|
Edition 6 - NSW Country THU 19 JUN 2003, Page B03 Who can you call at crunch time? By Stephen Brook
Last year Lew called CrosbylTextor, the brand new strategic polling company set up by former Liberal Party federal director Lynton Crosby and pollster Mark Textor. Lew's very public bid to retain his board seat in November was a flame out, but for CrosbylTextor it was just the beginning. The market is awash with consultancies staffed by people with Liberal Party connections, not the least being Ian Kortlang, currently attempting to sort out problems besetting public relations firm Burson-Marsteller. And last month former government whip Michael Ronaldson joined Fleishman-Hillard Stratcom's international advisory board, joining the likes of former US secretary of defence William Cohen and former speaker of the US House of Representatives Newt Gingrich. When CrosbylTextor started it was just
the two men as joint managing directors. The two say the company
is not about public affairs, not about market research and not
about lobbying, which Crosby feels many companies should undertake
themselves rather than engage consultants. Rather, the company
is a ``strategic polling company''. ``Our focus is understanding
how people think and using the understanding to help change behaviour,''
he says. Work for the Liberal Party is less than
10 per cent of business, says Crosby. Corporate strategic communication
makes up a lot of the rest, particularly representational management
for chief executives and corporate directors. ``I'm not sure they
really understand what's motivating shareholders,'' says Crosby. Textor was one of 15 international team
leaders in charge of the Pacific New Zealand and Australia for
polling group Wirthlin Worldwide. It has now left the Australian
market and last week CrosbylTextor signed an exclusive partnership
agreement with it.
|