of links around only one subject — imaging. Not that I’d recommend missing the Porter on a Friday night at 9 pm but it is great to see serious obsession shared.

From: George Nimeh
Date: Fri, 25 Apr 2008 21:18:22 +0100
To: SEUK, Sony Ericsson Global, Planning
Cc: digitalgroup
Conversation: Thought for the day
Subject: RE: Thought for the day

> Ps anyone seen anything particularly interesting in the world of
> imaging recently? Please share, it seems to be Cyber-shot heaven round
> here at the moment
>

Below are a few “interesting” things that I’ve come across. Some of them may have already been sent around, but I think they’re all worth a review.

If any of you would like to chat about how iD could help SE understand/activate these ideas and themes to create buzz and traction around Cyber-shot (and thus help people buy), lemme know.

Have an excellent weekend,
~G~

Photosynth
I think this is spectacular.
http://labs.live.com/photosynth/view.html?collection=NASAColl/LaunchPad/index.sxs&st=coll <http://labs.live.com/photosynth/view.html?collection=NASAColl/LaunchPad/index.sxs&st=coll>
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p16frKJLVi0
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/129
http://labs.live.com/photosynth/video.html
Photosynth is a software technology preview from Microsoft Live Labs and the University of Washington that analyzes digital photographs to build a three-dimensional point cloud of a photographed object. Pattern recognition components compare portions of images to create points, which are then compared to convert the image into a model. Currently, users can view models built by Microsoft or the BBC, but not create their own models.

Radar
Mobile/online imagery that create “conversations”.
http://www.smstextnews.com/2008/01/instant_picture_conversations_with_radar_-_the_application_of_the_week.html
This week’s application is Radar, a phenomenally well put together service that enables picture conversations online and on-the-go. If photo sharing site Flickr is Web 2.0, then Radar is Mobile 3.0. Or something like that… The entire service has been conceived to run from your mobile, not as a bit-part of the overall experience. Yes there’s an online element for those sat at desks, but Radar is all about mobility. You can easily upload photos from your handset and all your subscribed friends can instantly see — and crucially, comment — on the photo. You can then easily see who’s been commenting and reply back and, before you know it, get into a dialogue with your friends about the picture. All by phone. That’s the way to do it.

Flickrvision
Hypnotic global entertainment, all based on geo-located photos.
http://flickrvision.com/
Flickrvision shows realtime, geolocated Flickr photos. Just like Twittervision, it’s hypnotic to watch. The map moves around to show the location of the most recent tweet or photo. Both visualizations hail from David Troy, a VOIP consultant who has suddenly found himself doing a lot of geo work. See: http://www.i-boy.com/weblog/2007/05/site-of-day-flickrvision.html

Picnik and Fotoflexer
Two free tools that make photography easier.
http://www.picnik.com/
http://fotoflexer.com/
If you use Photoshop for basic photo editing, you’ll love ‘em. They’re simple, free, web applications that do the job very well. I love the Flickr/Facebook/Picasa/Photobucket/Webshots integration. In addition to being fully integrated into Facebook, both apps lets you pull in your Flickr photos, edit them, and then save them back to Flickr. Sah-weet! See: http://www.i-boy.com/weblog/2007/11/picnik-and-fotoflexer.html

Animoto
Incredibly easy to use … and creates fantastic content.
http://animoto.com/
Animoto is a web application that automatically generates professionally produced videos, each a customized orchestration of user-selected images and music. Using patent-pending Cinematic Artificial Intelligence technology and high-end motion design, the result is a user’s own personal creation with the visual energy of a music video and the emotional impact of a movie trailer.

And finally … Interestingness!
http://www.flickr.com/explore/interesting/
Besides being a five syllable word suitable for tongue twisters, it is also an amazing new Flickr Feature. There are lots of elements that make something ‘interesting’ (or not) on Flickr. Where the clickthroughs are coming from; who comments on it and when; who marks it as a favorite; its tags and many more things which are constantly changing. Interestingness changes over time, as more and more fantastic content and stories are added to Flickr.



A Good Year for Iris Direct - Marketing Agency of the Year
January 10, 2008, 11:33 am
Filed under: AgencyLife | Tags:

Since it is now all about Iris, I thought I’d pull out some background on the place. High growth, good work, people focused, independent and ambitious. It is a nice mix.

Agency of the Year 2007: Direct Agency of the Year - Best of the rest

Marketing 12-Dec-07

Hours of painstaking deliberation could not help the judges separate the joint runners-up for the Direct Agency of the Year award - Iris and Partners Andrews Aldridge.

Iris, which launched in 1999, has grown at breakneck speed. The judges
were particularly impressed with its string of diverse and heavyweight
new business wins this year. The integrated agency demonstrated its

ability to deliver on mail briefs, with other business units offering
expertise on sales promotion, sports sponsorship and experiential
marketing campaigns.Iris is now the global sponsorship agency for ING, lead global digital
agency for Shell, a digital roster agency for Coca-Cola, and was hired
by Southern Comfort for an EMEA brief. It also won promotional briefs to
support Unilever’s Sure, Lynx and Vaseline brands, as well as UK direct
marketing business for Gala Bingo.

Iris has been recruiting to accommodate this increase in business. The
most high-profile appointment came in May, with the arrival of former
British Airways finance director Drew Thompson as chairman. The agency
also poached Archibald Ingall Stretton’s Alistair Bryan and WWAV Rapp
Collins’ Paul Beier.

Green issues have continued to rise up the corporate agenda, and the
selected agencies were asked to provide evidence of their own
environmental credentials.

In March, Iris took part in ‘Lights out London’, which saw the agency
cut its energy consumption by 30%. It also runs recycling initiatives
and a ‘bike to work’ scheme, among other programmes.



A Good Year for OgilvyOne
December 13, 2007, 9:52 am
Filed under: Advertising, AgencyLife, Ogilvy | Tags:

Something to Shout AboutCampaign today announced OgilvyOne has be awarded DM Agency of the Year for the first time in its history.

It’s a good thing and given how important digital marketing has been to the British Airways win, an indication of how important having a real interactive capability is for direct marketing agencies. This is both creative concepting and production from OgilvyInteractive as well as digital media planning and buying from Neo@Ogilvy. Great work Bo and Richard.  And of course Mike, Annette, Colin and company.



Watch out — Software developers are becoming admen, and admen are becoming engineers.
October 4, 2007, 9:17 am
Filed under: Advertising, AgencyLife, Interactive Marketing

“All marketing will be digital sometime in the next 10 years”

–Steve Ballmer, CEO Microsoft, BusinessWeek, Oct 2007

Great quote for people in our industry and one that I think everyone fundementally believes.

It is interesting that in response to a threat to traditional software revenue, one of the smartest companies on the planet is focusing on advertising as its next source of revenue. Just when everyone thought advertising was dead.

What can we take away from this?

1) No one will pay for software anymore.

Microsoft believes people will not pay for applications. It is clear that Google also believes this and is putting into action from e-mail to word processing.

Stop and think of all of the applications you use to help you with your life –word processing, e-mail, financial planning tools, excersize trackers, vacation planners, home maintenance logs. Everyone of them can be provided by a brand in exchange for customers’ loyalty and not sold for £20 (or £200) at PC World.

2) Advertising isn’t dead, it simply has a new home

When a brand creates an application to help its customers, it still has to remind its customers why their product is relevant and let them know about new releases. This unobtrusive communication is the new advertising. Think of the VideoEgg and YouTube’s approach which recognises there are lots of times people want to watch an ad, not the current industry review in the UK to increase ad time from 7 minutes per hour to 12 on commercial TV.

3) Advertising will be driven by applications

Bob Garfield here talks about advertising being dead, or at least the 30 second spot. “Brands need to connect with customers.” We hear that a lot, but what does it mean? It means brands need to create applications that are useful and make a difference for their customers to pay attention and like them. That’s calculators, games, educational tools and billboards that notice your tire pressure is low and remind you take care of your car.

4) Learn to love your techies

Jonathan Nelson, founder of Organic, has always said “the world will never get less technical. It not like people can’t find more places to put microchips.” If marketers need to create applications to get their customers attention, they better learn the language of software development. People love to talk about digital channels, but a video ad can be a pre-roll on a website. That is digital but it isn’t unobtrusive. A print piece can be sent over e-mail. For marketing to be interactive, it needs to be functional. For anything — website, banner, billboard, video ad — to be functional, it has an application behind it.

Go out and hug a software engineer, it could be the most important thing you do for your marketing.



A Note on Blogging
September 10, 2007, 8:24 am
Filed under: AgencyLife, Blogging, Ogilvy

Blogging may have become a bit like start-ups in 1999 where everyone seems to have one and if anyone mentions the word it at a dinner party everyone rolls their eyes and runs for the bar.

Is it narcissic verbosity?  I couldn’t disagree more and just came across a great quote to remember from Rory Sutherland who I’ve got the good luck to go to meetings with on a regular basis.

Blogging — before your traffic hits proper media property levels — is definitely “drivel” but still incredibly useful.

RE: Campaign i-Q: Do planners spend too much time blogging? - 28-08-2007 22:22by: Rory Sutherland

JP Sartre once observed “I write to discover what I think”.

At a time when Excel and PowerPoint are the normal modes of communication, and where few in advertising write more than a couple of fully formed sentences or paragraphs from one month to the next, a blog provides a welcome opportunity to write to a decent length. 

It is a wonderful value exchange. The blogger gets to refine his thoughts by writing them in longhand and by gaining an immediate and responsive audience. The audience, one hopes, gains a little enlightenment along with an opportunity to refute/nitpick.

Nor, to anyone who writes regularly, is it all that time-consuming to write a few hundred words of tolerably grammatical prose each day - not if you do it regularly. I venture many of those who are amazed anyone can possibly turn out a few blog entries each week without neglecting their day job are those people so addled by Powerpoint that they need a lie-down to recover between bullet-points.

The more ideas you have the more you write. And vice versa.



Advertising v Interactive Advertising
August 25, 2007, 1:30 am
Filed under: AgencyLife

It is a common theme in the traditional advertising world, and direct marketing world, and sales promotion world that creatives come in sets of two. Art Director and copywriter. They work as a team, are hired as a team and even move agencies as a team.

This makes sense when the agency’s work is primarily a concept — it would be a tough job if the creative blackbox had only one lone hipster sitting in a dark corner, eyes rolling back in his head, trying to reason out whether it should be “Did somebody say McDonald’s?” or “Hey, sombody say McDonald’s!”

In this traditional world where what is given to a client is often a print ad or a script or mail pack, doubling up the creative team makes perfect sense. The account team scales based on the complexity of the client. The planner is a senior consultant and can work on his or her own. Design is a afterthought handled by “mac operators” that are part of the studio once the big idea has been cracked. Production just happens. The real magic is at the concept and with the account folk tapping their fingers, it is no wonder the creatives insisted on working in pairs.

So is this still relevant when our work is so much more complex?

A great campaign now has multiple channels, contact strategies that have to be delivered and synchronised over time, technical executions with data dependencies that require NASA-level project management and fifteen thousand different client teams that need to give their input.

In this world is it fair to put the weight of the delivery on even a superstar copywriter and art director? Can we expect them to know if a flash movie can branch based on if-then logic? If the layout breaks all of the information architecture rules Jacob Nielsen has so painstakingly taught the industry? Whether when a customer starts a card application, a promotion should be offered based on home address, income or key benefit? Whether an e-mail can come from a the sales team, and which of 15 key messages should be delivered in the opening paragraph? How to organise and edit 30 pages of text to make a good argument?

Mark Kingdon on Organic’s site says:

Great advertising was often created in “pairs” — a copywriter and an art director. In the digital world, the creation process is more complex. Strategists, designers, information architects, media specialists, and technologists must come together to create great experiences.

Organic Threeminds Blog

The next step is to look at how the digital agencies are structuring themselves — does RG/A have creative teams? AKQA? LBi? We know Sapient doesn’t, just as Accenture has never heard of them, so where will advertising move to?



Some Recent Work
March 1, 2007, 5:37 pm
Filed under: Advertising, AgencyLife, Interactive Marketing, TheWork | Tags:

Creatives coming in to interview always talk about “their book” or “their portfolio” — and can talk for 5 minutes or 5 hours on each piece.  They take pride and seeing as this is a big part of what we sell, they should.  I’ve always thought account people and strategist should maintain a book as well.  Even useless overhead locked off on executive row or in the ivory tower should has their personal projects.  Everyone at an agency needs to be attached to and proud of the work.

Here are a couple of campaigns I’ve been involved in at Ogilvy that I like and why.

Brand Republic Redesign
In my first week at Ogilvy I was handed a folder by Annette King as part of her transition notes - Haymarket’s brand republic was looking for an agency to help redesign their magazines / content portal. Great opportunity and high profile project.   After proving we were the right agency and working through that we couldn’t do the job for free, we kicked off a classic front-end site redesign with strategy, IA, design and functional specification for the Haymarket team to build.

I love the project because we were able to get a lot of community features integrated into the content of the site, got to redesign the brandmark, and came up with some fun interface ideas to allow quick browsing of content.

Brand Republic - Before

Brand Republic - After

Castrol Index

This Castrol Index site came about as Castrol realized they were spending a big sum on the Euro 2008 sponsorship and wanted to make more of it then supplying banners at the events.

The part we did the most work on was the overall site design, homepage control and the teamsheet.  Great use of flash and an early nod to the ipod album finder interface that has run rampent across the web.



Royal Mail Appoints Proximity to Handle All its Interactive Marketing
June 11, 2003, 1:19 am
Filed under: AgencyLife, Proximity | Tags:

Royal Mail appoints Proximity London to handle all its interactive marketing

Source: nma.co.uk | Published: 11 July 2003 07:45

Royal Mail is consolidating all its interactive activity through a single agency as it works to transform its business.

Proximity London has been appointed as Royal Mail’s sole agency for the next three years, following a pitch that shortlisted four agencies.

Ogilvy Interactive was previously Royal Mail’s lead agency.

The appointment sees Proximity London taking responsibility for Royal Mail’s digital strategy, online advertising, emarketing and the redesign of royalmail.com.

Last month it was appointed as Royal Mail’s lead below-the-line agency. This was part of the selection of an Omnicom Consortium, including Wolff Olins and AMV, to work on new branding and above- and below-the-line advertising.

According to John Baker, head of digital services at Proximity London, the appointment will enable a more efficient flow of information and concepts with a higher level of integration. “You have a single conversation above the line, in the mail, through press and poster and online; integrated creative concepts with a single strategy,” he said.

Head of interactive marketing at Royal Mail Steve Sefton said it was a combination of strong solutions and Proximity’s connection with Omnicom that influenced the final decision.

proximitylondon.com

royalmail.com



Organic Launches Next Generation of BT.com
September 15, 2000, 12:55 am
Filed under: AgencyLife, Organic | Tags:

Press Release: ORGANIC LAUNCHES NEXT GENERATION OF BT.COM

ORGANIC LAUNCHES NEXT GENERATION OF BT.COM

Release Date: 15 September 2000

bt.com offers greater functionality and personalisation to help customers
find their way on-line

London, 15 September 2000 — Organic, Inc. (Nasdaq: OGNC) today announced
its completion of the first stage of a major re-design of BT’s portal
http://www.bt.com which acts as a gateway to information on
all of the services the company offers its consumer and business users.
Organic Inc., a leading international Internet professional services firm, has
worked with BT to revise the existing site and to put in place a framework
for future development. The new site features innovative navigation,
enhanced functionality and greater personalisation to enable BT to
communicate more effectively on-line.

The primary home page has been restructured to make key areas within the
site easily identifiable. Organic has revamped the navigation to include
a pull down menu system and quick links to key BT services, unearthing
hidden areas on the site that have the potential to generate high traffic
including directory enquiries, bill payment and call management. In addition, the site has been updated to highlight BT promotions and encourage greater customer interaction and feedback. Organic has also developed BT’s
implementation of BroadVision, using the platform to introduce new levels
of personalisation to support the company’s service delivery to its different
customer segments.

Organic will also be working alongside BT and its portfolio of other
agencies to migrate over 100 existing sites into this new simpler single
site, using a design system it has created. The system defines not only
look and feel and layout, but also a strategic and technical framework.
Organic will continue to provide guidance to BT internal stakeholders and
their agencies on how to work within the design system.

John Baker, Managing Director of Organic’s London office commented, “We
were faced with an enormous challenge. Firstly, identify and bring forward the
services of real value to users within the existing site, BT’s hidden
gems. Secondly, create a simple framework and design system which BT can use to develop an online dialogue with its wide range of customers.”

Huw Williams, General Manager of BT Electronic Channels said, “People at
home and work want to use bt.com for a range of activities which were
previously done either by phone or by post. The site supports our
commitment to deliver consistently good service. The innovative design
and use of BroadVision provides new levels of personalisation that will help
us strengthen our relationship with consumers and respond to their changing needs.”

This is the first phase in an ongoing project to provide BT with a unified
presence on-line, bringing together its existing portfolio of sites.
Organic recently completed work on BT’s flagship SME portal http://www.bt.com/sme and Business Store, http://www.bt.com/businesstore

About Organic:

Organic, Inc. (Nasdaq: OGNC), a leading international Internet
professional services firm which targets the customer-to-business market, is built around a “buyer driven” service model that encompasses both traditional
business-to-business and business-to-consumer engagements. Founded in 1993
and based in San Francisco, Organic (<http://www.organic.com/>) has a
history as an industry innovator, having developed the Apache Web server,
and worked on the design of some of the Internet’s earliest Web sites,
including Yahoo! The company’s C2B Internet professional services include
strategic consulting and research, site design, software engineering and
technical program management, online marketing services including media
buying and management, and customer service and fulfilment consulting and
transaction management. Organic has performed work for over 250 clients,
and has gained significant experience by working with both the Global 1000 and emerging Internet companies. The company’s clients include
DaimlerChrysler, British Telecommunications plc, Tommy Hilfiger, Blockbuster, Washington Mutual, and Federated Department Stores, Inc. Organic has offices in the U.S., Canada, Asia, Europe and Latin America. In July 2000, the company
was added to the Russell 2000* Index.

ORGANIC and leaf design, and C2B are service marks or registered service
marks of Organic, Inc. or its subsidiaries in the United States and in
other countries. Other trademarks and service marks referenced are marks of
their respective owners.

About BT.com:

British Telecommunications plc is one of the world’s leading providers of
telecommunications services. Its principal activities include local, long
distance and international telecommunications services, mobile
communications, Internet services and IT solutions. BT has operations in
more than 30 countries worldwide, with ventures in the Republic of
Ireland, France, Switzerland, Spain, Germany, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands,
Sweden, New Zealand, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, Korea, Latin America and
India. BT and AT&T have also created Concert, the leading global
telecommunications company serving multi-national business customers,
international carriers and Internet service providers worldwide.

For further information

Please contact

Bernie McAndrew/Christian May

Organic Press Office

Gnash Communications

Tel : 0207 243 4443

bernie@gnash.co.uk

Source: Sourcewire